
- UID
- 1009018
- 帖子
- 15
- 贡献值
- 128
- 普币
- 60
- 听力指数
- 100
- 阅读权限
- 50
- 在线时间
- 36 小时
- 注册时间
- 2009-7-29
- 最后登录
- 2010-11-18
|

本帖最后由 summer114 于 2009-7-31 11:56 编辑
HW
This is scientific American's 60 seconds science, I'm Karen Hopkin, this'll just take a minute.
Remember Diking Jing and their dog spot, maybe you've read about them in first grade. See spot run, run spot run. Well, a new study in the Journal Psychological Science suggests that not only did you see spot run but you ran too, at least in your mind. Because reading about something turns on the same brain regions that control doing that thing. For years, scientists have suspected that our brains simulate the activities we read about. In behavioral studies, people who are reading about scoring a soccer go, we act more quickly when estimate a kicking motion then we are told to say pass their heads. Now researchers have used real-time brain imaging techniques to watch what happens when people read a story. 28 subjects took in tails from a day of life Ramond. A 7 year old boy who does things like get out of bed and sit through a English lesson, sure enough when Ramond scurries to his school desk sells in readers brains that Goven scurrying also spring to life. Fortunately, the copycattings can find to the brain, we don't actually act out the things we read about. If we did, you wouldn't want to sit next to someone skimming the daily paper.
Thanks for the minute, for scientific American's 60 seconds science. I'm Karen Hopkin. |
-
1
评分次数
-
|