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Bling Makes Your Brain Sing

'Rewarding' objects receive star status in neurological vision systems, study shows

By Randy Dotinga
HealthDay Reporter


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WEDNESDAY, Dec. 24 (HealthDay News) -- A sports car, a diamond ring, ice cream -- some things may make the human brain "pop."

So finds new research showing that neural vision systems get turned on by expensive or "rewarding" objects, even before people realize they're excited.

Text Continues Below



When you know that an object has been rewarding in the past, "your brain is representing them differently," said John Serences, a professor of psychology at the University of California, San Diego. "That may mean that you're seeing things that are of high value more clearly or sharply."

The research suggests that even the parts of the brain that handle the very beginning of the vision-processing system can tell whether something is valuable and should be flagged, Serences said.

In the new study, published in the Dec. 26 issue of the journal Neuron, Serences scanned the brains of 14 college students using fMRI technology, which allows scientists to detect activity in the brain.

The subjects played a game in which they were told to choose between red and green targets. They got 10 cents -- up to a total of $10 -- each time they chose certain targets.

The students learned that some targets would reward them and some wouldn't, and the fMRI imaging showed that their brains reacted differently to targets that had been monetarily rewarding in the past.

"One of the implications is that your brain is signaling to you that the items have been previously rewarded," Serences said. "Our brain is treating those things differently than those that have been associated with no rewards or those that have been associated with fewer rewards than in the past."

In an unusual finding, the researchers found that the brains of the subjects seemed to remember which targets were more rewarding even if the subjects themselves actually forgot.

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Copyright © 2008 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
Last updated 12/24/2008

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SOURCES: John Serences, Ph.D., assistant professor, University of California, San Diego; Dec. 26, 2008, Neuron


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