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There is a strange fact about people who prefer to stay home. Their brain at rest is already running at higher capacity than the brains of people who seek constant external stimulation. This is not laziness or fear of the world. This is how the nervous system is wired. In this video: • Hans Eysenck's optimal arousal theory — the cortical volume knob • What fMRI research reveals about the introvert brain doing "nothing" • Acetylcholine vs dopamine — two completely different reward circuits • Why 40 minutes at a party hits like a wall — and what is actually happening • The one honest question about loving solitude that most people avoid 📍 Key research: Eysenck, Optimal Arousal Theory (1967) fMRI resting-state introvert brain activity — Johnson et al. (2008) Acetylcholine reward pathway — Scott & Dearing 🔗 Related videos: → Next: "The Psychology of People Who Rewatch Movies and TV Shows Over and Over" ⏱ Timestamps: 00:00 — A pattern hiding in plain sight 01:15 — Hans Eysenck and the cortical volume knob 03:00 — The fMRI that proved a 40-year-old hunch 04:15 — Acetylcholine: the quiet reward circuit 05:45 — The 40-minute wall and why it hits so hard 06:45 — What "get out of your comfort zone" actually ignores 07:30 — A map, not an excuse 08:00 — The question worth sitting with 💬 If you recognized yourself — drop a number in the comments: how many minutes at a social event before your brain starts asking to leave? 🔔 Subscribe — next video explains why your brain picks the same old show over something new. And why that choice can be both smart and dangerous. #psychology #introvert #neuroscience #brain #homebody #quiet #thesilentstickman