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Study: Arguing Strains Brain More Than Agreeing

Brain drain: Arguing with others puts a lot more strain on your brain than agreeing with them, a new study finds. Our entire brain is a social processing network, said senior author Joy Hirsch, professor of psychiatry, comparative medicine. ....

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Can we talk? | Findings | Yale Alumni Magazine


Gregory Nemec
When Olivia Descorbeth ’20 spent two high school summers interning in the laboratory of Yale neuroscientist Joy Hirsch, she developed  an idea for an experiment. At Olivia’s school in Great Neck, New York, many of her classmates were wealthier than she. “I wanted to see if, cognitively, there was a distinction between communicating with someone from a similar or dissimilar socioeconomic background,” she says.
Her research proposal fit with Hirsch’s research. As a professor of neuroscience and  psychiatry, Hirsch focuses on “two-person neuroscience.” This field uses noninvasive techniques to study brain activity in two people while they interact. Now, Hirsch has an answer to Descorbeth’s question: when speakers differ markedly in education and family income levels, conversation requires more effort. (The results are in ....

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Scientists rethink value of popular brain scan


Scientists rethink value of popular brain scan
By MARION RENAULT, Associated Press
Published: December 15, 2020, 6:05am
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A functional magnetic resonance imaging scan on a computer screen at an Emory University lab in Atlanta. Using large magnets, the scans detect where oxygenated blood flows, allowing scientists to indirectly measure brain activity. (Ric Feld/Associated Press)
NEW YORK Brain scans offer a tantalizing glimpse into the mind’s mysteries, promising an almost X-ray-like vision into how we feel pain, interpret faces and wiggle fingers.
Studies of brain images have suggested that Republicans and Democrats have visibly different thinking, that overweight adults have stronger responses to pictures of food and that it’s possible to predict a sober person’s likelihood of relapse. ....

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