Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Jewish Business News

Science

Israeli researcher show movie audiences and schizophrenics share Similar brain activity

According to Prof. Talma Hendler of Tel Aviv University, the brain activity patterns of the groups members is similar in many cases.

black-swan-black-swan  Natalie Portman

Please help us out :
Will you offer us a hand? Every gift, regardless of size, fuels our future.
Your critical contribution enables us to maintain our independence from shareholders or wealthy owners, allowing us to keep up reporting without bias. It means we can continue to make Jewish Business News available to everyone.
You can support us for as little as $1 via PayPal at [email protected].
Thank you.

 

In one of the final scenes of the 2010 psychological thriller Black Swan, Nina, a ballerina played by Natalie Portman, finally loses her grip on reality, hallucinating that black feathers are poking through her skin.

According to Prof. Talma Hendler of Tel Aviv University’s School of Psychological Sciences, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, and Sagol School of Neuroscience, the brain activity of audience members watching this dramatic scene resembles that observed in many schizophrenics. “As Nina is getting crazier and crazier, audience members themselves experience something like schizophrenia”, Prof. Hendler said recently at an event sponsored by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

 

Two types of empathy

Prof. Hendler and her team of researchers have been investigating networks in the brain that appear to play a role in empathy. She has found evidence for two types of empathy, each tied to a different network of brain regions. The first, “mental empathy, ” requires you to mentally step outside yourself and think about what another person is thinking or experiencing. The second, “embodied empathy, ” is the intuitive, primal empathy you might feel witnessing someone get punched.

At the event, Prof. Hendler presented fMRI brain scan data of subjects who had watched several emotional movies. Audiences who had watched the dramatic scene from the Black Swan, Prof. Hendler found that the “mental empathy” network predominated, while the “embodied empathy” network only flickered to life occasionally – when Nina pulled a feather from her back, for example.

Prof. Hendler has witnessed this pattern, which relies more heavily on the mental empathy network even in the face of a visceral experience, in her schizophrenia patients. “It’s as if they have to think through the emotional impact of situations that other people grasp more intuitively and automatically, ” she said.

 

Newsletter



Advertisement

You May Also Like

World News

In the 15th Nov 2015 edition of Israel’s good news, the highlights include:   ·         A new Israeli treatment brings hope to relapsed leukemia...

Life-Style Health

Medint’s medical researchers provide data-driven insights to help patients make decisions; It is affordable- hundreds rather than thousands of dollars

Entertainment

The Movie The Professional is what made Natalie Portman a Lolita.

Travel

After two decades without a rating system in Israel, at the end of 2012 an international tender for hotel rating was published.  Invited to place bids...