Slashdot Mirror


Tool Use Is Just a Trick of the Mind

TwistedOne151 writes to recommend a ScienceNOW article describing the work of a team of Italian neurobiologists who have found the roots of the capacity for tool use in the primate brain: the brain treats the tool as part of the body. The experiment as described is passing clever.

4 of 326 comments (clear)

  1. Transcendence of the Menial by ShakaUVM · · Score: 5, Informative

    Seems to me that they solved some of the problem, but not the problem they were looking for. The F5 neurons in question appear to be the sort of task visualization center. As in, when you're operating a tool, from the remote crane on the space shuttle, to playing Super Mario Brothers, you imagine the task happening. If you're opening a ziploc bag, the opening task will be the same regardless of if you're using your hand, pliers, or reverse pliers (which close when they open and open when they close, according to the article) -- you imagine the ziploc bit getting prised apart. Apparently, since these neurons fire exactly the same way when they do their task, this is probably what they found.

    The more important part, how the brain can sublimate operating complex machinery so that it doesn't require conscious thought to operate, isn't explained here. Shuttle operators are actually trained to treat the crane like an extension of their arm, video game players eventually move past the controls to directly control the player on the screen, experienced skiers just imagine themselves turning without consciously having to weight their skis or edge, etc. All of these tasks originally required a lot of conscious control and expenditure of brain power (and in the case of skiing, a lot of bruises). And as long as it stays at this level, it stays awkward and stilted. It is at the point in which you transcend the raw mechanics and are capable of controlling it at a higher level (which is what this study found), that the skier becomes graceful, the video game player can race through flaming rotating death traps in super mario brothers, and the space shuttle control can quickly and adroitly manipulate stuff.

    The human brain really is a fascinating thing, and capable of really amazing feats, if you think about it.

  2. Re:Define:tool by kripkenstein · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually, this sort of thing is pretty easy to demonstrate.

    This is the example I was taught in psych class. Use your finger to apply pressure to your table. You feel pressure in the tip of your finger. Now use a pencil to apply pressure to your table. You then feel pressure at the tip of the pencil, and not in your fingers where you hold the pen.

    Note that, if you make an effort, you can feel the pressure on your fingers from the pencil. But the natural experience is to feel pressure in the pencil, as if it were part of your body. What this in fact proves is that the brain can make you 'feel' sensations anywhere, and not just in your body.

  3. Re:People are fantastic by aadvancedGIR · · Score: 4, Informative

    "BTW, is there anything known about diseases where people don't see tools as an extension of the body?"

    http://www.damninteresting.com/?p=678

    Proprioception Deficit Disorder is a disease where people lose the ability to "feel" their body. People suffering from this rare disease can't do things that seems natural to us without a lot of focus.

  4. Re:Define:tool by Acer500 · · Score: 4, Informative

    A very good story ran on Wired a short while back, "Hacking our five senses", and what he described is part of the story:
    http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/15.04/esp.html

    Also check out
    http://www.space.com/businesstechnology/cyborg_mann_041012.html
    http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/2002/03/50976

    And the story on Slashdot itself
    http://hardware.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/04/03/155204

    --
    There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.