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Christmas can be intense and kind of emotional.

Whether it鈥檚 that sinking feeling when you hear All I Want for Christmas for the 100th time or agonising about where you will spend Christmas day, there鈥檚 a lot going on. But it can also, of course, bring lots of joy and excitement.

In recent years, scientists have explored how Christmas affects our bodies and minds. Studies have shown that singing carols can relieve stress, and even found that Christmas Eve can be a peak time for heart attacks.

Bryan Haddock, a medical physicist at Copenhagen hospital, recently went in search of the Christmas spirit using brain imaging techniques in a light-hearted Yuletide study.

Friends exchanging gifts at Christmas
Image caption,
Because Christmas is so much fun

He was looking to see how people responded in different ways to Christmas images.

His team ran fMRI (Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging) scans on a group of 26 people and found that the "Christmas Spirit" network had a significantly higher activation in people who celebrate Christmas with positive associations as opposed to people who have no Christmas traditions and neutral associations.

The group was asked questions about their experience of Christmas after the scans were taken. They were asked to fill out a questionnaire about their Christmas traditions, feelings associated with Christmas, how long they had lived in Denmark and ethnicity.

Bauble on Christmas tree
Image caption,
Does this bauble make you feel warm and fuzzy?

Mr Haddock concluded that 鈥渢here is a Christmas spirit network in the human brain comprising several cortical areas. This network had a significantly higher activation in people who celebrate Christmas with positive associations as opposed to people who have no Christmas traditions and neutral associations.鈥

The scans showed that the brain was reacting to the Christmas images. However, the study did not conclude whether this was cause or effect - ie, whether this area lights up because you like Christmas, or you like Christmas because this area lights up.

Cat wearing Christmas antlers
Image caption,
Christmas can illicit strong feelings either way

Mr Haddock says, 鈥淭he answer is that it could be either or both. We are catching the brain responding to the Christmas stimulus and the brain is fast. Several steps and subprocesses are being caught at once so it is possible one of the activated areas is recognising while another is creating a response.鈥

He also suggests that 鈥渁lthough merry and intriguing, these findings should be interpreted with caution.鈥

So how did they find the Christmas Spirit network?

鈥淚n fMRI, you run a sequence of images and see if there is any stimulus in different parts of the brain.鈥

鈥淭he person lays in the scanner and we took a measurement every three seconds to monitor changes in blood oxygenation in the brain.

Cat wearing Christmas antlers
Image caption,
Christmas can illicit strong feelings either way

鈥淲e ran a sequence where we presented everyday images but then alternated it to a series of Christmas theme images, then back to regular images and repeated this cycle six times.鈥

鈥淎ll the time, we were taking the same measurement looking to see which parts are changing in time with the images changing within that cycle.鈥

鈥淲e looked at fluctuations and we saw reactions (to the pictures being changed) in their visual cortex.鈥

Image from study showing activation map in subjects.Image source, BMJ
Image caption,
Image from study. Activation maps showing areas of significant increases in cerebral activity while participants viewed images with a Christmas theme as opposed to everyday images.

Mr Haddock found that the part of the brain that lit up is also the part that is active when we have emotions shared with others - the primary motor cortex and pre-motor cortex. This part of the brain is also important for controlling body movement. Happy memories and pleasant behaviours are likely to activate the area.

However, Mr Haddock acknowledges there are limits to the study and that his colleagues in neuroscience might suggest that just because we can localise emotions in the brain, it doesn鈥檛 contribute much to how we understand them.

Unfortunately this experiment can鈥檛 provide definitive conclusions about the emotional impact of Christmas on the brain. However, he says, 鈥渋t鈥檚 not that far fetched to suggest a connection between these areas and why they we feel warm or happy when they light up.鈥

Gingerbread person with lolly
Image caption,
Mr Haddock admitted that, as a child, his brain lit up the first time he saw gingerbread at Christmas

So does Christmas make Mr Haddock鈥檚 brain light up?

鈥淚 still have knee-jerk responses to Christmas stimuli. The first time I hear certain songs or when I go get the tree, I鈥檓 definitely getting some positive reactions.鈥

鈥淚 find it interesting to reflect on how we react at different stages of life. As a teenager I started to miss the excitement I felt when I was younger. Some of the things that really triggered me as a kid, the first time I saw a gingerbread, or practicing the Christmas play - all those things didn鈥檛 excite me so much when I was a teenager. But now I have kids of my own and I have a different kind of excitement to experience it again with them.鈥

Gingerbread person with lolly
Image caption,
Mr Haddock admitted that, as a child, his brain lit up the first time he saw gingerbread at Christmas

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