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/ Technology News / 2008 / October 2008 / October 13, 2008 Why a gift is the universal language of love |
Females as good as males in math skills: Study
A new examination of existing studies has indicated that the mathematical skills of boys and girls, as well as men and women, are substantially equal. ANI
Our brains more responsive to friends than to strangers: Study
A new study has shown that peoples brains are more responsive to friends than to strangers, even if the stranger has more in common. ANI
Achilles' heel in aggressive breast tumours uncovered
Fox Chase Cancer Centre researchers have discovered that a loss of protein that initially slows breast cancer formation but then makes the tumours that do arise more aggressive. ANI
People often rely upon gifts to reveal their feelings to others. But how do items placed in a symbolic manner convey different meanings has long been a mystery.
London, October 13 : People often rely upon gifts to reveal their feelings to others. But how do items placed in a symbolic manner convey different meanings has long been a mystery.
A team of researchers from the University of Southern Denmark in Odense says that it probably happens because the brain makes sense of gestures in the same way that as it processes language.
Lead researcher Kristian Tylen used fMRI to scan the brains of volunteers as they viewed pictures of everyday objects arranged to communicate meaning, such as flowers left on a doorstep, followed by the same objects in less meaningful settings, such as flowers growing in the wild.
The researchers observed that the symbolic arrangements prompted more activity in regions associated with verbal communication, such as the left fusiform gyrus, used in reading, and the inferior frontal cortex, linked to semantic meaning.The team further saw that less conventional arrangements, like an art installation, also affected a "verbal" area, producing a pattern of brain activity previously associated with unusual verbal metaphors.
Studies conducted in the past have already shown that the brain processes body language and facial expressions in a similar way to verbal communication.
"It shows that language is more than just the processing of words - it pervades many of our activities," New Scientist quoted Tylen as saying.
ANI