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Your Best Brain Ever: A Complete Guide and Workout
Your Best Brain Ever: A Complete Guide and Workout
Your Best Brain Ever: A Complete Guide and Workout
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Your Best Brain Ever: A Complete Guide and Workout

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National Geographic presents a comprehensive guide to fighting mental decline. With cutting-edge neuroscience, information about Alzheimer's, fascinating case studies, and tips to fight brain aging symptoms such as slower mental acuity and "senior moments," this smart, engaging guide will help keep your memory sharp and your mind active. Fun, age-defying exercises--from body stretches to word games to foods that help you think--help the brain perform at its best, just like exercising does for other parts of the body. Leading memory loss expert Cynthia R. Green, PhD, and eminent science writer Michael Sweeney have created a book both informational and practical that gives readers everything they need to know about the care and feeding of one of the body's most important organs: the brain.

Editor's Note

Confront your fears…

If the occasional memory lapse has you worried, score piece of mind with this guide to fighting mental decline from National Geographic.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateDec 31, 2013
ISBN9781426213243
Your Best Brain Ever: A Complete Guide and Workout

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    Book preview

    Your Best Brain Ever - Cynthia R. Green

    Consultant

    CHAPTER 1

    Sustain Your Brain

    Keeping your body’s command center in peak condition

    Your brain’s health may be the most powerful indicator of how long you will live. It is crucial to whether that life will be rich and satisfying from youth well into old age, or something substantially less rewarding, and for less time.

    A car driven wisely, fueled with high-quality gasoline, given regular oil changes, and repaired with new parts as old ones wear out is likely to last longer than one that’s abused or neglected. Likewise, the easiest way to have a healthy brain in middle age and beyond is to start with one as a youth and to follow good physical and mental habits. Exercise it. Feed it. Challenge it. Then enjoy the rewards.

    But what of the person who comes late to repairs, like the owner of a car that rusts for years on blocks or runs too long on dirty oil? The car owner can always swap out the engine. You, on the other hand, have only one brain, basically composed of the same neurons you were born with, plus a few added to some narrowly specific areas. Once they’ve begun to deteriorate, can they be saved—or even made stronger?

    Brain researcher Marian Diamond is certain they can.

    In the 1960s, Diamond compared two groups of lab rats. The first group was confined to the equivalent of a gray isolation cell in a maximum-security prison. They ate simple rations to keep them alive from day to day, but their brains received little stimulation. No rat games, no rat puzzles, no rat get-togethers to break the boredom. She enrolled the second group in a version of rat school, complete with recess. They had toys and balls for play, challenging mazes to explore, exercise equipment to get blood pumping to their muscles and their neurons, and best of all, other rats to share their experiences. When she pitted the two in timed contests in which they ran the same mazes, the rats that had lived in the mentally and physically invigorating environment performed much better.

    NEW KIND OF FITNESS REGIMEN

    Learning can strengthen your brain at any age

    Diamond then did what she could not do to humans in a similar experiment. She put both winners and losers under the knife to examine their brains. (Life’s not fair, especially for rodents.) Rats that had enjoyed the richer learning environment and had won the maze races exhibited markedly different brains from those in the control group. Their cerebral cortices—the outer, wrinkled shells that are home to neural pathways that make sense of the world—were thicker than those of the unstimulated rats. The enriched-brain rats had more neural connections, a sign of greater mental activity. And they had more blood vessels to carry vital oxygen to keep those connections firing at peak efficiency. Diamond had gathered concrete evidence that what goes on in the mind manifests itself in the physical state of the brain. Learning strengthens the organ of the brain just as exercise strengthens muscles in the legs, arms, and abdomen.

    As revealing as Diamond’s research was, it had a twist: She didn’t experiment on young rats. She chose to work with rats in middle age and older, equal to ages between 60 and 90 in humans. Old rats had brains they could reshape in response to new experiences, a condition known as plasticity.

    Experience Is Everything

    That revelation changed widespread beliefs about the plasticity of older brains. Studies with young rats, cats, and other mammals had suggested that the brain opened a crucial window for learning during youth, and then closed it. For instance, in a series of famous experiments in the 1960s, neurobiologists David Hubel and Torsten Wiesel took a group of kittens and sewed one of each pair of eyes shut at birth but left the other untouched. At six months, they opened the closed eye. Although the eye was physically sound, the kitten never learned to see through it.

