Mobile phones may help partially sighted ””see”” better

Washington, May 19 (ANI): Mobile phones or hand-held games consoles can be used to provide training course for partially-sighted people, helping them become more self-reliable, according to a new study.

The new research has found that a computer-based technique developed and assessed by Durham University improved partially-sighted people””s ability to ””see”” better. It may eventually improve and broaden the portfolio of rehabilitation techniques for partially-sighted patients.

The study tested the technique on patients who suffer from a condition affecting their sight called hemianopia.

Hemianopia sufferers lose half of their visual field due to stroke or other brain injury. They are heavily dependent on others as they struggle with balance, walking, finding things around the house, and they are not normally able to drive.

The study, which tested patients”” visual ability before and after the training, found that patients became faster and more accurate at detecting objects, such as coloured dots or numbers, on a computer screen.

The researchers believe the test helped patients to compensate for their lost vision by exploring their ””blind field”” more, which is the part of the visual field affected by the brain damage. Further research is needed to pinpoint exactly why the technique helps patients to ””see”” better but the scientists believe it is likely due to improved attention, concentration and awareness of their visual problems.

The study findings offer hope that people who receive regular training like this could live more independently in their day-to-day lives because their visual ability would be improved.

Lead researcher, Dr Alison Lane, from Durham University””s Psychology Department, said: “This research shows us that basic training works in getting people to use their ””poor”” visual side better.

“Although we are not yet sure why this happens, we think it might be because training increases their attention, concentration and awareness of their ””blind”” field.

“We think attention is key in improving people””s abilities to use their limited vision.”

She added: “This simple technique is a very viable rehabilitation option and in future could be easily accessible at low cost to everyone who needs it.”

The Durham study compared two types of rehabilitation techniques – one focused on exploration and the other on attention. Neither training option is currently available on the NHS although alternative training programmes can be bought privately.

The research, which tested 46 patients, found that the basic attention training without the need for patients to move their eyes extensively was for the most part as effective at rehabilitation as the more specialised exploration technique.

The scientists say patients may even be able to see similar improvements in their vision by playing mainstream computer games, particularly those whereby you need to scan virtual environments with your eyes.

The study has been published in the academic journal, Brain. (ANI)

Music helps Alzheimer”s sufferers in remembering new information

Washington, May 13 (ANI): Patients with Alzheimer”s disease (AD) are better able to remember new verbal information when it is provided in the context of music even when compared to healthy, older adults, claim researchers from Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM).

The findings, which currently appear on-line in Neuropsychologia, offer possible applications in treating and caring for patients with AD.

AD, the most common form of dementia, is characterized by a general, progressive decline in cognitive function that typically presents first as impaired episodic memory. The onset and rate of this decline tends to vary across cognitive domains, and some functions may be preferentially spared in patients with AD.

To determine whether music can enhance new learning of information, AD patients and healthy controls were presented with either the words spoken, or the lyrics sung with full musical accompaniment along with the printed lyrics on a computer screen. The participants were presented visually with the lyrics to 40 songs. Twenty of the song lyrics were accompanied by their corresponding sung recording and 20 were accompanied by their spoken recording.

After each presentation, participants were asked to indicate whether or not they were previously familiar with the song they had just heard. The BUSM researchers found accuracy was greater in the sung condition than in the spoken condition for AD patients but not for healthy older controls.

“Our results confirmed our hypothesis that patients with AD performed better on a task of recognition memory for the lyrics of songs when those lyrics were accompanied by a sung recording than when they were accompanied by a spoken recording,” said senior author Brandon Ally, PhD, an assistant professor of neurology and director of Neuropsychology Research at the BUSM Center for Translational Cognitive Neuroscience. “However, contrary to our hypothesis, healthy older adults showed no such benefit of music, he added. (ANI)

Resting fat people not lazier than skinnier counterparts

Washington, Apr 21 (ANI): When a slim person is seen laying down watching TV, people assume they”re resting. But when people see a fat individual relaxing, it”s automatically assumed they”re lazy and unmotivated.

