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Free will takes flight: how our brains respond to approaching menace

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Free will takes flight: how our brains respond to approaching menace
Topic: Science 11:51 am EDT, Aug 25, 2007

Wellcome Trust scientists have identified for the first time how our brain's response changes the closer a threat gets. Using a Pac Man-like computer game where a volunteer is pursued by an artificial predator, the researchers showed that the fear response moves from the strategic areas of the brain towards more reactive responses as the artificial predator approaches.

When faced with a threat - such as a large bear - humans, like other animals, alter their behaviour depending on whether the threat is close or distant. This is because different defence mechanisms are needed depending on whether, for example, the bear is fifty feet away, when being aware of its presence may be enough, or five feet away, when we might need to fight or run away.

To investigate what happens in the brain in such a situation, researchers at the Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging at University College London created a game where subjects were chased through a maze by an artificial predator – if caught, they would receive a mild electric shock. The researchers then measured their brain activity using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). The results are published today in the journal 'Science'.

See also Nathan Myhrvold's photo essay on African lions.

Free will takes flight: how our brains respond to approaching menace



 
 
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