Reading
Changes Your Brain
Disinformation | 27 Dec. 2013
I
highly doubt that reading this post will do too much to you, but new research
shows that reading novels definitely does change your brain with lingering
effects. Carol Clark-Emory reports for Futurity:
After reading a novel, actual changes linger in the brain, at
least for a few days, report researchers.
Their findings, that reading a novel may cause changes in
resting-state connectivity of the brain that persist, appear in the journal Brain
Connectivity.
“Stories shape our lives and in some cases help define a person,”
says neuroscientist Gregory Berns, lead author of the study and the director of
Emory University’s Center for Neuropolicy. “We want to understand how stories
get into your brain, and what they do to it.”
Neurobiological research using functional magnetic resonance
imaging (fMRI) has begun to identify brain networks associated with reading
stories. Most previous studies have focused on the cognitive processes involved
in short stories, while subjects are actually reading them as they are in the
fMRI scanner.
The study focused on the lingering neural effects of reading a
narrative. Twenty-one Emory undergraduates participated in the experiment,
which was conducted over 19 consecutive days.
“The story follows a protagonist, who is outside the city of
Pompeii and notices steam and strange things happening around the volcano,”
Berns says. “He tries to get back to Pompeii in time to save the woman he
loves. Meanwhile, the volcano continues to bubble and nobody in the city
recognizes the signs.”
The researchers chose the book due to its page-turning plot. “It
depicts true events in a fictional and dramatic way,” Berns says. “It was
important to us that the book had a strong narrative line.”
For the first five days, the participants came in each morning
for a base-line fMRI scan of their brains in a resting state. Then they were
given nine sections of the novel, about 30 pages each, over a nine-day period.
They were asked to read the assigned section in the evening, and come in the
following morning…
[continues at Futurity]
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