Close X
Monday, December 23, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Let your mind wander to boost mental performance

Darpan News Desk IANS, 25 Oct, 2014 07:34 AM
  • Let your mind wander to boost mental performance
Engaging brain areas linked to so-called "off-task" mental activities such as mind-wandering and looking back at good times can actually boost performance on some challenging mental tasks, new research reveals.
 
The prevailing view is that activating brain regions referred to as the default network impairs performance on attention-demanding tasks because this network is associated with behaviours such as mind-wandering.
 
Like if you start thinking about what you did last weekend while taking notes during a lecture, for example, your note-taking and ability to keep up will suffer.
 
"Our study is the first to demonstrate the opposite - that engaging the default network can also improve performance," said Nathan Spreng, neuroscientist at Cornell University.
 
Spreng and his team developed a new approach in which off-task processes such as reminiscing can support rather than conflict with the aims of the experimental task.
 
While undergoing brain scanning, 36 young adults viewed sets of famous and anonymous faces in sequence and were asked to identify whether the current face matched the one presented two faces back.
 
The team found participants were faster and more accurate when matching famous faces than when matching anonymous faces.
 
This better short-term memory performance was associated with greater activity in the default network.
 
"The results show that activity in the default brain regions can support performance on goal-directed tasks when task demands align with processes supported by the default network," Spreng added.
 
The paper was published in the Journal of Neuroscience.

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

Stressed women easily prone to Alzheimer's: Study

Stressed women easily prone to Alzheimer's: Study
 Ladies, try not to stress too much. New research says anxious, easily-stressed women are more prone to developing Alzheimer's later in life....

Stressed women easily prone to Alzheimer's: Study

Melatonine intake may help combat obesity, diabetes

Chronic consumption of melatonine, a hormone found in animals, plants, and microbes, helps combat obesity and type-two diabetes, says a study...

Melatonine intake may help combat obesity, diabetes

Even moderate drinking could affect sperm quality

Even moderate drinking could affect sperm quality
Even if you are young and drink alcohol only during the weekends, that could be enough to harm your reproductive health as researchers have found...

Even moderate drinking could affect sperm quality

Smoking during pregnancy may damage fertility of sons

Smoking during pregnancy may damage fertility of sons
Smoking during pregnancy can harm the developing foetus and mothers who smoke while they are pregnant or breast feeding may damage the future fertility of their sons....

Smoking during pregnancy may damage fertility of sons

Antioxidant in grapes may help treat acne

Antioxidant in grapes may help treat acne
Resveratrol, an antioxidant derived from grapes and found in wine, can inhibit growth of the bacteria that causes acne, a new research shows....

Antioxidant in grapes may help treat acne

Why are Americans more depressed today

Why are Americans more depressed today
US citizens are more depressed now than they have been in decades but most of them are not aware of their conditions, says a new study....

Why are Americans more depressed today