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Your brain doesn’t work the same on Zoom, scientists say
Your brain doesn’t work the same on Zoom, scientists say
Your brain doesn’t work the same when you speak to someone on Zoom, scientists have confirmed. Neural signalling is significantly less when chatting to someone through a video call rather than having a face-to-face conversation, the new study found. When researchers watched the brain of someone talking in real life, they found that there was a detailed and complex system of neurological activity. On Zoom, however, that was dramatically less. It suggests that there is still something fundamentally lacking about speaking with someone online. People’s faces are not able to light up people’s brains in the same way, the researchers suggest. That is something of a surprise: current models suggest that the brain should process people’s faces in the same way whether they are on Zoom or in real life, given the features of them are the same. But the new study suggests that there really is something fundamentally different between the two contexts. “In this study we find that the social systems of the human brain are more active during real live in-person encounters than on Zoom,” said Joy Hirsch, a Yale professor who was the lead author on the new study. “Zoom appears to be an impoverished social communication system relative to in-person conditions.” To find that, researchers studied people’s brains in real time as well as looking at other signals, such as where people’s eyes moved. As well as increased neural activity, the researchers found that people’s eyes hovered for longer on the real faces, for instance. The two people’s brains also seemed to be more co-ordinated. That suggests that there are more social cues being shared between the two people, they said. “Overall, the dynamic and natural social interactions that occur spontaneously during in-person interactions appear to be less apparent or absent during Zoom encounters,” Professor Hirsch said. “This is a really robust effect.” The study suggests that face-to-face encounters remain very important, even as technology companies and others come up with new ways for us to interact with people remotely, the authors said. “Online representations of faces, at least with current technology, do not have the same ‘privileged access’ to social neural circuitry in the brain that is typical of the real thing,” said Professor Hirsch. The findings are described in a new paper, ‘Separable Processes for Live “In-Person” and Live “Zoom-like” Faces’, published in Imaging Neuroscience. Read More The Apple Watch feature everyone has been waiting for has finally arrived Scientists find surprise ‘layer’ underneath surface of Mars Apple’s plans for the future of AirPods might just have been revealed
2023-10-27 20:21
EU Commission sticks to US economist pick for senior antitrust job
EU Commission sticks to US economist pick for senior antitrust job
By Foo Yun Chee BRUSSELS The European Commission stuck to its guns on Friday, saying it was not
2023-07-17 18:47
Revolutionize Your Cleaning Routine on Tineco's Prime Day: Five Unbeatable Deals You Can't Ignore
Revolutionize Your Cleaning Routine on Tineco's Prime Day: Five Unbeatable Deals You Can't Ignore
MILAN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jul 11, 2023--
2023-07-11 14:17
Citi Eyes ‘Complex’ Debt Swaps Once Dominated by Credit Suisse
Citi Eyes ‘Complex’ Debt Swaps Once Dominated by Credit Suisse
Citigroup Inc. is looking to expand its footprint in a market that’s so far been dominated by Credit
2023-07-10 18:21
EU Floats New Option to Bridge French-German Divide on Nuclear
EU Floats New Option to Bridge French-German Divide on Nuclear
The European Union is running out of time to break a stalemate between France and Germany about nuclear’s
2023-10-11 20:22
The Best Laptop Deals for May 2023
The Best Laptop Deals for May 2023
Has it been a while since your last laptop upgrade? Advances in screen resolution, memory
2023-05-16 03:16
How does MLB take over a local broadcast? Even with months of planning, it's a mad scramble
How does MLB take over a local broadcast? Even with months of planning, it's a mad scramble
Major League Baseball's takeover of San Diego Padres' broadcasts involved months of planning, a playbook MLB is following this week with Arizona Diamondbacks' telecasts
2023-07-19 18:23
Thea Booysen: 5 unknown facts about fan-favorite YouTuber MrBeast's girlfriend
Thea Booysen: 5 unknown facts about fan-favorite YouTuber MrBeast's girlfriend
MrBeast and Thea Booysen reportedly started dating in February 2022, after the former broke up with Maddy Spidell
2023-05-31 18:59
Iowa law limits gender identity instruction, removes books depicting sex acts from school libraries
Iowa law limits gender identity instruction, removes books depicting sex acts from school libraries
Iowa teachers are now banned from raising gender identity or sexual orientation issues with children through the sixth grade
2023-05-27 01:25
Chef Jose Andres Wins Exemption for Gas Stoves in New Restaurant
Chef Jose Andres Wins Exemption for Gas Stoves in New Restaurant
Celebrity chef Jose Andres was given an exception to use gas appliances in his new Palo Alto restaurant,
2023-05-18 09:56
Sega cancels Creative Assembly shooter Hyenas
Sega cancels Creative Assembly shooter Hyenas
'Hyenas' was due to be released this year but has been axed due to "lower profitability of the European region".
2023-09-28 20:23
Sony Drops in Wake of Ruling Favoring Microsoft-Activision Deal
Sony Drops in Wake of Ruling Favoring Microsoft-Activision Deal
Sony Group Corp. shares fell as much as 2.7% Wednesday in Tokyo after a US federal judge ruled
2023-07-12 10:53