Now, Tanya Berry, from the U of A”s Faculty of Physical Education and Recreation, says these stereotypes about overweight people need to be addressed.

According to Berry, just because a person is overweight, it doesn”t mean they don”t exercise, and just because a person is thin, it doesn”t mean they are fit and healthy.

In the University of Alberta research, Berry had a group of study participants look at a number of pictures that would flash on a computer screen.

After each photo a sedentary word such as “lazy” would appear.

After the participants looked at each picture they were asked to say the colour of each word. Berry says when a picture of a thin “couch potato” came up, the participants were quick to say the colour of the word that appeared. But when a photo of an overweight person lying down appeared, the study participants paused.

Berry concluded that the slow reaction resulted as the stereotyped thoughts automatically set in, with the participant thinking about the person being lazy rather than thinking about the colour of the word. (ANI)

Fast food makes us impatient

Washington, March 26 (ANI): Fast food is not only bad for health, it can trigger impatience and hasty behaviour in people, a new study has found.

The original idea behind fast food is to increase efficiency, allowing people to quickly finish a meal so they can move on to other matters.

Now, researchers at the University of Toronto have found that the mere exposure to fast food and related symbols can make people impatient, increasing preference for time saving products, and reducing willingness to save.

“Fast food represents a culture of time efficiency and instant gratification,” said Chen-Bo Zhong, who co-wrote the paper with colleague Sanford DeVoe.

“The problem is that the goal of saving time gets activated upon exposure to fast food regardless of whether time is a relevant factor in the context,” Bo Zhong added.

In one experiment, the researchers flashed fast food symbols, such as the golden arch of McDonald”s, on a computer screen for a few milliseconds, so quick that participants couldn”t consciously identify what they saw.

They found that this unconscious exposure increased participants” reading speed in a subsequent task compared to those in a control condition, even when there was no advantage to finishing sooner.

In another study, participants who recalled a time when they eat at a food restaurant subsequently preferred time-saving products—such as two-in-one shampoo—over regular products.

A final experiment found people exposed to fast food logos exhibited greater reluctance for saving —choose a smaller immediate payment rather than opting for a much larger delayed payment.

The study is to be published in a forthcoming issue of Psychological Science. (ANI)

Graziers to get flood help online

The Queensland Government has organised an online flood assistance forum today for primary producers who cannot get off their properties to access information about help.

The web conference will involve speakers from the Queensland Rural Adjustment Authority, the Department of Communities and the Rural Financial Counselling Service.

Alex Stirton from the Department of Employment, Economic Development and Innovation says people can use their home computer and telephone to interact with speakers.

“We realise that a lot of producers probably aren’t able to leave home due to the floods, so we thought it was a good chance to get what information there is to producers as far as assistance from the recent floods,” he said.

“This is the first [online seminar] we’ve run for a natural disaster.”

Mr Stirton says the seminar is easy to use.

“It is an interactive seminar so producers can participate from their own homes,” he said.

“Producers register for the ‘webinar’ and receive an invite.

“They have to dial in over the telephone and it is done across the computer – so the audio is over the telephone and they watch the computer screen as the presenters go through their presentation.”

Online video-chats making blind dates a thing of the past

Melbourne, Mar 10 (ANI): With the advent of video dating services that allow potential partners to see each other via webcams, the trend of blind dates and the uncertainty that comes with them are coming to an end.

An increasing number of video dating services are appearing on the web, with an Australian service called Skyecandy leading the charge.

Founder of Sydney-based Skyecandy, Melonie Ryan, said that the newly launched dating service worked with Skype, the online video and audio chatting service.

Skyecandy users can sign up for up to 10 five-minute online speed dates in a row, with partners chosen on their age, basic details and location.

Users then spend a minute between dates rating participants on their friendliness and whether they”d like to exchange details to chat again.

Ryan said that so far, the service had attracted about 18,000 users, with online daters in Australia and the United States the fastest to adopt it.

