Home » Psychology news » Roots of human self-awareness: New study points to a complex, diffuse patchwork of brain pathways
Roots of human self-awareness: New study points to a complex, diffuse patchwork of brain pathways
August 23, 2012 by NewsBot
A research team has upended current thinking about areas in the human brain responsible for self-awareness. Using a rare patient with damage to areas considered vital to be self-aware, the team learned the patient was not only self-aware, but capable of introspection and self-insight. The researchers propose that self-awareness is a product of a diffuse patchwork of pathways in the brain rather than confined to specific areas.