    The experiment demonstrated that the kitten’s brain had been wired to expect, and process, visual information at a crucial time in development. When that time passed, those abilities were gone forever. Scientists call this type of brain development experience-expectant, meaning the brain awaits the stimulus of a particular experience, such as sight or sound, to develop the means to process that information.

    No Age Limits

    But there’s a second category of brain-developing experiences. These are called experience-dependent. They prompt brain growth in response not to stimuli common to the species, such as light and sound, but rather to the individual’s unique environment. A child raised in the Amazon jungle learns a lot about plants and animals of the rain forest. A child growing up in the suburbs figures out how to play on the jungle gym and swings, or to swim in a pool or kick a soccer ball.

    This second type of brain development can occur at any time. Some types of learning, such as mastery of a second language, are easier before the age of puberty, but on the other hand, vocabulary building occurs throughout life. In general, there is no single, crucial time window for this kind of learning. Your brain can learn experience-dependent knowledge at any time.

    THE UNIVERSE INSIDE YOUR HEAD

    Getting to know your body’s most dynamic system

    The brain’s plasticity reveals much about its amazing structure. It is the most complicated object in the universe, composed of billions of independent units that work together in remarkably complex symphonies that manage to comprehend the world; process, store, and retrieve information; and use that information to decide how to interact with the world. Each new experience changes the brain’s physical makeup, so that by the time you finish reading this page, your brain will be slightly different from your brain at the time you began with the page’s first word.

    At the cellular level, the human brain is a collection of as many as 100 billion nerve cells called neurons and about 50 trillion neuroglia cells. The latter sometimes are simply called glial cells, from the Greek word for glue. Their role is similar to that of hordes of servants in a castle: They serve their comparatively few masters, the neurons. Glial cells help neurons make connections and promote their health and steady functioning. Some take an active role in physical health by attacking microbes. Others, called oligodendrocytes, produce an insulating substance called myelin that speeds communication from neuron to neuron.

    Wired for Connectivity

    Neurons are the brain’s key players. Each begins as its own little orb. Once the neuron has fixed itself into its particular cubbyhole in the brain during fetal development, two types of projections sprout from its central core: a single, whiplike axon, some as short as a fraction of an inch and others several feet long, and from one to as many as 100,000 dendrites branching out like the knobby ends of a cat-o’-nine-tails. Dendrites reach out to other neurons, some near and some far. They receive information from the axons of their neighbors and pass it to their neuron for processing; their input allows a neuron to gather data—to learn. The neuron initiates or passes information via its axon to the dendrites of other neurons, like a teacher speaking to a classroom of students, with each of those students channeling the information to other students, parents, and friends. The web of axons and dendrites pointing in every direction makes the brain’s interior wiring resemble the chaos of a mangrove swamp.

    BRAIN INSIGHT

    From Chaos to Cognition

    As Emily Dickinson once wrote, The brain is wider than the sky

    Your brain is astonishingly, incomprehensibly, jaw-droppingly complicated.

    Assume that each of your brain’s roughly 100 billion neurons (nobody has counted them, but that’s a pretty good estimate) has the capability to connect with one to as many as 10,000 other neurons, thanks to its arrangement of axons and dendrites. If that’s the case, then the number of theoretical connection patterns in your brain is 40 quadrillion: 40,000,000,000,000,000. If you factor in the variable power of how strongly neurotransmitters send a signal from one neuron to the next, hypothesizing that each neuron has ten different signal strengths, then the number of electrochemical configurations in the brain runs to ten to the one-trillionth power. That’s the number 1, followed by a trillion zeros. Compare this with the estimates of the number of atoms in the observable universe: 10 to the 80th power, or 1 followed by 80 zeros.

    Out of this mind-blowingly vast maze of neural connections of varying intensities comes the ability to comprehend and interact with the universe. At some point in the brain’s development, consciousness arises within a three-pound, tofu-like mass of wrinkled matter. The universe becomes aware of itself—and can marvel at its own complexity.

