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2010-04-16 09:52:04
Rachael Rettner
LiveScience Staff Writer
LiveScience.com rachael Rettner
livescience Staff Writer
livescience.com Thu Apr 15, 2:31 pm ET
For those who find it tough to juggle more than a couple things at once, don't
despair. The brain is set up to manage two tasks, but not more, a new study
suggests.
That's because, when faced with two tasks, a part of the brain known as the
medial prefrontal cortex (MFC) divides so that half of the region focuses on
one task and the other half on the other task. This division of labor allows a
person to keep track of two tasks pretty readily, but if you throw in a third,
things get a bit muddled.
"What really the results show is that we can readily divide tasking. We can
cook, and at the same time talk on the phone, and switch back and forth between
these two activities," said study researcher Etienne Koechlin of the Universite
Pierre et Marie Curie in Paris, France. "However, we cannot multitask with more
than two tasks."
The results will be published this week in the journal Science.
Multitasking in the brain
The MFC is thought to be part of the brain's "motivational system."
Specifically, it helps monitor the value of rewards and drives a person's
behavior according to that value. In other words, it's where rewards are
represented in the brain.
Scientists knew that a region at the very front of the brain, called the
anterior prefrontal cortex (APC), was involved in multitasking. But they
weren't sure how the MFC was involved. Are the rewards for the different tasks
represented separately? Or summed together?
Koechlin and his colleagues had 32 subjects complete a letter-matching task
while they had their brains scanned with functional magnetic resonance
imagining (fMRI). The subjects saw uppercase letters on a screen and had to
determine whether those letters were presented in the correct order to spell
out a certain word. They were given money if they performed the task with no
errors.
The researchers saw that, the higher the monetary reward, the more activity
there was in the MFC.
But then they made the task more difficult. In addition to uppercase letters,
the subjects were also presented with lowercase letters, and had to switch back
and forth between matching the uppercase letters to spell out, say,
T-A-B-L-E-T, and lowercase letters to spell out t-a-b-l-e-t.
During this duel task, the MFC divided up the labor. One hemisphere of the
brain encoded the reward associated with the uppercase letter task, and so
showed activity during that task, while the other region encoded the reward
associated with the lowercase task, Koechlin said.
Essentially, the brain behaved "as if each frontal lobe was pursuing its own
goal," Koechlin said.
To make things even more complicated, the researchers introduced a third
letter-matching task. Here, they saw the subject's accuracy drop considerably.
It was as though, once each hemisphere was occupied with managing one task,
there was nowhere for the third task to go.
"[The] subjects perform as if they systematically forget one of the three
tasks," Koechlin told LiveScience.
Decision-making
The results might also explain why humans seem to have a hard time making
decisions between more than two things, Koechlin said.
Previous work has indicated that people like binary choices, or decisions
between two things. They have difficultly when decisions involve more than two
choices, Koechlin said. When faced with three or more choices, subjects don't
appear to evaluate them rationally; they simply start discarding choices until
they get back to a binary choice.
This is perhaps because your brain can't keep track of the rewards involved
with more than two choices, Koechlin said.