AFP Photo/Fabrice Coffrini
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A team of Swiss scientists set out on
a quest to learn if using smartphones actually makes us smarter. Their study
revealed that using a touchscreen device affects a part of the brain that
processes touch. In a study published in the journal
Current Biology, Swiss researchers said that people who use smartphones have an
enhanced somatosensory cortex.
RT.com reports the team monitored 37 volunteers
over 10 days – 26 of whom used touchscreen phones and 11 of whom used only old
cellphones.
Individuals then had an
electroencephalogram (EEG), which recorded voltage changes from brain activity.
The strongest response was triggered by the thumb, followed by the index and
middle fingers.
“By using
electroencephalography, we measured the cortical potentials in response to
mechanical touch on the thumb, index, and middle fingertips of touchscreen
phone users and nonusers [owning only old-technology mobile phones],” the study said.
Based on the results, the
researchers proposed “that cortical sensory processing in the contemporary
brain is continuously shaped by the use of personal digital technology.”
The significance of the changes in the users’ brains depended on how recent the exposure to screens was, the study clarified.
The significance of the changes in the users’ brains depended on how recent the exposure to screens was, the study clarified.
“The closer
they were to their peak usage, in time, the more brain activity they had
associated with their thumb,” LA Times
quoted the lead investigator of the study and neuroscientist at the University
of Zurich, Arko Ghosh, as saying.
“The findings
don’t offer a major breakthrough for brain science, per se, but they do
represent a clever way to track how the brain adapts during daily activity,” Ghosh said, adding that scientists can now “start extracting which
factors matter for the brain, which don’t, what are the drivers of plasticity
and what are not?”
“To do this, connecting our digital footprints
to brain activity is what we need to do,” he
added.
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