Get Smart by Using 10 Percent Less of Your Brain

theworldismine13

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Get Smart by Using 10 Percent Less of Your Brain
http://blogs.scientificamerican.com...smart-by-using-10-percent-less-of-your-brain/

The movie Lucy has become a teaching moment in the last month or so for scientists and journalists to remind the world—time and again—that we don’t just use 10 percent of our brains. All of the three pounds of jelly underneath our hardened domes is there for a good reason. It’s not just a terabyte hard drive with a lot of unused space.

In all fairness, the brilliant filmmaker Luc Besson of Femme Nikita fame probably understood this and decided to build the plot around this idea anyway. No different really from George Lucas spinning a fantasy about space ships traveling faster than light. It might have been more instructive in these finger-wagging critiques to point out why shutting down some brain function might be the royal road to cognitive enhancement.

An article I edited, “Accidental Genius by Darold Treffert, appeared in Scientific American’s August issue. It highlighted cases of acquired savantism in which brain injury, strokes or other mishaps result in the precipitous emergence of previously unrecognized musical, artistic or mathematical abilities. The article also talks about new technology—transcranial direct-current stimulation—that may be able to induce such a state for a brief interval. What may be happening either after an accident or after exposure to external stimulation (wryly referred to at times as cattle prods) is the tamping down of some neural circuits, allowing brain activity that had played a secondary role to now takes its turn as soloist in the great neural symphony orchestra. From the article:

Using transcranial direct-current stimulation (tDCS), these researchers induced savantlike abilities in human volunteers. The technique generates a polarized electric current to diminish activity in a part of the left hemisphere involved with sensory input, memory, language and other brain processes while increasing activity in the right hemisphere (the right anterior temporal lobe).

The investigators then asked study participants to solve the challenging “nine-dot” puzzle either with or without tDCS—a task that requires the creativity to search for a solution in an unconventional way. Participants had to connect three rows of three dots using four straight lines without lifting a pen or retracing lines. None of them could solve it before stimulation. When 29 subjects were exposed to “sham” stimulation—electrodes emplaced without any current to test for placebo effects—they were still at a loss. With the current switched on, however, some 40 percent—14 of 33 participants—worked their way through the puzzle successfully.

It is also useful to consider what would happen if you could turn up the volume and fire up more brain circuits across the board? Perhaps not such a great idea after all. I wrote about this once before when the really terrible Limitless came out in 2011. The film had a plot that revolved around a pill (NZT) that made a ne’er-do-well (Bradley Cooper) infinitely smarter. A snippet:

Suppose that your brain is not going full bore every second and suppose we could via a magic pill like NZT make that happen. With all of the neural machinery running full blast, what would be the result: Gordon Gekko, Albert Einstein, Pablo Picasso? Maybe not. With everything cranked up, you might, at best, be ravenously hungry, sexually aroused and sending tweets while skydiving. More likely, though, things would get a lot worse. A flood of stimulatory neurotransmitters would lead to what the experts call “excitotoxicity,” in which circuit after circuit blows out, the kind of massive brain damage that occurs after a stroke. Metaphorically, your head would explode.

My colleague Daisy Yuhas has recently issued an open-ended call to visitors to our site to compile wish lists of their most desired brain upgrades. For me, a hemorrhagic stroke doesn’t sound too appealing. Maybe, rather, some mythical chill pill might do the trick—a dimmer switch for the mind.​
 

wheywhey

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I just watched two documentaries on the International Mathmatical Olympiad (IMO). The American version is Hard Problems and the British version is Beautiful Young Minds. While awkward the American competitors seem fairly normal but many of the UK competitors have autism/Asperger's. This prevalence of autism may also explain why in recent decades the UK team has not become majority Asian like the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. Although the last two UK teams have been half Asian.

In Beautiful Young Minds one of the team leaders comments on autism and how people with the condition have the ability to focus and concentrate. There was one autistic kid who learned to speak and write Mandarin fluently in three months. He had a Chinese girlfriend. I've noticed that many YouTube polyglots are married to Asian women. I think Asian women are understanding when their husbands have a near obsessive focus on a single subject.
 

