How does the brain create and spread ideas?
How do ideas spread? What messages will go viral on social media, and can this be predicted?
UCLA psychologists have taken a 
significant step toward answering these questions, identifying for the 
first time the brain regions associated with the successful spread of 
ideas, often called “buzz.”
The research has a broad range of 
implications, the study authors say, and could lead to more effective 
public health campaigns, more persuasive advertisements and better ways 
for teachers to communicate with students.
“Our study suggests that people are 
regularly attuned to how the things they’re seeing will be useful and 
interesting, not just to themselves but to other people,” said the 
study’s senior author, Matthew Lieberman, a UCLA professor of psychology
 and of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences and author of the 
forthcoming book “Social: Why Our Brains Are Wired to Connect.” “We 
always seem to be on the lookout for who else will find this helpful, 
amusing or interesting, and our brain data are showing evidence of that.
 At the first encounter with information, people are already using the 
brain network involved in thinking about how this can be interesting to 
other people. We’re wired to want to share information with other 
people. I think that is a profound statement about the social nature of 
our minds.”
The study findings are published in the 
online edition of the journal Psychological Science, with print 
publication to follow later this summer.
“Before this study, we didn’t know what 
brain regions were associated with ideas that become contagious, and we 
didn’t know what regions were associated with being an effective 
communicator of ideas,” said lead author Emily Falk, who conducted the 
research as a UCLA doctoral student in Lieberman’s lab and is currently a
 faculty member at the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg School for
 Communication. “Now we have mapped the brain regions associated with 
ideas that are likely to be contagious and are associated with being a 
good ‘idea salesperson.’ In the future, we would like to be able to use 
these brain maps to forecast what ideas are likely to be successful and 
who is likely to be effective at spreading them.”
In the first part of the study, 19 UCLA 
students (average age 21), underwent functional magnetic resonance 
imaging (fMRI) brain scans at UCLA’s Ahmanson-Lovelace Brain Mapping 
Center as they saw and heard information about 24 potential television 
pilot ideas. Among the fictitious pilots — which were presented by a 
separate group of students — were a show about former beauty-queen 
mothers who want their daughters to follow in their footsteps; a Spanish
 soap opera about a young woman and her relationships; a reality show in
 which contestants travel to countries with harsh environments; a 
program about teenage vampires and werewolves; and a show about best 
friends and rivals in a crime family.
The students exposed to these TV pilot 
ideas were asked to envision themselves as television studio interns who
 would decide whether or not they would recommend each idea to their 
“producers.” These students made videotaped assessments of each pilot.
Another group of 79 UCLA undergraduates 
(average age 21) was asked to act as the “producers.” These students 
watched the interns’ videos assessments of the pilots and then made 
their own ratings about the pilot ideas based on those assessments.
Lieberman and Falk wanted to learn which
 brain regions were activated when the interns were first exposed to 
information they would later pass on to others.
“We’re constantly being exposed to 
information on Facebook, Twitter and so on,” said Lieberman. “Some of it
 we pass on, and a lot of it we don’t. Is there something that happens 
in the moment we first see it — maybe before we even realize we might 
pass it on — that is different for those things that we will pass on 
successfully versus those that we won’t?”
It turns out, there is. The 
psychologists found that the interns who were especially good at 
persuading the producers showed significantly more activation in a brain
 region known as the temporoparietal junction, or TPJ, at the time they 
were first exposed to the pilot ideas they would later recommend.
Source: Science Daily
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