From hand-held DVD players to hundred-inch plasma screens,
much of today's technology is driven by the human appetite
for pleasure through visual and auditory stimulation. What
creates this appetite? Neuropsychologists have found that
visual input activates receptors in the parts of the brain
associated with pleasure and reward, and that the brain
associates new images with old while also responding
strongly to new ones. Using functional MRI imaging and other
findings, they are exploring how human beings are
"infovores" whose brains love to learn. Children may
enjoy Sesame Street's fast pace because they get a
"click of comprehension" from each brief
scene.