Hawaiian Punch

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I just watched two documentaries on the International Mathmatical Olympiad (IMO). The American version is Hard Problems and the British version is Beautiful Young Minds. While awkward the American competitors seem fairly normal but many of the UK competitors have autism/Asperger's. This prevalence of autism may also explain why in recent decades the UK team has not become majority Asian like the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. Although the last two UK teams have been half Asian.

In Beautiful Young Minds one of the team leaders comments on autism and how people with the condition have the ability to focus and concentrate. There was one autistic kid who learned to speak and write Mandarin fluently in three months. He had a Chinese girlfriend. I've noticed that many YouTube polyglots are married to Asian women. I think Asian women are understanding when their husbands have a near obsessive focus on a single subject.


Lol in a way you are implying Asian people are autistic.
 

wheywhey

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Lol in a way you are implying Asian people are autistic.

No. I am not implying that Asians are autistic. I am saying that when an Asian has a particular ability, his culture will let him narrowly focus on that ability. Asian culture does not demand that you be "well-rounded" like western culture does. Asian universities don't require that their applicants be involved in student government, play an instrument, captain a sports team, and volunteer.

That is why I gave the example of Asian women being married to men who speak several languages. These men spend several hours a day studying languages.
 

Namekian Maranantha

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Obviously we don’t just use 10% of our brain.

Not so obvious that we don’t just use 10% of the brains CAPACITY.

When it is said that we use only 10% of our brains capacity, Its helpful to not get caught up in focusing on the validity of the actual % number but rather, to focus on… whether it is actually so that we don’t use as much of the brains capacity as is probably possible?

According to the article (and a host of ancient philosophies) mans creative capacity, went up as he was able to "tone down the mental activity"

So can we assume: To the degree the "mind-brain" is less excited with mental activity, our mental capacity will rise?

If that’s the case then it’s not a question of how much of the actual brain we use, but a question of the brains CAPACITY being dependent on the number of connectivity amongst the neurons. According to the article it seems to be saying it is not dependent on the number of connectivity amongst the neurons. In other words, a “magic pill” enhancing mental activity is not the answer to accessing higher brain capacity.

Assuming someone wants to get 'smarter' by using “10%” less of his brain? How do they tone down the mental activity? The article made reference to those who have had brain injury, strokes and other mishaps – will we have to suffer that?

Also reference was made to a technique called transcranial direct-current stimulation – will we have to go through that?

Can we exercise our ‘will-power’ to be mentally quiet?:dwillhuh:

….What about "meditation?" :patrice: ...worth discussion IMO :popcorn:
 

Brosef

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This is such an overly simplified way of looking at the brain I can't even begin to explain all the things wrong

It's not about how much of your brain you use but about the circuitry involved

There's different kinds of current and magnetic stim which can help people rehab AFTER strokes, after they've lost their original circuitry

Overstimm on a normal brain would deplete neurotransmitters fast, causing you to go into a long hangover state

Anyways enjoy this for what it is, a fictional movie.
 

Namekian Maranantha

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Nice man.

Strange the very thing (technique, method, action etc..) for becoming 'more' creative, so-called smarter and having more energy can possible be right at our finger tips within our own 'power' sort of speak.

And yet something so simple is often overlooked and dismissed. Though some may say thats why its merely dismissed as some oriental nonsense. The simplicity of it makes it either or both, easy to overlook, and difficult to 'do' with our overtly over-active, over-stimulated, over-distracted, over-stressed and attached minds.
 

Aje

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I don't know if this is similar, but I've noticed after, say, a couple alcoholic drinks I'm able to speak the second language on which I was raised a lot more fluently than when stone sober.
 

wheywhey

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No. I am not implying that Asians are autistic. I am saying that when an Asian has a particular ability, his culture will let him narrowly focus on that ability. Asian culture does not demand that you be "well-rounded" like western culture does. Asian universities don't require that their applicants be involved in student government, play an instrument, captain a sports team, and volunteer.

That is why I gave the example of Asian women being married to men who speak several languages. These men spend several hours a day studying languages.

David Shenk says that people become "geniuses" or high-accomplished due to choices they make and resources that are available to them. They constantly challenge themselves and often give up normal lives and relationships.

 
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Namekian Maranantha

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David Shenk says that people become "geniuses" or high-accomplished due to choices they make and resources that are available to them. They constantly challenge themselves and often give up normal lives and relationships.


.....agreed :ehh:

Sacrafice is the name of the game when it comes to being 'great'
 
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