Kitchen Knives and Face Blindness: An fMRI story – Education & Teacher Conferences Skip to main content

Kitchen Knives and Face Blindness: An fMRI story

AdobeStock_32506335_Credit

Nancy Kanwisher asks: is the brain like a kitchen knife, or is it like a Swiss Army knife?

That is: is it one big all-purpose instrument that we use to accomplish many different tasks? Or, is it made up of many distinct mini-tools, each one to be used in a special way under special circumstances?

And: what tool can we use to answer that question?

Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, Kanwisher starts hunting for a part of the brain that recognizes faces. Even more intriguing, she looks for the part of HER brain that recognizes faces.

The result: a fascinating exploration of our Swiss-Army-Knife brain, and the limits of our knowledge.


Recent Blogs

The Shelf-Life of Research: When Education Theories Evolve…
Andrew Watson
Andrew Watson

To most of us, research conclusions have an air of...

Enjoyment or Skill? The Case of Reading [Repost]
Andrew Watson
Andrew Watson

Student motivation has always been a concern; never more so...

Book Review: 10 to 25, by David Yeager
Andrew Watson
Andrew Watson

As long as humans have lived into their teens, adults...