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in General Factchecking by (160 points)

The idea that "the human brain uses only 10% of its capacity" is indeed an unfounded narrative that has been disproven by scientists who study the brain. The claim implies that 90% of the brain is asleep or abandoned and that human mental powers and abilities can win several times due to the stillness of the brilliant. Ultimately, technological advancements have brought us fMRI and other PET-type scans, have shown us that almost every area of the brain is active in some manner, including when a person is "at rest" or engaging in simple and mundane tasks. Regions of the brain are always engaged in one function or another like side commands, motion, sensory experiences, or even higher level functions like memories and reasoning, working somehow and together for that same purpose.

The 10% claim has likely continued to thrive in the collective consciousness because of uncertainty and speculation surrounding the early foundational neurological reflections. While neuroanatomists were studying the human brain, during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, for the first time, exploring through different levels of understanding which part of the brain performed which part of human function, only a few understand now from the slight difference in referencing the brain watching the active brain regions, it should be noted that to some logical extent (at that time) they (the scientists) speculated, there is no human brain region that is "silent" or abandoned functionality. The 10% claim spread through popular media, self-help, and motivational speakers, leading to a misunderstanding that stemmed from public's failure to understand inferences with such, humanities entire brains when are at work, also made sense that we don't engage all regions of our brain repairing up to active potential; down modeling the biggest and brightest to a small suppressible other. That said, the human brain does use energy through efficiency, engages regions of it all for ultimately the functional task we attempt to achieve or process, but is limitlessly functional when we do the work.

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ago by Newbie (300 points)
The idea that humans only use 10 percent of their brain isn’t true and has been debunked for years and by lots of research. Brain scans show that we use many different parts of the brain throughout the day, even when we’re resting or doing simple tasks. If 90 percent of the brain were unused, damage to those areas wouldn’t matter, but in reality even small brain injuries can cause serious problems. I used reliable sources like the National Institutes of Health and Scientific American to back this and they explain that the 10 percent claim came from a misunderstanding, not real science.

Sources: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26324967/ https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/do-people-only-use-10-percent-of-their-brains/
False
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ago by Newbie (300 points)

After reviewing scientific evidence from neuroscience research, I conclude that the claim that humans only use 10% of their brains is false. Brain imaging technologies such as PET scans and fMRI consistently show activity throughout the entire brain, even during sleep. Research demonstrates that different brain regions are responsible for different functions, and virtually all areas are active at various times. Even individuals with neurological disorders still use far more than 10% of their brain tissue. The persistence of this myth appears to stem from misunderstandings of early psychological writings and has been reinforced by popular culture rather than scientific evidence.

False

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