
MICHAEL INZLICHT
You say humans are wired to be lazy. Why is that so?
If we are faced with an option that requires more effort, we tend to avoid that. Our brain works in a reward and punishment sort of way. If you really want something and that requires effort, that effort becomes the cost. If your brain overcomes that cost, then you go for it.
But if our brain decides that desire for something is less than the effort cost, then we try to reduce the effort cost as much as possible. Suppose you have an apple in front of you and you want to eat it. There are many ways to reach the fruit. You could just walk straight or jump three times to reach it. But jumping does not make sense. You want to minimise your energy to get to the apple. We try to reduce that physical activity as much as possible. It is a very rational strategy any organism can adapt to.
Are effort costs also applicable for mental activities?
Fundamentally, yes. We are designed to reduce unnecessary effort, regardless of whether it is mental or physical. What scientists are working on is to figure out how the brain decides what is necessary and what is not. So, that is a big question.
Humans care about high order things like decision-making or how we see the world. But our body is the only way we can interact with the environment. I am interested in how we move our bodies, figure out the world and how we interact with the environment.
What do brain scans look like when we exert effort or are being lazy?
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THE GREAT FARM HUSTLE
Agroforestry is fast emerging as a win-win strategy to mitigate climate change and improve farmers' income. It is particularly so in India, home to one-fifth of the agroforestry carbon projects in the world. Over the past months ROHINI KRISHNAMURTHY has travelled to almost 20 villages across the country to understand how this market works. At all locations, she finds that communities and their land and labour are central to the projects. But they do not always benefit from the carbon revenue

CAN AGROFORESTRY CREDITS BE SAVED?
Ensure that farmers benefit from the carbon revenue and stay protected against market failure

Urban trap
Fearing loss of autonomy and access to government schemes, several villages across India are protesting against the decision to change their status to town

Dubious distinction
How Madhya Pradesh displaced Punjab as the country's leading state in stubble burning

TRADE TENSIONS
Why the benefits of agroforestry carbon trade do not trickle down to farmers

A fantastical lens
BIOPECULIARIS A LAUDABLE ATTEMPT TO CARVE A SPACE FOR SPECULATIVE CLIMATE FICTION WITHIN INDIAN LITERATURE. WHILE THE STORIES MAY NOT ALWAYS HIT THEIR MARK, THE ANTHOLOGY IS AN IMPORTANT STEP IN A GENRE THAT DESERVES MORE ATTENTION

Help on hold
US' decision to pause foreign aid could lead to hunger deaths, ruin economies of nations across Africa

Irrigation by snow
Declining rain and snowfall make farmers collect snow from higher altitudes to water their apple crops

Stem the rot
A fungal disease has hit the most widely sown sugarcane variety in Uttar Pradesh, threatening the country's sugar production

The mythos of ancient India's scientific excellence
Policymakers are obsessed by a fuddled idea of resurrecting a glorious civilisational past, and even IITs have fallen in line