Daydreaming
“Every time we slip effortlessly into a
daydream, a distinct pattern of brain areas is activated,
which is known as the default network. Studies show that
this network is most engaged when people are performing
tasks that require little conscious attention, such as
routine driving on the highway or reading a tedious text.
Although such mental trances are often seen as a sign of
lethargy - we are staring haplessly into space - the cortex
is actually very active during this default state, as
numerous brain regions interact. Instead of responding to
the outside world, the brain starts to contemplate its
internal landscape. This is when new and creative
connections are made between seemingly unrelated ideas.
"When you don't use a muscle, that muscle really isn't
doing much of anything," says Dr. Marcus Raichle, a
neurologist and radiologist at Washington University who
was one of the first scientists to locate the default
network in the brain. "But when your brain is supposedly
doing nothing and daydreaming, it's really doing a
tremendous amount. We call it the 'resting state,' but the
brain isn't resting at all." (
Boston Globe, August 31, 2008)
Daydream Achiever
A wandering mind can do important work, scientists are
learning - and may even be essential
By Jonah Lehrer | August 31, 2008
ON A SUNDAY morning in 1974, Arthur Fry sat in the front
pews of a Presbyterian church in north St. Paul, Minn. An
engineer at 3M, Fry was also a singer in the church choir.
He had gotten into the habit of inserting little scraps of
paper into his choir book, so that he could quickly find
the right hymns during the service. The problem, however,
was that the papers would often fall out, causing Fry to
lose his place.
But then, while listening to the Sunday sermon, Fry started
to daydream. Instead of focusing on the pastor's words, he
began to mull over his bookmark problem. "It was during the
sermon," Fry remembers, "that I first thought, 'What I
really need is a little bookmark that will stick to the
paper but will not tear the paper when I remove it.' " That
errant thought - the byproduct of a wandering mind - would
later become the yellow Post-it note, one of the most
successful office products of all time.
Although there are many anecdotal stories of breakthroughs
resulting from daydreams - Einstein, for instance, was
notorious for his wandering mind - daydreaming itself is
usually cast in a negative light. Children in school are
encouraged to stop daydreaming and "focus," and wandering
minds are often cited as a leading cause of traffic
accidents. In a culture obsessed with efficiency,
daydreaming is derided as a lazy habit or a lack of
discipline, the kind of thinking we rely on when we don't
really want to think. It's a sign of procrastination, not
productivity, something to be put away with your flip-flops
and hammock as summer draws to a close.
In recent years, however, scientists have begun to see the
act of daydreaming very differently. They've demonstrated
that daydreaming is a fundamental feature of the human mind
- so fundamental, in fact, that it's often referred to as
our "default" mode of thought. Many scientists argue that
daydreaming is a crucial tool for creativity, a thought
process that allows the brain to make new associations and
connections. Instead of focusing on our immediate
surroundings - such as the message of a church sermon - the
daydreaming mind is free to engage in abstract thought and
imaginative ramblings. As a result, we're able to imagine
things that don't actually exist, like sticky yellow
bookmarks.
"If your mind didn't wander, then you'd be largely shackled
to whatever you are doing right now," says Jonathan
Schooler, a psychologist at the University of California,
Santa Barbara. "But instead you can engage in mental time
travel and other kinds of simulation. During a daydream,
your thoughts are really unbounded."
The ability to think abstractly that flourishes during
daydreams also has important social benefits. Mostly, what
we daydream about is each other, as the mind retrieves
memories, contemplates "what if" scenarios, and thinks
about how it should behave in the future. In this sense,
the content of daydreams often resembles a soap opera, with
people reflecting on social interactions both real and
make-believe. We can leave behind the world as it is and
start imagining the world as it might be, if only we hadn't
lost our temper, or had superpowers, or were sipping a
daiquiri on a Caribbean beach. It is this ability to tune
out the present moment and contemplate the make-believe
that separates the human mind from every other.
"Daydreaming builds on this fundamental capacity people
have for being able to project themselves into imaginary
situations, like the future," Malia Mason, a neuroscientist
at Columbia, says. "Without that skill, we'd be pretty
limited creatures."
Teresa Belton, a research associate at East Anglia
University in England, first got interested in daydreaming
while reading a collection of stories written by children
in elementary school. Although Belton encouraged the
students to write about whatever they wanted, she was
startled by just how uninspired most of the stories were.
"The tales tended to be very tedious and unimaginative,"
Belton says, "as if the children were stuck with this very
restricted way of thinking. Even when they were encouraged
to think creatively, they didn't really know how."
After monitoring the daily schedule of the children for
several months, Belton came to the conclusion that their
lack of imagination was, at least in part, caused by the
absence of "empty time," or periods without any activity or
sensory stimulation. She noticed that as soon as these
children got even a little bit bored, they simply turned on
the television: the moving images kept their minds
occupied. "It was a very automatic reaction," she says.
