Film content, editing, and directing style affect brain activity
23. January 2009
Film content, editing, and directing style affect brain activity
23. January 2009
In addition to the previous post “Scientists extract images directly from brain” NYU scientists studied the brain activity when watching motion pictures: “Our data suggest that achieving a tight control over viewers’ brains during a movie requires, in most cases, intentional construction of the film’s sequence through aesthetic means,” the researchers wrote. “The fact that Hitchcock was able to orchestrate the responses of so many different brain regions, turning them on and off at the same time across all viewers, may provide neuroscientific evidence for his notoriously famous ability to master and manipulate viewers’ minds. Hitchcock often liked to tell interviewers that for him ‘creation is based on an exact science of audience reactions.’ “