One user Solicitor Kristyna Drummond-Hay, 27, said she tried the service after finding it while looking for Skype software.

She said online video dating was “nerve-racking at first”, but very soon she started likening seeing her online dates live on her computer screen.

“I”ve been on dating sites like RSVP and Oasis Active and people write what they think a woman wants to hear, but in front of your face you can pick up on their mannerisms and the tone of their voice and judge how genuine they are,” the Courier Mail quoted Drummond-Hay as saying. (ANI)

Japanese railway workers face enforced ‘smile scans’

London, Jul 7 (ANI): Railway workers in Japan are facing enforced “smile scans” every morning in a bid to boost their customer services, says a report.

According to the Mainichi Daily News, more than 500 staff at Keihin Electric Express Railway are subjected to daily face scans by “smile police” bosses, reports the Telegraph.

The “smile scan” software, developed by the Japanese company Omron, produces a sweeping analysis of a smile based on facial characteristics, from lip curves and eye movements to wrinkles.

After scanning a face, the device produces a rating of 0 to 100 depending on the estimated value of the fulfilled potential of a person’s biggest smile.

For those with a below-par grin, one of an array of smile-boosting messages will pop up on the computer screen ranging from “you still look too serious” to “lift up your mouth corners”.

A growing number of service industries are reportedly using the new Omron Smile Scan system for “smile training” among its staff.

Workers at Keihin Electric Express Railway receive a print out of their daily smiles, which they are expected to keep with them throughout the day to inspire them to smile at all times. (ANI)

‘Thinking cap’ to boost brainpower comes closer to reality

London, July 7 (ANI): Taking a step closer towards a ‘thinking cap’ that can enhance the mind’s ability to learn, scientists have found that stimulating the brain with magnets could boost a person’s learning ability.

It was found that when a magnetic pulse was applied to the premotor cortex- the area of the brain just behind the forehead- the brain’s ability to learn a task and remember it was greatly enhanced.

The researchers, led by Dr Lara Boyd at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, have claimed that the technique could be used to enhance intellectual capacity, and help those with learning difficulties.

For the study, the researchers tested the ability of 30 volunteers to track a target on a computer screen with a red dot using a joystick.

During the task, the target would move randomly, then enter a programmed pattern, and finally return to moving randomly.

The participants were not aware of the repeated section, believing that movements were random throughout.

Some of the volunteers had their brain stimulated by magnets, while others did not.

It was found that participants, who had received the stimulation, were significantly better than the other groups at tracking the target during the repeated section of the test.

They showed no significant difference in improvement during the random sections.

Boyd said that the study demonstrated that magnetic stimulation could boost learning skills and eventually lead to a “thinking cap”.

“With this tool we hope to be able to promote learning in patient populations who otherwise have great difficulty in acquiring new motor skills,” the Telegraph quoted her as saying.

She added: “In fact we are actively investigating this possibility right now in my lab.” he findings of the study have been published in the journal BMC Neuroscience. (ANI)

Subliminal messages force people into doing what they actually wanted to do

Washington, July 5 (ANI): Why is it that you were not planning to go for shopping but still end up going, and return home with a lot of new things? Well, this happens because you apparently wanted to go, but were not consciously aware of it, say researchers.

Dutch researcher Martijn Veltkamp has revealed that subliminal messages motivate people to do things that they already wanted to do, reports Science Daily.

However, this is only successful if a subliminal message matches a biological need, and if the behaviour is associated with a positive effect.

The researchers said that to make people behave in a certain way, the idea for such behaviour must first be planted in their minds.

Once the idea has been planted in their minds (so-called ‘priming’), either a lack of something (deprivation) or a positive association with a certain action can ensure that they are actually motivated to carry out that action.

Veltkamp studied this interaction in a series of experiments.

During the study he flashed the words ‘drinking’ and ‘thirsty’ onto a computer screen very quickly, so that they could not be consciously perceived.

This priming is what researchers call ‘making the representation of the behaviour accessible’.

