Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
So you don't think you can have a headache and an itch at the same time?Not sure if this is on topic, but has anyone felt itch and pain simultaneously? The two sensations apparently compete for neural paths, and i can't recall ever having both at the same time. It might even be possible to trade pain for itchiness.
I think you underestimate the capacity of one's brain to walk and chew gum at the same time. I remember being told the myth that we couldn't dream in color. That's probably why I still recall a certain dream from my childhood that had the most vivid colors.
Ketyk got it right when he noted:
Doesn't "multi-tasking" depend on the tasks?
I can drive and listen to the radio.
I can drive and eat a Whopper.
When you say compete for neural paths, are you imagining one solid spinal nerve plugged into the brain? Are you imagining a gate in the brain that only lets one nerve line in at a time?
Best to turn to a source of scientific information and not word of mouth for these questions:
Sounds like the brain chooses to respond to one vision or the other until you also discover:In a related perceptual phenomenon, flash suppression, the percept associated with an image projected into one eye is suppressed by flashing another image into the other eye while the original image remains. ... The majority of cells in the inferior temporal cortex and the superior temporal sulcus of monkeys trained to report their percept during flash suppression follow the animal's percept: when the cell's preferred stimulus is perceived, the cell responds. If the picture is still present on the retina but is perceptually suppressed, the cell falls silent, even though primary visual cortex neurons fire.[17][18] Single-neuron recordings in the medial temporal lobe of epilepsy patients during flash suppression likewise demonstrate abolishment of response when the preferred stimulus is present but perceptually masked.[19]
Blindsight is defined as the ability of people who are cortically blind due to lesions in their striate cortex, also known as primary visual cortex or V1, to respond to visual stimuli that they do not consciously see[1]. The majority of studies on blindsight are conducted on patients who are blind on only one side of their visual field. Following the destruction of the striate cortex, patients are asked to detect, localize, and discriminate amongst visual stimuli that are presented to their blindside often in a forced-response or guessing situation, even though they are not able to actually see the stimulus. Research shows a surprising amount of accuracy in the guesses of blind patients. This ability to guess, at levels significantly above chance, aspects of a visual stimulus, such as location, or type of movement without any conscious awareness of any stimuli is known as Type 1 blindsight. Type 2 blindsight occurs when patients claim to have a feeling that there has been a change within their blind area, for example, movement, but that it was not a visual percept[3][citation needed]. This phenomenon challenges what we once believed to be true, that perceptions must enter consciousness to affect our behavior. Blindsight proves that our behavior can be guided by sensory information of which we are completely unaware. (Carlson, 2010) It may be thought of as a converse of the form of anosognosia known as Anton–Babinski syndrome, in which there is full cortical blindness along with the confabulation of visual experience.
The question becomes, define multi-tasking. Are you talking about actually doing more than one task at a time, say driving and eating, playing a guitar and singing, etc? Or are you talking about having two things receiving conscious attention at the exact same moment?
Then there's the issue how just how much information can a brain remain aware of simultaneously? Look at your computer screen. How many neurons does it take to bring that image into your consciousness center? Include the surrounding room image, the sounds, the smells, your fingers touching the keyboard and your brain also sending commands back and receiving feedback from the movement all the while you may be thinking about being late for work if you don't hurry up and recognizing the faces of your kids who are in the room.
I rest my case.
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