
The Book Blog at http://www.readersread.com/ posted this excerpt from a study in which readers' brains were analyzed as they read. Turns out that reading about something might actually make you better at that thing. What better inspiration to keep reading?
"A brain-imaging study carried out by psychologists at Washington University in St Louis used functional magnetic resonance imaging to track brain activity as participants read short stories, finding that reading is by no means a passive activity. Instead, as participants read from a 1940s text about the daily activities of a young boy, activity in different brain regions increased depending on what was going on in the story. So, if the character in the book "pulled a light cord", brain activity increased in the frontal lobe region which controls grasping motions. As the character in the story "went through the front door into the kitchen", activity went up in the relevant temporal lobes. "There has been good evidence for a while that mental simulation - imagination - can improve performance in sport and other skilled behaviours. This study suggests that readers do mental simulation when they comprehend a story," Jeffrey Zacks, a co-author of the study and director of the university's dynamic cognition laboratory, said today. "It could well be that the simulations we perform when reading function like skilled practice. I was reading a cooking magazine last night, and I certainly hope that helps me get better with a whisk."
4 comments:
Both your books sound wonderful ~ I am an artist ~ mixed media & will check out your books ~ I love to read, especially about artists in a novel ~
Stop by my blog and tell me what you think ~ I play at art and write about creativity and its connection to the soul ~
http://artmusedog.blogspot.com
Congratulations on your new book!
Hugs and namaste,
Carol
Im on my way to a stronger mind, as I just finished reading your blog. Thanks for sharing inspiring thoughts - TMNK
I agree completely, and my work is living proof that reading is not passive. I teach people to write bio-vignettes that capture the character of their mothers. When people read these short stories, they laugh and they cry and their minds get busy delving into their memory banks. I love to watch varying emotions pass over their faces. Thank you for this great article, and how was dinner?
http://thestorywoman.com
I agree completely, and my work is living proof that reading is not passive. I teach people to write bio-vignettes that capture the character of their mothers. When people read these short stories, they laugh and they cry and their minds get busy delving into their memory banks. I love to watch varying emotions pass over their faces. Thank you for this great article, and how was dinner?
http://thestorywoman.com
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