In one group of participants, this was combined with deprivation hey were thirsty. In another group the word ‘drinking’ was combined with positive words, which led to a positive association.

eltkamp combined the three factors in different ways, and then registered how willing the participants were to have a drink.

The study observed that motivation for carrying out certain actions (such as drinking) occurred when the action matched an existing deprivation, or had a positive association.

To understand positive association, the researchers let the participants eat cucumber to alleviate fluid deprivation.

As expected, the participants that had only been deprived of fluid were less motivated to drink later on, but the motivation stayed high in those people whose motivation to drink was partly due to positive association. (ANI)

Drinkers don’t remember that their minds wander

Washington, May 06 (ANI): A moderate dose of alcohol increases a person’s mind wandering, while at the same time reducing the likelihood of noticing that one’s mind has wandered, according to a new study.

The study offers the first evidence that alcohol disrupts an individual’s ability to realize his or her mind has wandered, suggesting impairment of a psychological state called meta-consciousness.

These findings suggest that distinct processes are responsible for causing a thought to occur, as opposed to allowing its presence to be noticed.

Researchers studied a group of men, half of whom had consumed alcohol and half of whom had been given a placebo.

After 30 minutes, the participants began reading a portion of Tolstoy’s ‘War and Peace’ from a computer screen.

The results revealed that while they were reading the text those who had consumed alcohol were mind-wandering without realizing it about 25 percent of the time-more than double that of those who had not consumed alcohol.

However, as far as ‘catching themselves’ zoning out, those who had been drinking were no more likely to do so than the other group.

Participants in the alcohol group would have had many more opportunities to catch themselves because they zoned out more often-but they did not. They were impaired in their ability to notice their own mind-wandering episodes.

“Researchers have known for a while that alcohol consumption can interfere with our limited-capacity powers of concentration. But this “double-whammy” may explain why alcohol often disrupts efforts to exercise self-control-a process requiring the ability to become aware of one’s current state in order to regulate it,” said University of Pittsburgh professor of psychology Michael Sayette.

The paper is published in this month’s issue of Psychological Science. (ANI)

3D images shed new light on ancient Catacombs of Rome

London, May 4 (ANI): Austrian and Italian archaeologists, architects and computer scientists, have teamed up to create the first fully comprehensive 3D images of the ancient Catacombs of Rome, which date back to the 2nd Century AD.

There are more than 40 of Rome’s underground Christian, Jewish and pagan burial sites, the Catacombs, which stretch over 170 km.

But, until now, they have never been fully documented, their vast scale only recorded with handmade maps.

According to a report by BBC News, that is now changing, following a three-year project to create the first fully comprehensive three-dimensional image using laser scanners.

A team of 10 Austrian and Italian archaeologists, architects and computer scientists have started with the largest catacomb, Saint Domitilla, just outside the Italian capital.

The tunnels, caves, galleries and burial chambers of Saint Domitilla stretch for about 15km (9 miles) over a number of levels.

At a time when Christians, in particular, were persecuted, the Catacombs became a relatively safe place to bury the dead.

The soft, volcanic tufa rock was an especially workable, yet durable, material that was burrowed out over the course of nearly three centuries.

Yet, because of concerns about safety, only about 500m (1,640ft) are accessible to the public today.

The new, moving, images of this entire underground system will change all that and open up this beautiful subterranean world in a way that it has never been seen before.

On a computer screen, the viewer can now see the whole underground complex. Using different buttons on the key pad, one can zoom in on the tunnels.

The viewer can travel “through” walls, down corridors and into chambers, giving the first real sense of its beauty, scale and detail.

Paintings on walls, which have not been seen in nearly 2,000 years, are now visible – their colours vivid and clear.

“It is not a virtual image, it is not animation – what you are seeing is real data,” said Zimmerman.

“Well, you could have filmed each room. But that would not have given you the ability to ‘travel’ through the catacomb in a way that the scanned images allow,” he said.

