See It, Imagine It -- It's the Same to Your Brain.WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- Imagining something and actually seeing it are virtually one and the same to the brain, researchers said on Wednesday. They said the same parts of the brain light up when a person thinks of a face or a scene as when the same person actually looks at a photograph of the same face or place. And, the team at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Massachusetts Institute of Technology, at Cambridge; coeducational; chartered 1861, opened 1865 in Boston, moved 1916. It has long been recognized as an outstanding technological institute and its Sloan School of Management has notable programs in business, reports, they can tell, with 85 percent accuracy, whether a person is thinking of a face or a place, just by looking at how his or her brain lights up. "We use some of the same brain machinery when we actively see and when we simply imagine," Nancy Kanwisher Nancy Kanwisher is a Professor in the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT. She studies the neural and cognitive mechanisms underlying human visual perception and cognition. , associate professor of brain and cognitive sciences cognitive sciences The areas of medicine that study the nature and processes of mental activity–eg, neurology, psychiatry, psychology at MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology , said in a statement. Writing in the Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, Kanwisher and Kathleen O'Craven of the Rotman Research Institute in Toronto, Canada said they used functional magnetic resonance imaging functional magnetic resonance imaging n. Abbr. fMRI Magnetic resonance imaging that provides three-dimensional images of the brain based on changes in blood flow and that can be correlated with brain functions. (FMRI fMRI abbr. functional magnetic resonance imaging ) to look at the brains of volunteers. FMRI allows researchers to see blood flow and activity in various parts of the brain in real time. "These findings strengthen evidence that imagery and perception share common processing mechanisms and demonstrate that the specific brain regions activated during mental imagery depend on the content of the visual image," the researchers wrote in their report. Kanwisher and colleagues had, in previous studies, identified a part of the brain's cortex called the parahippocampal place area, which responded strongly to images of indoor and outdoor spaces, but not at all to faces. Another cortical region, called the fusiform face area The Fusiform face area (FFA) is a part of the human visual system which seems to specialize in facial recognition. The FFA is located in the ventral stream on the ventral surface of the temporal lobe on the fusiform gyrus. , responded strongly to images of faces. In their latest study they concentrated on these two areas as they asked volunteers to look at photographs of places or faces and then to later create, with their eyes closed, a mental image of the same faces and scenes. The FMRI images reveal a striking similarity between regions activated during imagery and those activated during perception," they wrote. Finally, the researchers checked to see if, simply by looking at the FMRIs, they could tell whether a person was thinking of a face or a place, and found they were correct 85 percent of the time. Science Headlines, Yahoo, Nov. 1, 2000 |
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