Unlike more specialised kinds of mental processing, there is no dedicated “imagination cortex” that shows up on brain scans. Instead, imagination is the result of inputs from all corners of the brain and throughout the body.
This article is part of a special series exploring the radical potential of the human imagination. Read more here.
Advances in scanning the active brain – specifically, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) – have revealed that it is organised into several key networks. Each shares information within its network while also keeping in touch with others. This allows the brain to switch between different “modes” of thinking by selecting the right network for the job at hand.
Conjuring creativity
There are three key networks involved in our imaginations. The one most associated with such thought was discovered by accident in the late 1990s, when neuroscientists noticed a distinct pattern of brain activity when research participants were left waiting in fMRI scanners between tasks.
Regions of the brain associated with memory, mood and self-reflection became more active when the participants weren’t occupied by a particular task, signalling an internally focused state of mind. This became known as the default mode network (DMN), and it is in play when we…
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