Nov 5, 2007 1
Marian Diamond on the brain
By: Alvaro Fernandez
Quotes from a great article, Professor, 81, proves brain stays young:
- In 1960, Diamond became the first female faculty member in Cal’s science department, achieving full professorship in 1974. She still teaches anatomy with her 81st birthday two weeks away.
- Diamond, a professor of anatomy at UC Berkeley, determined that the brain can stay young through stimulation, which can be achieved through her five-point plan: diet, exercise, challenge, newness and tender loving care.
- Using her plan, how is she challenged?
- “Every student who sits in that chair,” she said, pointing across the desk in her fifth-floor office in the Life Sciences Building on campus. “They come in here asking questions, and you better have the answers.”
- What newness, then, is in her life?
- “I have grandchildren,” she said. “What could be better, deciding new things for them, to stimulate their brains.”
- She has four children, four grandchildren and a husband, Arnold Scheidel, who teaches anatomy at UCLA. They see each other on school weekends,
- Diamond feels her own brain growing.
Keep reading here.
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Related resources
A previous post listing a number of her essays: Marian Diamond and the Brain Revolution
Her great book Magic Trees of the Mind: How to Nurture Your Child’s Intelligence, Creativity, and Healthy Emotions from Birth Through Adolescence, by Berkeley’s Marian Diamond and Janet L. Hopson.

clinical professor of neurology at New York University School of Medicine, and disciple of Alexander Luria.




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