How can we make the brain excsive….
1. Exercise boots brain power
Wondering whether there is a relationship between exercise and mental alertness? The answer is yes.
Wondering whether there is a relationship between exercise and mental alertness? The answer is yes.
Just about every mental test possible was tried. No matter how
it was measured, the answer was consistently yes: A lifetime of exercise can
result in a sometimes astonishing elevation in cognitive performance, compared
with those who are sedentary. Exercisers outperform couch potatoes in tests
that measure long-term memory, reasoning, attention, problem-solving, even
so-called fluid-intelligence tasks. These tasks test the ability to reason
quickly and think abstractly, improvising off previously learned material in
order to solve a new problem. Essentially, exercise improves a whole host of
abilities prized in the classroom and at work
2. Your brain is a survival organ
The human brain evolved, too.
The human brain evolved, too.
The brain is a survival organ. It is designed to solve problems
related to surviving in an unstable outdoor environment and to do so in nearly
constant motion (to keep you alive long enough to pass your genes on). We were
not the strongest on the planet but we developed the strongest brains, the key
to our survival. … The strongest brains survive, not the strongest bodies. …
Our ability to understand each other is our chief survival tool. Relationships
helped us survive in the jungle and are critical to surviving at work and
school today. … If someone does not feel safe with a teacher or boss, he or she
may not perform as well. … There is no greater anti-brain environment than the
classroom and cubicle.
3. Every brain is wired differently
What you do and learn in life physically changes what your brain
looks like — it literally rewires it. … Regions of the brain develop at
different rates in different people. The brains of school children are just as
unevenly developed as their bodies. Our school system ignores the fact that
every brain is wired differently. We wrongly assume every brain is the same.
4. We don't pay attention to
boring things
The brain is not capable of multi-tasking. We can talk and
breathe, but when it comes to higher level tasks, we just can't do it. …
Workplaces and schools actually encourage this type of multi-tasking. Walk into
any office and you'll see people sending e-mail, answering their phones,
Instant Messaging, and on MySpace — all at the same time. Research shows your
error rate goes up 50 percent and it takes you twice as long to do things. When
you're always online you're always distracted. So the always online
organization is the always unproductive organization.
We must do something emotionally relevant every 10 minutes to
reset our attention.
5. Repeat to remember
Improve your memory by elaborately encoding it during its
initial moments. Many of us have trouble remembering names. If at a party you
need help remembering Mary, it helps to repeat internally more information
about her. "Mary is wearing a blue dress and my favorite color is
blue." It may seem counterintuitive at first but study after study shows
it improves your memory.
6. Remember to repeat
How do you remember better? Repeated exposure to information /
in specifically timed intervals / provides the most powerful way to fix memory
into the brain. … Deliberately re-expose yourself to the information more
elaborately if you want the retrieval to be of higher quality. Deliberately
re-expose yourself to the information more elaborately, and in fixed, spaced
intervals, if you want the retrieval to be the most vivid it can be. Learning
occurs best when new information is incorporated gradually into the memory
store rather than when it is jammed in all at once. … Memory is enhanced by
creating associations between concepts. This experiment has been done hundreds
of times, always achieving the same result: Words presented in a logically
organized, hierarchical structure are much better remembered than words placed
randomly — typically 40 percent better.
7. If you sleep well, you'll
think well
The bottom line is that sleep loss means mind loss. Sleep loss
cripples thinking, in just about every way you can measure thinking. Sleep loss
hurts attention, executive function, immediate memory, working memory, mood,
quantitative skills, logical reasoning ability, general math knowledge.
As for naps?
Napping is normal. Ever feel tired in the afternoon? That's
because your brain really wants to take a nap. There's a battle raging in your
head between two armies. Each army is made of legions of brain cells and
biochemicals — one desperately trying to keep you awake, the other desperately
trying to force you to sleep. Around 3 p.m., 12 hours after the midpoint of
your sleep, all your brain wants to do is nap.
The ideal time to nap — the nap zone.
One more tip: "Don't schedule important meetings at 3 p.m.
It just doesn't make sense."
8. Stressed brains don't learn the same way
Your brain is built to deal with stress that lasts about 30
seconds. The brain is not designed for long term stress when you feel like you
have no control. The saber-toothed tiger ate you or you ran away but it was all
over in less than a minute. If you have a bad boss, the saber-toothed tiger can
be at your door for years, and you begin to deregulate. If you are in a bad
marriage, the saber-toothed tiger can be in your bed for years, and the same
thing occurs. You can actually watch the brain shrink.
What causes stress?
Business professionals have spent a long time studying what
types of stress make people less productive and, not surprisingly, have arrived
at the same conclusion that Marty Seligman's German shepherds did: Control is
critical. The perfect storm of occupational stress appears to be a combination
of two malignant facts: a) a great deal is expected of you and b) you have no
control over whether you will perform well.
What effect does stress have on the brain?
Stress damages virtually every kind of cognition that exists. It
damages memory and executive function. It can hurt your motor skills. When you
are stressed out over a long period of time it disrupts your immune response.
You get sicker more often. It disrupts your ability to sleep. You get
depressed.
Stress not only lowers performance, but also heightens emotional
memory so that the poor performances are very easy for us to remember.
9. It's important to stimulate
more senses
Our senses work together so it is important to stimulate them!
Your head crackles with the perceptions of the whole world, sight, sound,
taste, smell, touch, energetic as a frat party. … Smell is unusually effective
at evoking memory. If you're tested on the details of a movie while the smell
of popcorn is wafted into the air, you'll remember 10-50 percent more. … Those
in multisensory environments always do better than those in unisensory
environments. They have more recall with better resolution that lasts longer,
evident even 20 years later.
10. Vision trumps all other senses
We are incredible at remembering pictures. Hear a piece of
information, and three days later you'll remember 10 percent of it. Add a
picture and you'll remember 65 percent. … Pictures beat text as well, in part
because reading is so inefficient for us. Our brain sees words as lots of tiny
pictures, and we have to identify certain features in the letters to be able to
read them. That takes time. … Why is vision such a big deal to us? Perhaps
because it's how we've always apprehended major threats, food supplies and
reproductive opportunity.
11. Male and female brains are
different
What's different? Mental health professionals have known for
years about sex-based differences in the type and severity of psychiatric
disorders. Males are more severely afflicted by schizophrenia than females. By
more than 2 to 1, women are more likely to get depressed than men, a figure
that shows up just after puberty and remains stable for the next 50 years.
Males exhibit more antisocial behavior. Females have more anxiety. Most
alcoholics and drug addicts are male. Most anorexics are female. … Men and women
process certain emotions differently. Emotions are useful. They make the brain
pay attention. These differences are a product of complex interactions between
nature and nurture.
12. We are powerful and natural
explorers
The desire to explore never leaves us despite the classrooms and
cubicles we are stuffed into. Babies are the model of how we learn — not by
passive reaction to the environment but by active testing through observation,
hypothesis, experiment, and conclusion. Babies methodically do experiments on
objects, for example, to see what they will do.
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