"Television was what they did when they didn't know what
else to do."
The problem with this habit, Belton says, is that it kept
the kids from daydreaming. Because the children were rarely
bored - at least, when a television was nearby - they never
learned how to use their own imagination as a form of
entertainment. "The capacity to daydream enables a person
to fill empty time with an enjoyable activity that can be
carried on anywhere," Belton says. "But that's a skill that
requires real practice. Too many kids never get the
practice."
While much of the evidence linking daydreaming and
creativity remains anecdotal, rooted in the testimony of
people like Fry and Einstein, scientists are beginning to
find experimental proof of the relationship. In a
forthcoming paper, Schooler's lab has shown that people who
engage in more daydreaming score higher on experimental
measures of creativity, which require people to make a set
of unusual connections.
"Daydreams involve a more relaxed style of thinking, with
people more willing to contemplate ideas that seem silly or
far-fetched," says Belton. While such imaginative thoughts
aren't always practical, they are often the wellspring of
creative insights, as Schooler's research shows.
However, not all daydreams seem to inspire creativity. In
his experiments, Schooler distinguishes between two types
of daydreaming. The first type consists of people who
notice they are daydreaming only when asked by the
researcher. Even though they are told to press a button as
soon as they realize their mind has started to wander,
these people fail to press the button. The second type, in
contrast, occurs when subjects catch themselves daydreaming
during the experiment, without needing to be questioned.
Schooler and colleagues found that individuals who are
unaware of their own daydreaming while it's happening don't
seem to exhibit increased creativity.
"The point is that it's not enough to just daydream,"
Schooler says. "Letting your mind drift off is the easy
part. The hard part is maintaining enough awareness so that
even when you start to daydream you can interrupt yourself
and notice a creative insight."
In other words, the reason Fry is such a good inventor - he
has more than twenty patents to his name, in addition to
Post-it notes - isn't simply because he's a prolific
daydreamer. It's because he's able to pay attention to his
daydreams, and to detect those moments when his daydreams
lead to a useful idea.
Every time we slip effortlessly into a daydream, a distinct
pattern of brain areas is activated, which is known as the
default network. Studies show that this network is most
engaged when people are performing tasks that require
little conscious attention, such as routine driving on the
highway or reading a tedious text. Although such mental
trances are often seen as a sign of lethargy - we are
staring haplessly into space - the cortex is actually very
active during this default state, as numerous brain regions
interact. Instead of responding to the outside world, the
brain starts to contemplate its internal landscape. This is
when new and creative connections are made between
seemingly unrelated ideas.
"When you don't use a muscle, that muscle really isn't
doing much of anything," says Dr. Marcus Raichle, a
neurologist and radiologist at Washington University who
was one of the first scientists to locate the default
network in the brain. "But when your brain is supposedly
doing nothing and daydreaming, it's really doing a
tremendous amount. We call it the 'resting state,' but the
brain isn't resting at all."
Recent research has confirmed the importance of the default
network by studying what happens when the network is
disrupted. For instance, there is suggestive evidence that
people with autism engage in less daydreaming than normal,
with a default network that exhibits significantly reduced
activity during idle moments. In addition, more abnormal
default networks in autistic subjects correlated with the
most severe social deficits. One leading theory is that
atypical default activity interferes with the sort of
meandering memories and social simulations that typically
characterize daydreams, causing people with autism to
instead fixate on things in their environment.
The exact opposite phenomenon seems to occur in patients
with schizophrenia, who exhibit overactive default
networks. This might explain the inability of
schizophrenics to differentiate properly between reality
and the ideas generated by the imagination.
Problems with daydreaming also seem to afflict the aging
brain: Harvard researchers recently discovered that one of
the main symptoms of getting older is reduced coordination
in the default network, as brain areas that normally
operate in sync start to fire at different times.
Scientists speculate that this deficit contributes to the
inability of many elderly subjects to control the duration
and timing of their daydreams.
"It's very important to use the default network at the
right time," says Jessica Andrews-Hanna, a researcher at
Harvard who has studied the network in older subjects.
"When you need to focus" - such as during stop-and-go
traffic, or when engaged in a conversation - "you don't
want to let your mind wander off."
What these studies all demonstrate is that proper
daydreaming - the kind of thinking that occurs when the
mind is thinking to itself - is a crucial feature of the
healthy human brain. It might seem as though our mind is
empty, but the mind is never empty: it's always bubbling
over with ideas and connections.
One of the simplest ways to foster creativity, then, may be
to take daydreams more seriously. Even the mundane
daydreams that occur hundreds of times a day are helping us
plan for the future, interact with others, and solidify our
own sense of self. And when we are stuck on a particularly
difficult problem, a good daydream isn't just an escape -
it may be the most productive thing we can do.
Jonah Lehrer is an editor at large at Seed magazine and the
author of "Proust Was a Neuroscientist." He is a regular
contributor to Ideas.
© Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company