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Kodachromes in the Brain

樱花视频
Published on: 06/26/2014
Last Updated: 09/16/2024
2 minute read

It is easy to be impressed by colorful functional magnetic resonance-imaging (fMRI) photos of activity in the brain. Every introduction-to-psychology textbook has these pictures to show students that there are places in the brain for various cognitive events. William Uttal has been casting doubt on what we really know from fMRI pictures, most recently in Reliability in Cognitive Neuroscience: A Meta-Meta-Analysis.

In his review,  writes that Uttal鈥檚 point concerning the unreliability of these fMRI pictures 鈥渟hould be taken seriously by anyone engaged in research that uses changes in brain images as the dependent variable in a cognitive experiment鈥 (para. 2). Whitaker also points out two methodological problems that Uttal did not consider: one, that the emotional state of a person affects the location of brain activation, and two, what

is actually seen is a computer-generated image of changes in the oxygen concentration in the blood of some veins within the venous network that are presumably draining tissue regions in the brain that have recently been active (para. 8).

Does that really tell us much about what part or parts of the brain are most involved when I balance my checkbook or recall who played shortstop for the White Sox in 1952?

Have cognitive neuroscientists been overselling these Kodachromes in the brain to our students and the public? Isn鈥檛 it more important for psychologists to learn more about how we think than where in the brain we think about something?

Read the Review



By Harry A. Whitaker

PsycCRITIQUES, 2014 Vol 59(23)

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