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in General Factchecking by (180 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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by Newbie (310 points)
I think that it is false that the human brain only uses 10% of its capacity because brain imaging technologies such as fMRI and PET scans show that different parts of the brain are active at different times. Almost every area of the brain has a defined purpose and is constantly used, even through we might not use all of our neurons ay once.
False
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by Newbie (310 points)

"Humans use only 10% of their brains" is a common myth, but it is just that--a myth. The phrase most likely originates from a 19th century phycologist William James, who suggested that the potential of most people's mental abilities remains untapped. However, according to modern scientists we use all of our brains, all of the time. Britannica (Do We Really Use Only 10 Percent of Our Brain? | Britannica) says that if we only used 10% of our brains, brain damage wouldn't have such an effect on our health. In addition, Brittanica says that (with the exception of the spleen, gallbladder, and appendix), humans have evolved remove unnecessary organs. Therefore, if we could survive with only 10% of our brains, our ancestors would have evolved to have smaller brains long ago to preserve energy and resources that could be better used elsewhere. So, while it may be fun to think about the idea of human potential with "all 100% of our brains", that is the world we live in already. 

False
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by Newbie (300 points)
After viewing many different sources, this claim is 100% a myth. Every single site I viewed and read through showed extreme evidence and convincing findings that this statement, "The human brain uses only 10% of its capacity," is completely false. Even at rest, the human brain is almost always using its full capacity. Overall, the idea that humans only use a small fraction of their brain oversimplifies and misrepresents how the brain actually works, reinforcing a popular myth rather than reflecting scientific reality. My sources:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ten-percent-of-the-brain_myth

https://mcgovern.mit.edu/2024/01/26/do-we-use-only-10-percent-of-our-brain/
False
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ago by Newbie (260 points)

The claim that humans only use 10 percent of our brain capacity is misleading, because this claim has been repeatedly disproven by many scientific studies and credible scientific sources. An excerpt from an article by the McGovern institute, quoting a graduate student in the field of neuron study states,All of our brain is constantly in use and consumes a tremendous amount of energy,” Halgren says. “Despite making up only two percent of our body weight, it devours 20 percent of our calories.” Additionally, this article clarifies what may be the origin of this common misconception, "In 1907, William James, a founder of American psychology, suggested in his book “The Energies of Men” that “we are making use of only a small part of our possible mental and physical resources.” This influential work likely sparked the idea that humans access a mere fraction of the brain—setting this common misconception ablaze.The brain is incredibly complex and has a variety of functions in phases of high and low activity, and the claim that we only use 10 percent is misleading. 

Source used:

https://mcgovern.mit.edu/2024/01/26/do-we-use-only-10-percent-of-our-brain/

Exaggerated/ Misleading
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ago by Newbie (220 points)
The claim: "The human brain uses only 10% of it's compacity" is false.

"All of our brain is constantly in use and consumes a tremendous amount of energy,"[1]. The myth was first started, then spread, when scientists first began exploring the brain's abilities but lacked the tools to capture exactly what was happening. The human brain is consistently reshaping neural connections, controlling reflexes, controlling the body, hormones, automatic reflexes such as breathing. blinking, hungry signals, etc. Our brains are constantly changing, developing, and learning, therefore the human brain is using 100% of its compacity all the time, and as such consumes a large amount of energy to sustain itself (which is why it's important to eat more than a few hundred calories a day), mainly glucose and carbs. And if we were to only use 10% of our brains we wouldn't be able to do  half of the things we do automatically and consciously.

https://mcgovern.mit.edu/2024/01/26/do-we-use-only-10-percent-of-our-brain/#:~:text=by%20Rubina%20Veerakone%20%7C%20January%2026,of%20energy%2C%E2%80%9D%20Halgren%20says.
False

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