Ich habe zu viel darüber nachgedacht, was du gesagt hast. Untersuchungen ergaben, dass die neueren und fortschrittlicheren Teile des menschlichen Gehirns, die soziale Interaktionen unterstützen – das so genannte soziale kognitive Netzwerk – mit einem alten Teil des Gehirns, der Amygdala, verbunden sind und in ständiger Kommunikation mit diesem stehen.
https://news.northwestern.edu/stories/2024/11/overthinking-what-you-said-its-your-lizard-brain-talking-to-newer-advanced-parts-of-your-brain/?fj=1
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We’ve all been there. Moments after leaving a party, your brain is suddenly filled with intrusive thoughts about what others were thinking. “Did they think I talked too much?” “Did my joke offend them?” “Were they having a good time?”
In a new Northwestern Medicine study, scientists sought to better understand how humans evolved to become so skilled at thinking about what’s happening in other peoples’ minds. The findings could have implications for one day treating psychiatric conditions such as anxiety and depression.
“We spend a lot of time wondering, ‘What is that person feeling, thinking? Did I say something to upset them?’” said senior author Rodrigo Braga. “The parts of the brain that allow us to do this are in regions of the human brain that have expanded recently in our evolution, and that implies that it’s a recently developed process. In essence, you’re putting yourself in someone else’s mind and making inferences about what that person is thinking when you cannot really know.”
[https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adp0453](https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adp0453)