The brain can unlock true multitasking after intensive training
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New research by Georgetown scientists shows how the brain rewires itself to automate learned tasks. The findings challenge a long-held understanding of how humans master complex skills, suggesting that true multitasking is really possible.
Beyond offering encouragement to busy people that they really can do two things at once, the study also has important implications for the development of artificial intelligence capable of building on prior learning as the brain does.
The paper, "Extensive Experience Remodels Neural Task Circuitry to Escape the Frontal Bottleneck and Increase Automaticity of Categorization," is published in the Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
How the brain automates skills
"We have another stepping stone in our understanding of how the brain learns," said senior author Maximilian Riesenhuber, Ph.D., a professor of neuroscience at Georgetown University School of Medicine, and co-director of the Center for Neuroengineering.
"The encouraging part is that you really can learn to multitask. There is actually a way to remodel your brain architecture and use other parts of your brain."
The new study builds on decades of research on how learning occurs in the brain.
Scientists wanted to understand the mechanisms behind automation, and how the brain shifts from learning a new task into a way of executing that task more unconsciously after extensive experience.
A good example is driving, Riesenhuber said. When someone first learns to drive, it requires their full concentration. But after driving for many years, most people can talk, listen to music, or consider a problem without having to focus completely on operating the vehicle.
"The question is: how does your brain do that?" Riesenhuber said.
Most previous research on learning has focused on the early stages, but what happens to the brain long-term is harder to study and less understood.
Inside the intensive training study
For the new study, researchers trained people to sort morphed images of cars into two categories, learning to spot subtle differences to tell them apart. Participants completed more than 30,000 trials over five to 10 weeks, using an app that allowed them to sort the images as a game on their phone. Researchers used fMRI and EEG to conduct brain scans on the participants before and after they completed the trials.
They found that after people had initially learned to sort the images, the task activated their prefrontal cortex. This area of the brain is responsible for executive function and thinking, but can typically only handle one task at a time.
However, when researchers scanned the brains of participants who had been practicing the sorting task for weeks, they found that the categorization was now happening in the temporal cortex, a part of the brain involved in encoding memory and recognizing complex objects.
"Previous studies have shown that parts of the temporal cortex can be activated by particular object categories in experienced observers, birds, cars, even Pokemon, but a limitation of all of those studies is that they only looked after people became experts," said first author Patrick Cox, Ph.D., who began the study as a graduate student in Riesenhuber's lab and is now an assistant professor of psychology at Lehigh University.
"The strength of this study is that it is longitudinal. We measure before and after training, so we can see that extensive training essentially put a category selective area in the temporal lobe that was not there before."
"This has implications for critical real world scenarios, like when a radiologist can accurately classify masses on an X-ray as benign or malignant fairly automatically, often without extensive deliberation, thanks to years of training," Cox said.
Bypassing the brain's frontal bottleneck
Category information from the car-selective area in the temporal cortex bypassed the prefrontal cortex and connected directly to output parts of the brain.
"Experience remodels the brain to bypass that frontal bottleneck. The prefrontal cortex then stays free for whatever else you want to do, increasing your capacity," Riesenhuber explained.
Indeed, the researchers found that the more the car task was "offloaded" from the prefrontal cortex, the better people were able to do another task in parallel to the car task.
The finding challenges a longstanding theory that humans are not capable of true multitasking. Instead, it was thought that the brain rapidly switched back and forth between two tasks.
"What we show is that the circuitry actually changes so the brain can do two things at once," Riesenhuber said. "This really is true multitasking."
Implications for habits, AI and safety
The findings can also have implications for understanding compulsive behaviors, because they demonstrate that learned behaviors move into brain circuits that are less accessible to conscious thought or executive function.
"The first step to unlearning something is understanding where it is actually happening in the brain," Riesenhuber said. "This shows why strategies like telling someone to think of something else don't really help, because they don't really have the behavior under conscious control."
It also helps explain why humans are so good at continuous learning, or building skills upon skills—something that AI still struggles with.
Moving a learned skill into the temporal cortex and freeing space in the prefrontal cortex could allow the brain to use the old information as a building block to learn something new, Riesenhuber said. Current AI models don't have that same capability, he noted.
Next, researchers want to study the mechanisms or signals involved in moving learning from one part of the brain to another and to figure out what the limits of multitasking are.
"Another really interesting question is what kinds of tasks can be learned well enough to do in parallel," Cox said. "We can walk and chew gum at the same time, but looking at our phones to text while driving will never be safe, because we take our eyes away from the road. It comes down to being able to train fully separate neural circuits for two tasks to become compatible."
Publication details
Extensive Experience Remodels Neural Task Circuitry to Escape the Frontal Bottleneck and Increase Automaticity of Categorization, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience (2026).
Journal information: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Key medical concepts
Temporal LobePrefrontal Cortex
Clinical categories
NeurologyPsychology & Mental health Provided by Georgetown University Medical Center Who's behind this story?
Sadie Harley
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