My Best Life: un aiuto per vivere meglio

   
HEALTH DEPRESSIONE SEXUALITY PRINCIPLES GRAFOLOGIA FOOD ENVIRONMENT MUSICA RIDERE MIX SEARCH



Home
page

Breaking
news

In caso di...

Medicina
occidentale

Medicine
complementari

Medicina cinese
e agopuntura

 

Omeopatia

 

Fitoterapia

 

Dipendenze

 

Chi è

Links

E-mail

Cerca nel sito

 

Per conoscere la psicosomatica:

Italiano - English 

 


How does switching tasks affect our ability to monitor and adapt our behavior? (23/08/2012)

 

For the human brain, learning a new task when rules change can be a surprisingly difficult process marred by repeated mistakes, according to a new study by Michigan State University psychology researchers.

Imagine traveling to Ireland and suddenly having to drive on the left side of the road. The brain, trained for right-side driving, becomes overburdened trying to suppress the old rules while simultaneously focusing on the new rules, said Hans Schroder, primary researcher on the study.

“There’s so much conflict in your brain,” said Schroder, “that when you make a mistake like forgetting to turn on your blinker you don’t even realize it and make the same mistake again. What you learned initially is hard to overcome when rules change.”

The study, in the research journal Cognitive, Affective & Behavioral Neuroscience, is one of the first to show how the brain responds to mistakes that occur after rules change.

Study participants were given a computer task that involved recognizing the middle letter in strings such as “NNMNN” or “MMNMM.” If “M” was in the middle, they were to press the left button; if “N” was in the middle, they were to press the right. After 50 trials, the rules were reversed so the participants had to press the right button if “M” was in the middle and the left if “N” was in the middle.

Participants made more repeated errors when the rules were reversed, meaning they weren’t learning from their mistakes. In addition, a cap measuring brain activity showed they were less aware of their errors. When participants did respond correctly after the rules changed, their brain activity showed they had to work harder than when they were given the first set of rules.

“We expected they were going to get better at the task over time,” said Schroder, a graduate student in MSU’s Department of Psychology. “But after the rules changed they were slower and less accurate throughout the task and couldn’t seem to get the hang of it.”

Continually making these mistakes in the work environment can lead to frustration, exhaustion and even anxiety and depression, said Jason Moser, assistant professor of psychology and director of MSU’s Clinical Psychophysiology Lab.

“These findings and our past research suggest that when you have multiple things to juggle in your mind – essentially, when you are multitasking – you are more likely to mess up,” Moser said. “It takes effort and practice for you to be more aware of the mistakes you are missing and stay focused.”

In addition to Schroder and Moser, co-researchers include Erik Altmann, associate professor of psychology, and master’s student Tim Moran.

For more information
Michigan State University
http://www.msu.edu/

(MDN)

 


L'armadietto omeopatico casalingo
(del Dott. Turetta)
Quali sono i problemi o le disfunzioni che possono giovarsi di un intervento omeopatico d'urgenza e, di conseguenza, come dovrebbe essere un ideale armadietto medicinale omeopatico casalingo.


A cura di: Dott.ssa S.Cavalli, Dott. L. Colombo, Dott. U. Zuccardi Merli
[_private/vid/salute/minisommario_video_salute.htm]

 

Aggiungi questo sito ai tuoi preferiti
(aggiungi segnalibro):
premi il tasto  Ctrl   assieme al tasto  D


Home di mybestlife.com - Salute - Sessualità - Gola - Depressione - I consigli del nonno - Musica - Grafologia - Ambiente - Per saperne di più - Viaggi: tutto in una pagina - Meteo - Ridere - Mix

Cerca nel sito

Chi siamo e come contattarci

Copyright © 1998/2018 mybestlife.com tutti i diritti sono riservati eccetto quelli già di altri proprietari.

  

 



 



 


-

[_private/root_princ/juiceadv_overlay.htm]

 

 

 

“”