the science and practice of brain fitness

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Brain and brain fitness fundamentals.

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Page 1: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Alvaro Fernandez. June 10th, 2008

Page 2: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

An Introduction to SharpBrains

Brain Fitness Market Research and Advisory Services: Independent, not affiliated with products/ vendors. For institutions: Market Research, Consulting and Training Services.

For individuals: Blog and Educational Website

Co-Founded by neuroscientist Elkhonon Goldberg and executive & educator Alvaro Fernandez.

Member of Scientific American Partner Network.

Over 10 scientists, educators, as blog Expert Contributors.

Featured by NYT, US News & World News, Reuters…

Learn more: www.sharpbrains.com

You can find all teasers that follow at: www.sharpbrains.com/teasers

Contact: Alvaro Fernandez at [email protected]

Page 3: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Industry-leading publications

10-Questions Checklist to Evaluate Programs Making Brain Fitness

Claims (Free)

Brain Fitness 101 eGuide: Answers to Your Top 25

Questions (Free)

State of the Brain Fitness Software

Market 2008 ($495)

Page 4: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

An Introduction to our Webinar Series

#1: “The State of the Brain Fitness Software Market, 2008”

May 27th

#2: “Brain Rules for Thinking Smarter”, with John Medina

June 3rd

#3: “The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness”, based on classes ad speaking engagements

June 10th

Page 5: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Key take-aways

Groundbreaking studies show the value of Mental Stimulation and Stress management, on top of nutrition and physical exercise.

We have “3 brains” and 7 key “mental muscles”.

Good brain exercise requires:- Novelty- Variety- Challenging Practice

There is an increasing number of science-based computer-based programs to train specific cognitive skills. None is a General Solution/ “magic pill”.

Page 6: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Content

First, let’s warm-up

Science and trends

Training the 7 main “mental muscles” Motor coordination

Emotions

Memory

Executive

Sensory

Language

Visual

Page 7: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

And let’s create some synapses

Which word in the English language is most often pronounced incorrectly?

Would you rather a crocodile attack you or an alligator?

What is the next number in the sequence 2 5 7 12 19 31 _

Page 8: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Let’s work out some neurons while checking our attention and processing speed

Quickly, name the colors of the following words

Page 9: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

How Accurate is your Memory?

Which penny is the right one?

Draw the face of a penny.

Page 10: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Content

First, let’s warm-up

Science and trends

Training the 7 main “mental muscles” Motor coordination

Emotions

Memory

Executive

Sensory

Language

Visual

Page 11: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

The “3 brains”

1) Reptilian: breathing, movement

3) “Human”: thoughts

2) Mammalian: emotions

Graph by Rita Carter, Mapping the Mind

Page 12: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Parts of the cortex- the “human” brain

VisualOccipital Lobe

Auditory and languageTemporal Lobe

Movement, orientation, calculation and certain types of recognition.

Parietal Lobe

Deals with the most integrated brain functions: thinking, conceptualizing and planning.

Frontal Lobe

Graph by Morphonix

Page 13: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

New research at the intersection of Cognition and Emotion

Some areas that typically improve as we age Self-regulation Emotional functioning Wisdom: move from Problem solving to Pattern recognition

Some areas that typically decline as we age Effortful, deliberative and resource-intensive Processing speed Memory: working, recall, source Attention: selective, divided Mental imagery Problem-solving

For all, our actions influence the rate of improvement and/ or decline

Source: Laura Carstensen, several papers (2005)

Page 14: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

The source of a few miscommunications

Graph by Rita Carter, Mapping the Mind

Page 15: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

What happens when we learn something new

Graph by Rita Carter, Mapping the Mind

New Old

Page 16: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

The promise of neuroplasticity

Salk Institute: enriched environments for mice London cab drivers: vigorous cognitive

stimulation offset detrimental ageing effect Jugglers: the visual brain grows Studies on bilingual people School Sisters of Notredame in Mankato,

Minnesota, and the Cognitive Reserve Cognitive Therapy Meditation Biofeedback

© SharpBrains.

Page 17: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Intervention modalities

Page 18: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Program for Working Memory Training

Page 19: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Stress management: the balloon gains altitude and overcomes obstacles as you relax

Page 20: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Content

First, let’s warm-up

Science and trends

Training the 7 main “mental muscles” Motor coordination

Emotions

Memory

Executive

Sensory

Language

Visual

Page 21: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

What does a complete brain workout look like?

Page 22: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Content

First, let’s warm-up

Science and trends

Training the 7 main “mental muscles” Motor coordination

Emotions

Memory

Sensory

Language

Visual

Executive

Page 23: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Motor coordination

Draw a circle with the right hand and a square with the left one

Now, draw a square with the right hand and a circle with the left one

Sign up for a dancing class!

Page 24: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Content

First, let’s warm-up

Science and trends

Training the 7 main “mental muscles” Motor coordination

Emotions

Memory

Sensory

Language

Visual

Executive

Page 25: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Visualization for relaxation

Travel back to a time Index: when you felt a healthy exhaustion

Middle: loving exchange

Ring: most caring gesture you have ever received

Little: most magnificient place you have seen

Source: Five Good minutes, by Jeffrey Brantley

Page 26: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

The interaction of Emotion, Focus and keeping an Open Mind (basket example)

Page 27: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Content

First, let’s warm-up

Science and trends

Training the 7 main “mental muscles” Motor coordination

Emotions

Memory

Sensory

Language

Visual

Executive

Page 28: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

What is a memory and what is a pattern

Usual perception: memories are like snapshots taken by a camera

Reality: memories are circuits of neurons. We recreate experiences, not retrieve copies

Intuition: condensation of analytic experiences.

Illustration by Elkhonon Goldberg, The Wisdom Paradox

Page 29: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Content

First, let’s warm-up

Science and trends

Training the 7 main “mental muscles” Motor coordination

Emotions

Memory

Sensory

Language

Visual

Executive

Page 30: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Sensory Activities

Chocolate melting experiment: eyes closed,let the chocolate melt in your mouth

Page 31: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Content

First, let’s warm-up

Science and trends

Training the 7 main “mental muscles” Motor coordination

Emotions

Memory

Sensory

Language

Visual

Executive

Page 32: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Haiku

Write a haiku that expresses what area of brain research you are most interested in and why.Haiku: A Japanese lyric verse form that has three

lines of five, seven, and five syllables.

Page 33: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Content

First, let’s warm-up

Science and trends

Training the 7 main “mental muscles” Motor coordination

Emotions

Memory

Sensory

Language

Visual

Executive

Page 34: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Visual: Which one doesn’t fit

Page 35: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Content

First, let’s warm-up

Science and trends

Training the 7 main “mental muscles” Motor coordination

Emotions

Memory

Sensory

Language

Visual

Executive

Page 36: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Executive Functions: What box should come next?

Page 37: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Towers of Hanoi: What is the minimum number of moves you need to place the disks in column C (you can not place a large plate on top of a smaller one)?

A B C

Page 38: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Key take-aways

Groundbreaking studies show the value of Mental Stimulation and Stress management, on top of nutrition and physical exercise.

We have “3 brains” and 7 key “mental muscles”.

Good brain exercise requires:- Novelty- Variety- Challenging Practice

There is an increasing number of science-based computer-based programs to train specific cognitive skills. None is a General Solution/ “magic pill”.

Page 39: The Science and Practice of Brain Fitness

Thanks for your attention!

For information and teasers:

Visit www.sharpbrains.com

contact Alvaro at [email protected]