Joe's Black Dog

Joe's Black Dog
Joe's Black Dog by Marjorie Weiss

28 December 2013

Brave New Brain

Brain View  by Suranga's Photo Collection - InstagramSriLanka
Brain View , a photo by Suranga's Photo Collection - InstagramSriLanka on Flickr.


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The revolutionary findings about your brain's remarkable ability to change itself are barely a decade old.

In the 1990s, scientists rocked the field of neurobiology with the startling news that the mature mammalian brain is capable of sprouting new neurons in the hippocampus and the olefactory bulbs, and that it continues to do so even into old age. This process is called neurogenesis.

Scientists also confirmed what was long suspected: your brain is not hardwired. It can reinvent itself, as it were, by creating new pathways to reroute, readjust, and otherwise change the networking and connections, sometimes even substituting one area for another. 

Your brain also changes to reflect what you learn, do, and think. In fact, your brain is physically rearranging its networks just about every minute of every day. That's neuroplasticity.

Then they discovered that your actions, thoughts, feelings, or environment can change your genes - more specifically, whether certain genes are expressed - altering brain fuction; character traits; and risk of some diseases, from cancer to schizophrenia. That's epigenetics. 

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They showed how neglect, abuse, and bullying in childhood can stunt brain development, and they gave some credibility to age-old concepts of positive personal transformation through religious experiences, meditation, self-help programs, and even positive thinking and your own will. They also explain how and why talking cures such as psychotherapy and cognitive behaviour therapy can change lives.

The Scientific American Brave New Brain
Judith Horstman
2010
Wiley USA