
New
HealthMore in Health→
Brain study shows how movies shift attention between sight and sound
Key Takeaways
- Researchers recorded brain activity directly from 19 epilepsy patients watching a multilingual short film.
- Ventral frontal regions responded more to auditory input while dorsal regions were more tuned to visual information.
- The balance shifted with comprehension, favoring audio in English scenes and visual processing when foreign-language scenes used subtitles.
DE
DT Editorial Team··via medicalxpress.com