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Study Compares Brain Activity In Games Against Humans and AI

Ars Technica covers research done using an fMRI machine to map brain activity game players. The study compares brain patterns in players competing against what they think are other humans against what they think is AI. It also goes into the differences in how games affect the male and female brain. "The human brain appears to try to parse the intentions of others by engaging its own decision-making process; in short, it appears to model another person's mind by seeing what it would do if it were in that other person's skull. The three areas of the brain that the authors identify are involved, in part, in making executive decisions for that brain's owner, in addition to evaluating other people's executive decisions. So, the fact that they're busier when a person thinks they're playing another human could also be interpreted as them focusing harder on an identical decision making process."

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  1. Dire Wolves by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    When battling dire wolves, it is advantageous to think what they might do. It's not surprising that we have this ability, and apply it to what an idiot ahead of us on the freeway might do.