Archive for September, 2011

September 20, 2011: 5:38 pm: SharpBrainsUncategorized

We are honored to announce that AARP has included our very own book The SharpBrains Guide to Brain Fitness (182 pages; $14.95) in its new List of Best Books on Brain Fitness, which will be unveiled during AARP’s upcoming Life@50 National Event. We hope this list will help many more individuals and institutions learn about our resource: given that 80% of respondents to a recent AARP survey selected “Staying Mentally Sharp” as their top priority, we certainly know there is a significant need for quality information!

AARP’s Best Books Guide


Brain Fitness


The Dana Guide to Brain Health, by Floyd E. Bloom, M. Flint Beal, and David J. Kupfer (Dana Press, 2006).

The SharpBrains Guide to Brain Fitness: 18 Interviews with Scientists, Practical Advice, and Product Reviews, to Keep Your Brain Sharp, by Alvaro Fernandez and Elkhonon Goldberg. (SharpBrains Inc., 2009).

Save Your Brain: The 5 Things You Must Do To Keep Your Mind Young and Sharp
, by Paul Nussbaum. (McGraw-Hill, 2010).

The Secret Life of the Grown-Up Brain: The Surprising Talents of the Middle-Aged Mind, by Barbara Strauch (Viking, 2010).

The Memory Bible: An Innovative Strategy for Keeping Your Brain Young
, by Gary Small (Hyperion, 2003).

___________

Also Recommended:

The Mature Mind: The Positive Power of the Aging Brain, by Gene Cohen (Basic Books, 2006).

The Brain That Changes Itself, by Norman Doidge (Penguin, 2007).

Spark: The Revolutionary New Science of Exercise and the Brain, by John Ratey and Eric Hagerman (Little, Brown and Co., 2008).

Think Smart: A Neuroscientist’s Prescription for Improving Your Brain’s Performance, by Richard Restak (Riverhead, 2010).

Compiled by:
Office of Academic Affairs, AARP

September 18, 2011: 8:04 pm: SharpBrainsUncategorized

How To Help Your Child’s Brain Grow Up Strong (NPR):

- “Kids who learn two languages young are better able to learn abstract rules and to reverse rules that they’ve already learned,” says Aamodt. “They’re less likely to have difficulty choosing between conflicting possibilities when there are two possible responses that both present themselves. They’re also better at figuring out what other people are thinking, which is probably because they have to figure out which language to use every time they talk to somebody in order to communicate.”

- “This is really critical because there are so many things parents want to do when they read parenting books,” he says. “They take steps to teach their children math or reading … but a big thing we can do for our children is to do the best to foster the development of self-control and willpower. Self-control and the ability to restrain impulses is associated with success at every age, whether it means being able to read at age 4, or being able to restrain impulses at a later age, or even what your peers think of you in high school. At all of these ages, willpower and self-control is a stronger predictor of academic success than IQ.”

- “When children are young, they can learn self-control by focusing on any fun activity — whether that means studying martial arts or playing with dolls and planning a make-believe tea party.”

To learn more:

September 15, 2011: 8:00 pm: Books for Cognitive Psychology ArenaUncategorized
  • By Diane F. Halpern.

The fourth edition of Sex Differences in Cognitive Abilities critically examines the breadth of research on this complex and controversial topic, with the principal aim of helping the reader to understand where sex differences are found – and where they are not. Since the publication of the third…

ISBN: 9781848729414

Published Sep 20, 2011 by Psychology Press

: 3:10 pm: Greater Good MagazineUncategorized

(Editor’s Note: we are pleased to bring you this arti­cle thanks to our col­lab­o­ra­tion with Greater Good Science Center).

A Course Correction for Positive Psychology

A review of Martin Seligman’s latest book, Flourish: A Visionary New Understanding of Happiness and Well-Being.

- By Jill Suttie

As president of the American Psychological Association in 1998, Martin Seligman challenged the psychological community to radically change its approach. For too long, he charged, psychology had been preoccupied solely with relieving symptoms of mental illness; instead, he believed it should explore how to thrive in life, not just survive it. He called for a psychology that would uncover what makes people creative, resilient, optimistic, and, ultimately, happy. The “positive psychology” movement was born.

Yet in his latest book, Flourish, Seligman tries to provide something of a course correction for positive psychology. Seligman, the Zellerbach Family Professor of Psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, where he also directs the university’s Positive Psychology Center, argues that positive psychology has been too focused on the goal of promoting happiness alone. He proposes a shift, both to increase overall personal well-being—what he calls “flourishing,” which is not as dependent on one’s mood or momentary feelings as happiness—and to improve one’s community, not just one’s self.

While Seligman still considers happiness to be important, in Flourish he offers a more holistic take on well-being, which he summarizes with the acronym PERMA: Positive emotion, Engagement, Relationships, Meaning, and Accomplishment. Each of these elements, he argues, is crucial to a full, well-lived life, even if it sometimes involves struggle and leads, in the short term, to unhappiness.

