Are You Thinking What I'm Thinking? The Secret
of Finding Friends Could All Be Down to 'Mind Reading', Say Researchers
by
Rob Waugh
Daily Mail
The secret of popularity may be being able to guess what other
people are thinking and in particular to guess what other people
want.
Researchers found that the area of the brain used to 'mentalise' the technical term for imagining what's inside somebody else's
head is far larger in people with a lot of friends.
The forebrain region found just above the eyes is one of the
most highly evolved areas of the human brain.
It is known to be crucial to social skills and the ability to mentalise,
or guess what other people are thinking.
Scientists found an association between the size of the orbital
frontal cortex the part of the brain just above the eyes and
the number of friends a person has.
Brain scans revealed that volunteers with the largest numbers of
friends also had the largest orbital frontal cortex.
The study proves a link between mind-reading skills
and the ability to maintain a circle of socially significant friends,
as opposed to acquaintances.
Lead researcher Professor Robin Dunbar, from the Institute of Cognitive
and Evolutionary Biology at Oxford University, said: Mentalising
is where one individual is able to follow a natural hierarchy involving
other individuals mind states.
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February
2, 2012
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