Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Decoded: What Brain Does When You Reveal More On Facebook

Darpan News Desk IANS, 11 Mar, 2016 01:08 PM
    In a first such experiment, scientists have configured a network of brain regions involved in self-disclosure as people post about themselves on the social networking giant Facebook that currently has 1.5 billion monthly active users.
     
    The team from Freie Universität Berlin and the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences in Germany focused on the medial prefrontal cortex and the precuneus - two brain regions that are recruited when thinking about oneself.
     
    Results showed that participants who share more about themselves on Facebook had greater connectivity of both the medial prefrontal cortex and precuneus. 
     
    "Human beings like to share information about themselves. In today’s world, one way we are able to share self-related information is by using social media platforms like Facebook,” said Dr Dar Meshi, lead author and a postdoctoral researcher, in a paper featured in the journal Scientific Reports.
     
    In the first attempt to examine the intrinsic functional connectivity of the brain in relation to social media use, Dr Meshi and colleagues observed connectivity between regions of the brain previously established to play a role in self-cognition in 35 participants. 
     
    Facebook was used in the study because people post information about their thoughts, feelings, and opinions, as well as pictures and videos of themselves.
     
    All subjects completed a “Self-Related Sharing Scale” to determine how frequently each subject posted pictures of themselves, updated their profile information, and updated their status. 
     
     
    Researchers recorded functional neuroimaging (fMRI) data while subjects were allowed to let their mind wander. 
     
    They then analysed the connectivity of each participant’s brain to determine a relationship between brain connectivity and “Self-Related Sharing Scale” score across participants.
     
    “Our study reveals a network of brain regions involved in the sharing of self-related information on social media,” Meshi added. 
     
    The authors point out that the implications of their research are broad and lay the foundation for future scientific investigation into self-disclosure.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Microsoft to set up cloud data centres in India

    Microsoft to set up cloud data centres in India
    Microsoft will offer its commercial cloud services -- Azure and Office 365 --by the end of 2015 from local data centres in India where the company sees a $2 trillion business opportunity....

    Microsoft to set up cloud data centres in India

    Want high-speed selfies? Try Instagram app

    Want high-speed selfies? Try Instagram app
    If you have not tried Instagram's new app for a high-speed selfie to woo your girlfriend, you are definitely missing out on some great action here....

    Want high-speed selfies? Try Instagram app

    Strap a multi-function smartphone to your arm

    Strap a multi-function smartphone to your arm
    You may soon have a wearable device that can offer you the benefits of a smartwatch, fitness tracker and smartphone all at once if developers of an unusual ....

    Strap a multi-function smartphone to your arm

    Facebook can steer young minds into politics

    Facebook can steer young minds into politics
    "Especially for those young people that have an issue-based approach to why political participation matters, rather than a traditional orientation...

    Facebook can steer young minds into politics

    Twitter set to display targeted ads for movie lovers

    Twitter set to display targeted ads for movie lovers
    The advertising move named “Movie Conversation” would display ads about a particular movie to users who have tweeted about similar movies or related...

    Twitter set to display targeted ads for movie lovers

    Apple launches new update of iOS8 with problems resolved

    Apple launches new update of iOS8 with problems resolved
    Info-tech giant Apple has launched a new update of its operating system for iOS8 cellphones, claiming it resolved the problems which forced the company...

    Apple launches new update of iOS8 with problems resolved