"The Cognitive Process of Assigning Blame and Learning from Mistakes"
Originally Published 2 years ago — by Medical Xpress

University of Iowa researchers have discovered that the human brain can quickly distinguish between outcomes caused by human error and those that are blameless. In just one second, the brain can differentiate between the two, and in cases of human error, it takes additional time to catalog the mistake and inform the rest of the body to avoid repeating it. This study provides evidence that the brain has genuine error-specific systems that trigger adaptive responses, such as slowing down ongoing actions.