According to Zimmerman, “Its moving, 3D flexibility, gives you the chance to compare areas, to assess the ways the Catacombs were developed over time, to analyse how and why those who built them did what they did. That’s never been possible before.” (ANI)

Short-term memories ‘don’t fade away gradually’

Washington, Apr 30 (ANI): For many years, scientists have held that short-term memories don’t suddenly disappear, but grow gradually more imprecise over the course of several seconds. However, a new study has found just the opposite.

In the study, researchers at the University of California, Davis, found that their subjects retained temporary memories of an object’s colour or shape for at least four seconds.

After that, the memories began to wink out like streetlights at daybreak, remaining quite accurate until they suddenly disappeared.

To test the accuracy of short-term visual memory, Weiwei Zhang, a postdoctoral scholar, and Steve Luck, a professor of psychology, both at the UC Davis Center for Mind and Brain, devised a pair of tests, both of which could separately measure two things: the accuracy of a short-term memory and the probability that the memory still existed. Each test was given to 12 adults.

In the first test, three squares – each with a different colour fill – flashed for a tenth of a second on a computer screen. After an interval of one, four or 10 seconds a wheel showing the entire spectrum of colours appeared on the screen.

The three squares also reappeared, only now they were colourless and one of them was highlighted. Subjects were asked to recall the colour of the highlighted square and click on the area of the wheel that most closely matched it. Each subject repeated this test 150 times for each of the three memory retention intervals.

When subjects retained a memory of the colour, they clicked very close to it on the wheel – the distance between the click and the actual colour indicating the accuracy of the memory. When colour had disappeared from memory, however, subjects clicked at random on the wheel.

The second test was similar to the first, but used shapes instead of colours.

Luck said that the study revealed that subjects ‘either had the memory or didn’t have the memory and the probability of having it decreased between four and ten seconds. The memories did not gradually fade away.’

The finding provides insight into the underlying mechanisms behind memory formation and retention.

“The memories are not like flashlights that get progressively weaker as the battery runs low. They are more like a laptop computer that continues working at the same speed until it suddenly shuts down,” Luck said.

The study has been published in the April issue of the journal Psychological Science. (ANI)

Depression impairs ability to learn ‘good things in life’

Washington, Mar 19 (ANI): Depression is often associated with negative thoughts and emotions, but a new study has suggested that the real trouble with depressed people is the failure to appreciate positive experiences.

Researchers at Ohio State University found that depressed and non-depressed people were about equal in their ability to learn negative information that was presented to them.

However, depressed people weren’t nearly as successful at learning positive information, as were their non-depressed counterparts.

“Since depression is characterized by negative thinking, it is easy to assume that depressed people learn the negative lessons of life better than non-depressed people – but that’s not true,” said Laren Conklin, co-author of the study and a graduate student in psychology at Ohio State.

For the study, researchers tested 34 college students, 17 of whom met criteria for clinical depression and 17 of whom were not depressed.

Daniel Strunk, co-author of the study and assistant professor of psychology at Ohio State, said that the key to conducting this study was the use of a computer game paradigm. The developers affectionately call the game “BeanFest.”

It involves people encountering images of beans on the computer screen. The beans could be good or bad, depending on their shape and the number of speckles they had.

One of measures researchers used in the study classified whether the depressed participants were currently undergoing a mild, moderate or severe episode of depression.

In the study, those undergoing a severe depressive episode did more poorly on correctly choosing positive beans than those with mild depression, further strengthening the results.

The study appears in the March issue of the Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry. (ANI)

Blink often to keep computer-related eye woes at bay

Washington, Mar 11 (ANI): Blinking frequently while sitting in front of the computer helps reduce the risk of dry eyes from prolonged use, say researchers.

Keshia Sims Elder, assistant professor in the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Optometry, has revealed the blinking frequently helps keeps the front surface of the eye moist.

“Many work in front of a computer all day and this can leave vision vulnerable to problems like dry eyes, eyestrain and other problems that may signal computer vision syndrome,” said Elder.

There are other ways to protect sight and avoid computer vision syndrome, Elder said.

