cellio: (shira)
[personal profile] cellio
When praying (which usually means when at services), I've noticed that there's a background thread that runs in my brain. While the foreground task is reciting the words in the siddur, the background thread is analyzing the words (ok, only some of the words) based on what I've learned so far of grammar. Sometimes I notice something new (oh, that's how that verb is put together!). This is good; direct application aids learning.

But... is there a way to prevent that thread from grabbing focus? Its job, most of the time, is to note things to come back to later, but sometimes it distracts me when I ought not be distracted. Like, say, when I'm leading services. I don't want to surpress it; I just want it to behave.

(Please tell me that other people's brains work this way too? Pretty much any time I'm doing something vaguely "intellectual", there are at least two things going on in my brain, the main activity and the "meta" level that's noticing how I'm processing that main activity.)

(no subject)

Date: 2006-01-27 05:07 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] grouchyoldcoot.livejournal.com
It's a very interesting effect, and I think it happens to everyone to one degree or another. Have you ever had the two threads diverge, and then have a sort of 'interrupt' experience when they get so far apart that they can't both run on the same brain at the same time?

If I could figure out how to make the second thread start and stop, it would be a fantastic fMRI experiment to see if we could see brain activation associated with the second thread. It presumably uses the parts of the brain not heavily taxed by the main thread.

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