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  • JuliaJuliaJULIA.

  • WHAT!?

  • Hey guys Julia here for DNews

  • Have you guys ever been on a train playing on your phone and suddenly youve missed

  • your train stop? Or if youre like me, your family thinks youve suddenly gone deaf

  • when youve got your nose stuck in a book. This has become an actual recurring problem

  • in my life. But aha! Science vindicates me! Apparently focusing on something visual does

  • makes us kind of deaf. It happens to most of us.

  • It’s calledinattentional deafnessaccording to a study published in the journal

  • Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics. The researchers tested over 100 participants and

  • had them focus on tasks on a computer screen and they played a noticeable tone. When the

  • task demanded more attention, eight out of ten participants failed to notice the tone.

  • And this isn’t exactly news. Humans aren’t that good at paying attention to lots of different

  • things at the same time. We can focus, we just can’t pay attention. Researchers have

  • known for years aboutinattentional blindness”, which like it sounds is when you don’t see

  • something happening because you were focused on something else. The classic example is

  • theinvisible gorilla test”. Where you watch people pass a basket ball back and forth

  • and count how many times they passed it. But in the middle of the video a person in a gorilla

  • suit walks in, beats their chest, and walks out. In one study of this video, 42% of people

  • didn’t notice the gorilla. At all because they were so focused on the basketball.

  • So what’s going on? Well a recent study published in the Journal of Neuroscience found

  • our brains aren’t as efficient as we’d like to think. In this small study, researchers

  • hooked up 13 volunteers to a brain activity measuring device called a MEG. This machine

  • is used to measure how long it takes for anunusual sensory signalto get from your

  • brain to your consciousness. Basically, how long it takes for you to recognize something

  • after you see or hear it. This typically takes 300msec, and is referred to as a p3 reading

  • .

  • In the study the volunteers were given a visually demanding task, like matching things on a

  • computer. While they were engrossed in their task, the researchers played a tone. The scientists

  • found that the volunteers were so focused on matching things, their P3 response was

  • suppressed. Which means they didn’t consciously perceive the sound. And another reading suggested

  • that they didn’t even hear it.

  • The MEG also looked at activity in the superior temporal sulcus and posterior middle temporal

  • gyrus, which are parts of our brain that usually light up in response to hearing a sound. But

  • since the volunteers were so focused on the task, even this reading was weak. So really,

  • when youre focusing really hard on something, your brain barely hears it and it doesn’t

  • even reach your consciousness.

  • The researchers found that this is because the senses of hearing and vision share a limited

  • neural resource. Simply put, your brain doesn’t have the resources to consciously perceive

  • multiple things at the same time.

  • So take that mom and dad! I wasn’t ignoring you when I was reading, I literally couldn’t

  • hear you!

JuliaJuliaJULIA.

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