Undergoing a regular comprehensive eye exam eyes and wearing correct eyeglass or contact-lens can help avoid computer-related eye woes.

Just 20 seconds of rest to eyes can help prevent dry eyes. Even using a humidifier will help boost eye moisture.

“Special glasses and computer screen filters are available to help reduce glare and discomfort,” Elder said.

Pre-existing, uncorrected vision problems like farsightedness, astigmatism and age-related eye conditions may also contribute to computer vision syndrome. (ANI)

Elderly control emotions better than young adults

Washington, Mar 5 (ANI): While regulating a feeling of disgust, elderly carry out memory-intensive tasks better than young adults, says a new study.

The study, published in the March issue of the journal Psychology and Aging, found that regulating emotions – such as reducing negative emotions or inhibiting unwanted thoughts – is a resource-demanding process that disrupts the ability of young adults to simultaneously or subsequently perform tasks.

“This study is among the first to demonstrate that the costs of emotion regulation vary across age groups,” said Fredda Blanchard-Fields, chair of Georgia Tech’s School of Psychology and the study’s lead author.

The study included 72 young adults who were 20 to 30 years old and 72 adults who were 60 to 75 years old.

For investigation, three-fourths of the participants watched a two-minute Fear Factor television clip depicting a woman eating something revolting in order to win money.
he video was intended to induce a feeling of disgust in the participants. The remaining participants comprising the control group watched a two-minute clip of two men talking about a woman’s dress and subsequently sharing a beer in silence that was not intended to induce emotions.

After watching one of the videos, each participant played a computer memory game. For the task, a number – between zero and nine – appeared on a computer screen and each participant had to determine whether that number matched the number that appeared on the screen two numbers earlier. Twenty-two trials were presented before the task concluded and a combined performance score was computed.

“To compare the effect that a person’s emotion regulation strategies had on his or her performance at the working memory task, the participants who watched the disgust-inducing film were divided into three groups and given different emotion-regulatory instructions,” explained Blanchard-Fields.

One group was told to change their negative reaction to the disgusting television clip into positive feelings as quickly as possible and another group was advised to maintain the intensity of their negative reaction to the video and to not change their feelings in any way. A third group received no instructions.

The control group that watched the neutral video of the men drinking beer also received no instructions. The volunteers then completed two additional memory games.

The study showed that all of the participants performed better at the working memory task after watching the clip than before, likely due to the learning process. However, after being told to turn their disgust into positive feelings, the young adults performed significantly worse than the older adults in the memory task. Older adults who were given the same instructions continued to improve at the memory task.

“Negative emotions can be toxic and disrupt one’s balance in life, so the ability of older adults to regulate negative emotions serves to enhance their quality of life,” noted Blanchard-Fields. (ANI)

Scientists identify ‘happiness’ gene

London, Feb 25 (ANI): If life looks joyful in spite of recession, job insecurity and expanding waistline, then you should consider thanking your “brightside” gene.

A gene that affects if we’re cheery or gloomy has been tracked down by British researchers, reports The Guardian.

The groundbreaking study claims that individuals who carry the gene don’t pay much attention to negative things happening In their lives and, instead, focus on the happier aspects of life. In the process, they end up becoming more sociable and are generally in better shape psychologically.

Elaine Fox, head of psychology at Essex University, said: “We’ve shown for the first time that a genetic variation is linked with a tendency to look on the bright side of life. This is a key mechanism underlying resilience to general life stress.”

To reach the conclusion, the research team checked how long it took people to react to good and bad images that flashed up on a computer screen.

The study involved more than 100 volunteers.

The positive snaps were that of a couple hugging and someone sailing along in a boat. The negative images included a photo of someone being mugged.

Volunteers’ genetic tests revealed that a tendency to ignore negative images and dwell on the positive ones was strongly linked to a variation in a gene that controls serotonin, which also branded as the brain’s main “feel-good” chemical.

