Can Phones Read Minds - Easy Magic Tricks With Cards

2020, Aug 22    

Yes. Your mobile device and Internet connection can affect cognitive-behavioral processes in people, according to a new study published Thursday in the Journal of Neuroscience.

Researchers led by neuroscientist Peter Trombley of the University of Washington, led by neurosurgeon and MIT associate professor Mark Cote, looked more closely at how people think about information. They found that brain waves in general tended to predict what individuals would say to an online stranger as they listened to music or read a book people who had heard more music had a more positive or negative perception of the stranger compared to those who were not. This finding may suggest that our brains are more open than many people believed at first because of our own beliefs.

While the scientists were looking for the role of social influences, Trombley and Cote found that men, women, students and teens were more likely to think of strangers as ‘social enemies’ in terms of how they reacted based on what they’d read or heard the stranger might say. People who were already close friends with the stranger were more likely to have more positive or negative feelings toward the stranger as a result. The study appears in the journal Neuroscience.

‘We did not find any specific differences between those who knew the stranger and those who didn’t, but people should definitely be cautious about who they read or hear from online,’ said Trombley, an associate professor of psychiatry, neurology and psychology at Brown University and lead author of the study. ‘We don’t know exactly how online and social interactions influence people’s actions but it is quite a strong correlation.’

A different set of social influences was found in humans, where a stronger sense of social responsibility was found when watching and seeing a stranger. A different set of social influences than is found in most other animals, the researchers observed.

‘When we do not recognize others as someone who is not in a need of us as part of our community we may be less prepared to be kind to others, or we may experience more prejudice and shame after experiencing the situation and have an exaggerated or negative reaction,’ said co-author Mark Eichengreen, assistant professor of philosophy and social sciences at Baylor University in Houston.

‘This suggests, in a human environment, that the social effects of a stranger’s social contact may be particularly strong in people who already harbor a certain self-fulfilling prophecy.’

The study was published online July 15 in the journal Science.

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