For example, relationships can be a source of joy, but they can also involve conflict and sacrifice. Yet having close relationships is an important life goal for most people and contributes to one’s overall well-being. Indeed, research shows that people with close relationships enjoy all kinds of physical and mental health benefits, including greater longevity.

Seligman believes that psychologists should focus on increasing these aspects of well-being using positive psychology interventions—like keeping a gratitude journal to increase positive emotion—rather than prescribing psychotropic medications, which he claims fail to cure people. He is critical of social scientists who emphasize the study of environmental influences—like poverty and upbringing—on behavior and don’t pay enough attention to the study of individual character. This breeds a victim mentality, he claims, which hampers the individual’s opportunity to grow.

“Human beings are often, perhaps more often, drawn by the future than they are driven by the past,” he writes, “and so a science that measures and builds expectations, planning, and conscious choice will be more potent than a science of habits, drives, and circumstances.”

In this idea are echoes of Seligman’s seminal work on “learned helplessness,” where repeated experiences lead a person to believe that he or she is powerless to avoid emotional suffering, and so stops trying. To prevent this, Seligman suggests teaching patients coping skills, which they can use to better control their emotional responses to difficult situations and help avert depression and anxiety. These same skills, he argues, can be taught in our public institutions—including schools, hospitals, and the military—in order to inoculate whole communities against emotional distress.

In the book, he highlights the work of social scientists who have tried to do just that, including Karen Reivich and Jane Gillham, who study character-building. Reivich and Gillham have developed a classroom intervention that helps children increase their optimism, flexibility, and assertiveness in order to prevent them from developing depression later on. In addition, they’ve created a program that helps students identify their character strengths (e.g., creativity, self-control) and use them more effectively. When applied to schools, these programs have been shown to decrease depression, anxiety, and conduct problems among students, and to increase positive social skills, like empathy and cooperation.

In another example, Seligman worked with the military to create a character-based program that combats PTSD in veterans. Before soldiers are deployed, they are taught resiliency, or the ability to adapt to different circumstances, thereby reducing their chances of returning home with post-battle mental illness. Though some critics have accused Seligman of brainwashing soldiers to accept intolerable conditions, he counters with data showing his program reduces later suffering.

Seligman’s work is inventive, but his writing can sometimes ramble. The beginning of the book is nearly unreadable, with a convoluted comparison between his theories of “authentic happiness” and “flourishing.” Still, for those who can get past its faults, Flourish is a thought-provoking read, filled with insights into Seligman’s thinking and personality, as well as inside stories of positive psychology’s early beginnings, its occasional detractors, and its many successes.

Jill Suttie Greater Good— Jill Sut­tie, Psy.D., is Greater Good’s book review edi­tor and a free­lance writer. Copy­right Greater Good. Greater Good, based at UC-Berkeley, is an online mag­a­zine that high­lights ground break­ing sci­en­tific research into the roots of com­pas­sion and altruism.

September 12, 2011: 10:46 am: SharpBrainsUncategorized

Predicting Alzheimer’s Disease More Accurate Through Cognitive Changes Than Biomarkers (Medical News):

  • “Measuring people’s changes in cognitive abilities is a better predictor of Alzheimer’s disease than changes in biomarkers, researchers from the Benito Menni Complex Assistencial en Salut Mental, Barcelona, Spain, reported in Archives of General Psychiatry, a JAMA journal.”
  • “The investigators used a range of tests to assess the participants’ cognition and how well they functioned. Cognition is the mental process of knowing, and includes perception, awareness, reasoning and judgment. They also took cerebrospinal fluid samples from them at the beginning of the study and every year for two years. Participants’ blood samples were also taken when the study began — this was tested for genes which are linked to Alzheimer’s disease. From MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) results included in the ADNI, they were able to gather data on the participants’ cortical thickness and brain volume.
  • “They found that cortical thickness of the left middle temporal lobe of the brain, as well as two measures of delayed memory in those with MCI were linked to a higher likelihood of developing Alzheimer’s disease within 24 months.
  • Changes in functional activity (Editor’s Note: our emphasis to highlight the need to evaluate changes over time, not just one time activity) scores seemed to show a greater rate of decline in the participants than changes in biomarkers.”

This is consistent with one of the most insightful sessions held during the 2011 SharpBrains Summit, on The Role of Cog­ni­tive Health Mon­i­tor­ing Sys­tems (requires registration to view): A missing piece in today’s brain health toolkit is the capa­bil­ity to mon­i­tor a person’s cog­ni­tive per­for­mance and Cog­ni­tive Reserve across the lifes­pan. Such a sys­tem could greatly facil­i­tate the pre­ven­tion, diag­no­sis and treat­ment of cog­ni­tive decline due to aging and dis­ease. Pol­icy, research and tech­nol­ogy strands are con­verg­ing to bet­ter define and meet this need: Which instru­ments, plat­forms and ana­lyt­i­cal approaches could pro­vide the data and out­comes required? How will behav­ioral mark­ers com­ple­ment bio­log­i­cal and neu­roimag­ing mark­ers? How may cog­ni­tive mon­i­tor­ing sys­tems be devel­oped, mar­keted and used?