Every individual inherits two versions of the gene, either two short ones, two long ones, or one of each. People who had two longs versions were most likely to focus on the positives, according to the study published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B. (ANI)

Be helpful to attract prospective partners this Valentine’s Day

London, Feb 14 (ANI): For those wondering how to impress their prospective partners this Valentine’s day, being helpful may prove to be a great mantra.

Researchers at University of Sussex suggest that changing the way one acts, rather than the looks, can make one more appealing to the opposite sex.

The researchers have found that volunteers subconsciously rated faces as more attractive if they felt their owner’s behaviour had been beneficial.

During the study, 64 volunteers were first asked to rate the attractiveness of a set six “average-looking” faces, which appeared on a computer screen on a scale of minus 100 to plus 100.

They were then asked to identify dots, which would appear on either the left or right side of the screen.

Before it was shown, faces appeared looking either to the left or right. The volunteers asked to concentrate on the dots.

However, they were then later asked to rate the faces again based on how attractive they thought they were.

They found that almost 57 per cent found a face more attractive if it had pointed in the correct direction of the dot.

The results also showed that faces of the opposite sex were more effective at directing participants’ attention.

“In other words, women pay more attention to where men look and vice versa. The faces that gave accurate cues as to where the target dot appeared increased in attractiveness,” the Telegraph quoted Dr. Beena Khurana as saying.

“The traditional belief is that the more we find a face attractive the more we pay attention to it. But here we show that we can cause a face to become attractive as a function of the way it behaves.

“We think that perceived attractiveness is both dynamic and responsive to the behaviour of people,” she added.

The findings have been are published in the journal Social Cognition. (ANI)

Your ‘gut feeling’ may lead to best decisions

Washington, February 9 (ANI): It’s time that people gave due importance to the words “I have a gut feeling”, for a brain-reading study from Northwestern University suggests that intuitions may actually help solve all sorts of problems one faces in everyday life.

Researchers behind the study say that it offers precise electrophysiological evidence that such decisions may sometimes not be guesswork after all.

They have revealed that guesses made by the participants during the study turned out to be as accurate or more accurate than when they thought they consciously remembered.

“We may actually know more than we think we know in everyday situations, too,” Nature magazine quoted Ken Paller, professor of psychology at Northwestern, as saying.

“Unconscious memory may come into play, for example, in recognizing the face of a perpetrator of a crime or the correct answer on a test. Or the choice from a horde of consumer products may be driven by memories that are quite alive on an unconscious level,” the researcher added.

According to Paller, the study links lucky guesses to valid memories, and suggests that people need to be more receptive to multiple types of knowledge.

In their study report, the researchers have revealed that during the first part of the memory test, the participants were shown a series of colourful kaleidoscope images that flashed on a computer screen. Half of the images were viewed with full attention as participants tried to memorize them.

When the participants were seeing each of the other images, they heard a spoken number, such as 3, 8 or 4, which they had to keep in mind until the next trial, when they indicated whether it was odd or even.

The researchers said that the participants had to listen to a new number on every trial, and press a button to complete the number task.

They said that it could be said in other words that the participants could focus on memorizing half of the images, but were greatly distracted from memorizing the others.

A short time later, they viewed pairs of similar kaleidoscope images in a recognition test.

“Remarkably, people were more accurate in selecting the old image when they had been distracted than when they had paid full attention. They also were more accurate when they claimed to be guessing than when they registered some familiarity for the image,” Paller said.

While splitting attention during a memory test usually makes memory worse, Paller said: “But our research showed that even when people weren’t paying as much attention, their visual system was storing information quite well.”
The researcher added: “The novel results show that when people try to remember, they can know more than they think they know.”

Writing about their findings in the journal Nature Neuroscience, the researchers revealed that their study built upon a body of research that shows that amnesia victims with severe memory problems often have strong implicit memories.

They said that their work indicated that people should not rely only on conscious memory.

“It suggests that we also need to develop our intuitive nature and creativity. Intuition may have an important role in finding answers to all sorts of problems in everyday life — including big ones such as our ailing economy,” Paller said. (ANI)