devildog 0 #1 April 13, 2012 Who knew? http://www2.wkrg.com/news/2012/apr/13/can-alcohol-make-men-smarter-study-suggests-yes-ar-3600523/ QuoteMen, for your next date, you might want to suggest a casual meeting at a local bar or pub. Recent research shows that men become better at creative problem solving after they consume alcohol. Although some people believe that alcohol can inhibit your normal thinking processes, the study from the University of Illinois showed that the additional drinks allowed for more innovative answers that, in the end, equaled more correct answers on a brain teaser test. "We have this assumption, that being able to focus on one part of a problem or having a lot of expertise is better for problem solving," Jennifer Wiley, a psychologist at the University of Illinois who co-authored the study, explained in a new commentary on the Federation of Associations in Behavioral and Brain Sciences (FABBS) site. "But that's not necessarily true. Innovation may happen when people are not so focused." In the study, originally published online in an earlier 2012 issue of Consciousness and Cognition, Wiley and her team tested 40 social drinkers. Half of the subjects were told to watch an animated movie while being given snacks and enough vodka cranberry drinks to give them a blood alcohol level of 0.075, just below the legal limit of 0.08. The other group had to watch the same movie without any treats. Then, everyone was asked to finish problem-solving brain teasers. Tests included seeing a group of words and finding a fourth word that would fit with the previous words. One question asked what word works with peach, arm and tar. Another asked which word matched with blue, cottage and Swiss. (If you're stumped, the answers are at the bottom of the story.) Astonishingly, those in the drinking group averaged nine correct questions to the six answers correct by the non-drinking group. It also took drunk men 11.5 seconds to answer a question, whereas non-drunk men needed 15.2 seconds to think. Both groups had comparable results on a similar exam before the alcohol consumption began. It's important to note that their level of alcohol consumption was below the legal limit, and it worked on creative problems but not on working memory problems. According to Wiley, alcohol improves creative memory by decreasing working memory, which is the ability to remember one thing while you're thinking of something else. Said Wiley, "Sometimes it's good to be distracted." So men, on that next date, you may want to drink up, but not too much - and hope that she doesn't ask if you remember her name.You stop breathing for a few minutes and everyone jumps to conclusions. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
quade 3 #2 April 13, 2012 The headline writer has drawn an incorrect conclusion. The study doesn't say it makes you "smarter." What it says, and quite a few people have known for quite some time, is that mind altering chemicals (alcohol being simply the most popular), can enable the connection of previously unrelated memories to be simultaneously accessed. Some folks might call this "creative." Wow, it sure was "creative" when Bob thought of driving his car at top speed off that cliff. Or... Wow, it sure was "creative" of Bob to hit on that chick while she was standing next to her body builder boyfriend. Sure, while under the influence of alcohol you "might" make a connection between say, robots, aliens and cars that turn into giant robots and decide to write a kids saturday morning cartoon about it . . . but that doesn't prove you're "smart," just that you've made a connection between two things no sober person would.quade - The World's Most Boring Skydiver Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
devildog 0 #3 April 13, 2012 Quote The headline writer has drawn an incorrect conclusion. The study doesn't say it makes you "smarter." What it says, and quite a few people have known for quite some time, is that mind altering chemicals (alcohol being simply the most popular), can enable the connection of previously unrelated memories to be simultaneously accessed. Some folks might call this "creative." Wow, it sure was "creative" when Bob thought of driving his car at top speed off that cliff. Or... Wow, it sure was "creative" of Bob to hit on that chick while she was standing next to her body builder boyfriend. Sure, while under the influence of alcohol you "might" make a connection between say, robots, aliens and cars that turn into giant robots and decide to write a kids saturday morning cartoon about it . . . but that doesn't prove you're "smart," just that you've made a connection between two things no sober person would. or... "It's important to note that their level of alcohol consumption was below the legal limit, and it worked on creative problems but not on working memory problems. According to Wiley, alcohol improves creative memory by decreasing working memory, which is the ability to remember one thing while you're thinking of something else." You stop breathing for a few minutes and everyone jumps to conclusions. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
quade 3 #4 April 13, 2012 Right, but that's not going to make you "smarter." For instance, you will almost assuredly do worse on tests.quade - The World's Most Boring Skydiver Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
devildog 0 #5 April 13, 2012 True, I wouldn't recommend downing a few beers before midterms :)You stop breathing for a few minutes and everyone jumps to conclusions. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
format 0 #6 April 14, 2012 I can not seem to feel the difference between Alcohol and Skydiving. I can feel that I should but I fail to do so. Now I feel I should write "I'm sorry"... and I am.What goes around, comes later. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JackC1 0 #7 April 14, 2012 It's a fact, beer does make you smarter, Al Murray says so. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0tHlefllnYA Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites