Psychology, asked by masterjediyash, 7 months ago

what happens when we use 100% of our brain​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
6

Answer:

no one can use its brain 100%

Explanation:

It is a common misconception that 100% of your brain can be used at the same time. Your body could not handle the functionality of this supercomputer at such levels. Think about the fact that currently your brain is using 20% of all the resources you put into it.

That being said, you are not even using only a minute amount at any given time. That means, to use 100% of your brain you might have to expend many times the amount of energy you are using now. And, in terms of sheer calorie consumption, that is almost impossible.

But let’s say it were possible from an energy perspective. Then you still have all the input coming in all at once.

Answered by jobha
0

Answer:

You are in a way always using 100% and never using it. All of your brain is important but you cannot use it all at once.

It is a common misconception that 100% of your brain can be used at the same time. Your body could not handle the functionality of this supercomputer at such levels. Think about the fact that currently your brain is using 20% of all the resources you put into it.

That being said, you are not even using only a minute amount at any given time. That means, to use 100% of your brain you might have to expend many times the amount of energy you are using now.

If we used 100% of the neurons in our brain simultaneously, would we have telepathy, psychokinesis, etc?

My bio teacher said we use only 4% of our brain. What the hell does that mean, when every study suggest that we use all 100% even when we do nothing (no inactive brain area ever found)?

What if everyone on Earth could use 100% of their brain?

Why don't we utilise 100% of the human brain?

Is it true that a normal human uses only 5% of their brain? What will happen if a human being uses the full capacity of his brain?

If we force to use 100% of our brain, It would look like this:

Seriously, the only situation that I know in which a person can “use” 100% brain utility (using every neuron connection at the same time) is during seizures. If someone know any other scenario, please tell me in the comments.

It comes down to how our brain proccesses information.

Our brain doesn’t work like most computer CPUs. Most current generation CPUs have cores that can do almost any task at a fix clock speed, basically every CPU cores is the same. Because of this universal versatility, you can utilize it to 100% CPU time utilization, in which every core is doing everything as fast as it can, to do the set of tasks you give to it. Because the RAM channel bandwidth is very high, you have relatively little problem in task scheduling.

For the brain, you can replace “cores” with a “nuclei” which is a cluster of neurons that does a specific task.

Our brain processes different kind of task/information in different part of the brain (cores), and there’s so many of them. Even every muscle that controls your fingers has its own “motor core” (a network of neuron dedicated to control that finger). If a core is not receiving enough information, it will not utilize every neuron on that core. But if it receives more information than it can handle, it will run at 100% utility, and ignore what it can’t process at the time (the data is lost).

Now, there's a special bundle of cores, called the prefrontal cortex. That's where you make conscious decisions based on the information coming from other brain area, although this part is physically relatively big compared to other cores, this core is easily overloaded because the task is so complex. Your standard IQ test mostly measures this core's performance.

Edit: Some say that this brain region is where your consciousness resides, but it hasn’t been proven to be true or not. It is still an interesting controversial topic (thanks to for the edit).

For example, if you’re playing basketball and you have the ball while dribling towards your opponents ring. This is what happens in your brain

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