    IT STARTS WITH A SPARK

    Neural communication runs on electricity

    If only you could watch as information passes along circuits of neurons, it might look like flocks of birds darting, converging, and scattering against the sky. Like birds in flight, reeling and turning as if by magic, neurons communicate without the need to touch one another. A tiny space, called a synapse, separates the would-be embrace of axons and dendrites.

    The neuron’s language of communication within its own cell body is electricity. A spark received via a dendrite travels as electric energy until it reaches the end of the neuron’s axon. There, the information it contains is translated into a variety of chemicals known as neurotransmitters. Each neurotransmitter has its own particular job, ranging from energizing the receiving neuron to fostering positive feelings of rewarding behaviors to suppressing particular actions. The neurotransmitters traverse the synaptic gap and dock in matching receptor sites like keys in a lock. Their joining with the cell wall of the receptor neuron initiates a new electrical charge, which travels the length of that neuron until it is converted to chemical energy at the far side.

    A neuron requires stimulation to fire. That stimulus could begin outside the body, as when you look at the sea and electromagnetic waves reflecting off the surface activate the light-sensitive rod and cone cells in your eyes’ retinas. That sensation—blue or green, flat, rolling, or choppy—knocks down the first domino in the line. From the retina, the signal passes along a neural chain to the visual cortex at the back of the brain and then back to the front for further processing. A stimulus could also originate internally, as when you feel hungry, or when your conscious mind remembers the face of your fifth-grade teacher and activates the first neuron in another domino-like pattern. Some neurons fire consciously, and some fire below the level of conscious thought. Some even fire in ways to mimic the world outside.

    When a particular bit of information travels throughout a circuit of neurons, it changes from electrical to chemical, back and forth, propagating a signal at speeds that can reach more than two hundred miles an hour. As it travels, it may prompt the addition or subtraction of more information, or set off a flood of new signals with new information. All this motion requires energy. The brain accounts for only about 2 percent of a body’s weight, but it uses about 25 percent of the body’s blood sugar and oxygen.

    Because neurons aren’t bound to each other like bricks in a wall, they remain free to make new connections and break old ones. That’s exactly what happens when the brain learns something new: The information physically alters the connections.

    BRAIN INSIGHT

    The MVPs of Your Mind

    These chemicals are some of the most important messengers in the brain

    ACETYLCHOLINE. Causes muscles to contract; also linked to memory, sleep, and attention.

    DOPAMINE. Crucial for movement of the body, as well as the brain’s reward system, associated both with pleasure and addiction. Patients with Parkinson’s disease have lowered dopamine levels, causing characteristic shaking of limbs and head.

    ENDORPHIN. Released following stress or pain, acting like a natural opiate by binding to opiate receptors on neurons.

    GAMMA-AMINOBUTYRIC ACID, or GABA. Quiets, rather than excites, neurons, because the brain needs to decelerate as well as accelerate a multitude of functions.

    GLUTAMINE. Excites neurons, except in high concentrations fatal to neurons; required for learning and memory.

    NOREPINEPHRINE. Plays a key role in regulating mood, as well as blood pressure, heartbeat, and arousal.

    SEROTONIN. Prompts sleep and appetite; also plays a role in mood, related to everything from depression to anxiety to sexual arousal.

    PIECES OF A PUZZLE

    Understanding your brain’s anatomy

    At the micro level, neurons in their billions form an intricate electrical net. At the macro level, they are organized into the discrete structures of the brain, with four main parts: cerebrum, diencephalon, cerebellum, and brain stem.

    The outer surface of the cerebrum, nearest the skull, is the cerebral cortex. It’s the wrinkly, gray, walnut-shaped covering that most people think of when they visualize the brain. The cerebral cortex is home to the functions of information processing that separate humans from other animals.

    The cerebrum exists in two hemispheres, the left and right, connected by a band of neural tissue called the corpus callosum, which allows information to pass between the two. The left hemisphere has long been considered dominant because it typically is the site of language processing. Strokes in the left hemisphere sometimes impair speech. Injuries to the right hemisphere, on the other hand, sometimes result in reductions in or loss of the ability to integrate information—to see the forest for the trees. The right hemisphere apparently plays a crucial role in emotional and spatial recognition, such as seeing raised eyebrows and upturned corners of the mouth and realizing that a face expresses joy.

    The two hemispheres duplicate many anatomical structures. Brain experts speak of folds and

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