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Friday, June 5, 2009

Daydreaming Promotes Problem-Solving

New research indicates that when the brain wanders ~ as in daydreaming ~ it is working even harder to solve problems.

Scientists scanning the brains of people inside MRI machines found that a "default network" deep inside a human brain becomes more active during daydreaming. The scans also revealed intense activity in the executive network, the outlying region of the brain associated with complex problem-solving, said neuroscientist Kalina Christoff.

According to Cosmos Magazine:
"People assume that when the mind wanders away it just gets turned off ~ but we show the opposite, that when it wanders, it turns on," said Christoff, head of a neuroscience laboratory at the University of British Columbia.

The findings, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggest daydreaming might be a better way to solve problems than intense focusing.

"People who let themselves daydream might not think in the same focused way as when performing a goal-oriented task, but they bring in more mental and brain resources," said Christoff.

She argued that now people might change their attitudes towards daydreamers. "Within ourselves, we have absorbed that attitude that mind wandering is a bad thing. We're harsh on ourselves, if we catch ourselves mind wandering," she said. "A more playful attitude might allow you to call in more resources."
Some research indicates people typically spend a third of their waking time daydreaming. "It's a big part of our lives, but it's been largely ignored by science," Christoff said.

Click here for the complete Cosmos Magazine article.
Painting is "The Daydream" by Dante Gabriel Rossetti, 1880.

3 comments:

Trée said...

Very interesting. Most of my writing takes place before I am fully awake. I can't talk but I can type and write until the third cup of coffee kicks in and then my creative juices dry up; until the next morning.

Sylvie said...

Very cool. I wish they had found this out years ago. Still it's good to know. I find that letting your mind wander a bit when you have a tough problem, when you come back to deal with it the problem seems much simpler.

Gregory LeFever said...

Trée: I would have never guessed. You're so prolific, it's hard to believe your stories and poetry happen so soon in the day. Thanks for the comment!

Sylvie: So true. My brain solves most of my most perplexing problems when I stop thinking about them as well. Suddenly, out of the blue, a solution pops up. Thank you, too, for stopping by!