  • Dr. Yaakov Stern, Head Cog­ni­tive Neu­ro­science Divi­sion of the Taub Insti­tute, Colum­bia University
  • Dr. David Darby, Chief Med­ical Offi­cer, CogState
  • Dr. Jef­frey Kaye, Direc­tor, NIA — ORCATECH
  • Mod­er­ated by: Dr. Joshua Stein­er­man, Assis­tant Pro­fes­sor, Albert Ein­stein Col­lege of Medicine

To learn more about the 2011 SharpBrains Summit (recordings are now available): click Here.

September 9, 2011: 12:01 pm: Alvaro FernandezUncategorized

A quick FYI — I will be speaking at the following events. Please do come and say Hello if you get the chance!

> Sep­tem­ber 19-20th, San Fran­cisco, CA: Trans­lat­ing Neu­ro­science Into Mar­ketable Ther­a­peu­tic Inter­ven­tions, at the Entertainment Software and Cognitive Neurotherapeutics Society (ESCoNS). Details Here.

> Sep­tem­ber 23rd, Los Gatos, CA: The Sharp­Brains Guide to Brain Fit­ness, at Los Gatos Pub­lic Library. Details Here.

> Novem­ber 8th, San Fran­cisco, CA: Brain Fit­ness for Adap­tive Orga­ni­za­tions, at the 2011 Neu­roLead­er­ship Sum­mit. Details Here.

September 7, 2011: 8:00 pm: Books for Cognitive Psychology ArenaUncategorized
  • Edited by Eduardo Salas, Stephen M. Fiore and Michael P. Letsky.

Cognitive processes in teams have been a valuable arena for team researchers to explore. Team cognition research advances and informs a variety of disciplines, including cognitive and social sciences, engineering, military science, organizational science, human factors, medicine, and communications…

ISBN: 9780415874137

Published Sep 07, 2011 by Routledge Academic

September 6, 2011: 12:15 pm: Alvaro FernandezUncategorized

The New York Times has recently published several very good and seemingly unrelated articles…let’s try and connect some dots. What if we questioned the very premise behind naming some classrooms the “classrooms of the future” simply because they have been adding technology in literally mindless ways? What if the Education of the Future (sometimes also referred to as “21st Century Skills”) wasn’t so much about the How we educate but about the What we want students to learn and develop, applying what we know about mind and brain to the needs they are likely to face during the next 50–70 years of their lives?

In Classroom of Future, Stagnant Scores:

  • “The digital push here aims to go far beyond gadgets to transform the very nature of the classroom, turning the teacher into a guide instead of a lecturer, wandering among students who learn at their own pace on Internet-connected devices.”
  • “Hope and enthusiasm are soaring here. But not test scores.”

School Curriculum Falls Short on Bigger Lessons:

  • “Now that children are back in the classroom, are they really learning the lessons that will help them succeed?”
  • “Many child development experts worry that the answer may be no. They say the ever-growing emphasis on academic performance and test scores means many children aren’t developing life skills like self-control, motivation, focus and resilience”

Steve Pinker’s review of WILLPOWER: Rediscovering the Greatest Human Strength

  • “Ever since Adam and Eve ate the apple, Ulysses had himself tied to the mast, the grasshopper sang while the ant stored food and St. Augustine prayed “Lord make me chaste — but not yet,” individuals have struggled with self-control. In today’s world this virtue is all the more vital, because now that we have largely tamed the scourges of nature, most of our troubles are self-inflicted. We eat, drink, smoke and gamble too much, max out our credit cards, fall into dangerous liaisons and become addicted to heroin, cocaine and e-mail.”

A couple of in-depth interviews on What the education of the future could deal with in more explicit and targeted ways:

September 5, 2011: 8:00 pm: Books for Cognitive Psychology ArenaUncategorized
  • By Gianfranco Denes.
  • Translated by Philippa Venturelli Smith.

The origin, development, and nature of language has been the focus of theoretical debate among philosophers for many centuries. Following the pioneering clinical observations 150 years ago of loss of language following a cerebral lesion, language started to be considered a biological system, that…

ISBN: 9781848720398

Published Sep 06, 2011 by Psychology Press

September 2, 2011: 2:55 pm: SharpBrainsUncategorized

Heathline now offers a cool interactive Human Brain in 3D you can play with, as part of their overall Body Maps. Enjoy!

Related articles:

- Use It or Lose It: What is It?

- Why We Need to Retool Use It or Lose It

http://www.sharpbrains.com/blog/2006/09/12/use-it-or-lose-it-what-is-it/Use