An interesting little article about what you are doing when you are 
doing nothing.


http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1580364,00.html

What are you doing when you aren't doing anything at all? If you said 
"nothing," then you have just passed a test in logic and flunked a 
test in neuroscience. When people perform mental tasks--adding 
numbers, comparing shapes, identifying faces--different areas of their 
brains become active, and brain scans show these active areas as 
brightly colored squares on an otherwise dull gray background. But 
researchers have recently discovered that when these areas of our 
brains light up, other areas go dark. This dark network (which 
comprises regions in the frontal, parietal and medial temporal lobes) 
is off when we seem to be on, and on when we seem to be off. If you 
climbed into an MRI machine and lay there quietly, waiting for 
instructions from a technician, the dark network would be as active as 
a beehive. But the moment your instructions arrived and your task 
began, the bees would freeze and the network would fall silent. When 
we appear to be doing nothing, we are clearly doing something. But 
what?

The answer, it seems, is time travel.

The human body moves forward in time at the rate of one second per 
second whether we like it or not. But the human mind can move through 
time in any direction and at any speed it chooses. Our ability to 
close our eyes and imagine the pleasures of Super Bowl Sunday or 
remember the excesses of New Year's Eve is a fairly recent 
evolutionary development, and our talent for doing this is 
unparalleled in the animal kingdom. We are a race of time travelers, 
unfettered by chronology and capable of visiting the future or 
revisiting the past whenever we wish. If our neural time machines are 
damaged by illness, age or accident, we may become trapped in the 
present. Alzheimer's disease, for instance, specifically attacks the 
dark network, stranding many of its victims in an endless now, unable 
to remember their yesterdays or envision their tomorrows.

Why did evolution design our brains to go wandering in time? Perhaps 
it's because an experience is a terrible thing to waste. Moving around 
in the world exposes organisms to danger, so as a rule they should 
have as few experiences as possible and learn as much from each as 
they can. Although some of life's lessons are learned in the moment 
("Don't touch a hot stove"), others become apparent only after the 
fact ("Now I see why she was upset. I should have said something about 
her new dress"). Time travel allows us to pay for an experience once 
and then have it again and again at no additional charge, learning new 
lessons with each repetition. When we are busy having 
experiences--herding children, signing checks, battling traffic--the 
dark network is silent, but as soon as those experiences are over, the 
network is awakened, and we begin moving across the landscape of our 
history to see what we can learn--for free.

Animals learn by trial and error, and the smarter they are, the fewer 
trials they need. Traveling backward buys us many trials for the price 
of one, but traveling forward allows us to dispense with trials 
entirely. Just as pilots practice flying in flight simulators, the 
rest of us practice living in life simulators, and our ability to 
simulate future courses of action and preview their consequences 
enables us to learn from mistakes without making them. We don't need 
to bake a liver cupcake to find out that it is a stunningly bad idea; 
simply imagining it is punishment enough. The same is true for 
insulting the boss and misplacing the children. We may not heed the 
warnings that prospection provides, but at least we aren't surprised 
when we wake up with a hangover or when our waists and our inseams 
swap sizes. The dark network allows us to visit the future, but not 
just any future. When we contemplate futures that don't include 
us--Will the NASDAQ be up next week? Will Hillary run in 2008?--the 
dark network is quiet. Only when we move ourselves through time does 
it come alive.

Perhaps the most startling fact about the dark network isn't what it 
does but how often it does it. Neuroscientists refer to it as the 
brain's default mode, which is to say that we spend more of our time 
away from the present than in it. People typically overestimate how 
often they are in the moment because they rarely take notice when they 
take leave. It is only when the environment demands our attention--a 
dog barks, a child cries, a telephone rings--that our mental time 
machines switch themselves off and deposit us with a bump in the here 
and now. We stay just long enough to take a message and then we slip 
off again to the land of Elsewhen, our dark networks awash in light.



xponent

Paging Dr Bob Maru

rob


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