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Dana Foundation
May 24th, 2009

Brain Scientists Identify Links between Arts, Learning

Arts education influences learning and other areas of cognition and may deserve a more prominent place in schools, according to a wave of recent neuroscience research.One recent study found that children who receive music instruction for just 15 months show strengthened connections in musically relevant brain areas and perform better on associated tasks, compared with students who do not learn an instrument.

A separate study found that children who receive training to improve their focus and attention perform better not only on attention tasks but also on intelligence tests. Some researchers suggest that arts training might similarly affect a wide range of cognitive domains. Educators and neuroscientists gathered recently in Baltimore and Washington, D.C., to discuss the increasingly detailed picture of how arts education changes the brain, and how to translate that research to education policy and the classroom. Many participants referred to the results of Dana Foundation-funded research by cognitive neuroscientists from seven leading universities over three years, released in 2008.

“Art must do something to the mind and brain. What is that? How would we be able to detect that?” asked Barry Gordon, a behavioral neurologist and cognitive neuroscientist at Johns Hopkins University, who spoke May 8 during the “Learning and the Brain” conference in Washington, D.C. “Art, I submit to you without absolute proof, can improve the power of our minds. However, this improvement is hard to detect.”

Study links music, brain changes

Among the scientists trying to detect such improvement, Ellen Winner, a professor of psychology at Boston College, and Gottfried Schlaug, a professor of neurology at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, presented research at the “Learning, Arts, and the Brain” summit May 6 in Baltimore. Their work measured, for the first time, changes to the brain as a result of music training.

For four years, Winner and Schlaug followed children ages 9 to 11, some of whom Continue Reading »

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Tags: Arts, attention, Barry Gordon, Brain Scientists, cognition, cognitive development, cognitive domains, dana foundation, Dana Press, Ellen Winner, Harvard Medical School, improve attention, improve focus, intelligence, IQ, Johns Hopkins University, Learning, learning and the brain, Learning and the Brain Conference, mental fitness, Michael Posner, music training, neuroimaging, neuroscientists
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Alvaro Fernandez
Feb 23rd, 2009

Centre for Brain Fitness at Baycrest: Interview with Dr. William Reichman

In April 2008, Baycrest, a leading research institute focused on aging and brain function, received $10-million from the Ontario Government to create a groundbreaking Centre for Brain Fitness. Its stated goal was to “develop and commercialize a range of products designed to improve the brain health of aging Ontarians and others around the world”.

“Our government is proud to support Baycrest and its invaluable work, which is already leading to the discovery of important new tools and approaches to treating brain diseases associated with aging,” said Minister of Research and Innovation, John Wilkinson.

We have Baycrest’s CEO with us today, to explore why Ontario and Baycrest chose to Bill Reichman Baycrestbecome pioneers in this area, and discuss some of the main opportunities, and challenges. Dr. William E. Reichman is President and CEO of Baycrest. Dr. Reichman, an internationally-known expert in geriatric mental health and dementia, is also Professor of Psychiatry on the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto.

Alvaro Fernandez: Bill, thank you for your time. Let me start by asking, given that you just spoke at the recent Consumer Electronic Show, what do you make of the growing brain fitness field?

Bill Reichman: it looks like a classic example of a very promising but still early stage field – a lot of opportunity and enthusiasm, but also a lot of product claims that are not backed by solid research. Think about the physical fitness analogy: even today, after decades of progress, you still see people buying research-based products such as treadmills but also all types of random machines they see on TV and have not been subject to any validation. Similarly, consumers today do not know what to make of growing brain fitness claims. As another speaker pointed out, for the industry to fulfill its promise, it will need to be careful with research and claims, not to end up like the nutraceuticals category.

By the way, let me recognize that the work you are doing with SharpBrains reports and your website is very important to offer quality information.

Thank you. Let’s step back for a moment. Taking a, say, 10 years view, what is the main opportunity that technology-based brain fitness can offer to society?

First of all, let me say that I think we have an opportunity to make major progress in Brain Health in the XXI century, similar to what happened with Cardiovascular Health in the XX, and technology will play a crucial role.

Given the rapid advances we are witnessing today in the research and technology arenas, I feel confident in saying that in less than 10 years we will have both valid and reliable assessments of cognitive functions, that will be used both by Continue Reading »

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Tags: aging, aging and brain function, aging workforce, Alzheimer’s disease, assessments of cognitive functions, baby boomer, Baycrest, brain development, Brain Fitness, brain function, Brain health, cardiovascular health, caregivers, Centre for Brain Fitness, cognitive assessments, cognitive exercise, cognitive rehabilitation, Consumer Electronic Show, Donald Stuss, female hormones, Gary Small, geriatric, Gordon Winocur, groundbreaking, healthy aging, Ian Robertson, John Wilkinson, MaRS, medicine, Mental Health, neuroimaging, neuropsychologists, neuroscientists, nutraceuticals, Ontario, PDA, Physical Fitness, prevent Alzheimer’s Disease, psychiatry, Research and Innovation, Rotman Research Institute, stroke, telehealth, Traumatic Brain Injury, William Reichman, women
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Alvaro Fernandez
Dec 22nd, 2008

Encephalon #61: Brain & Mind Reading for the Holidays

Welcome to the 61st edition Encephalon brain blog carnivalof Encephalon, the blog carnival that offers some of the best neuroscience and psychology blog posts every other week.

We do have an excellent set of articles today. covering much ground. Enjoy the reading:

---

Neuroscience and Society

Neuroanthropology,
by Greg Downey

The Flynn Effect: Troubles with Intelligence 2
Average IQ test scores had risen about 3 points per decade and in some cases more. Tests of vocabulary, arithmetic, or general knowledge (such as the sorts of facts one learns in school) have showed little increase, but scores have increased markedly on tests thought to measure ‘general intelligence’.

MindHacks,
by Vaughan Bell

Medical jargon alters our understanding of disease
Understanding how popular ideas influence our personal medical beliefs is an essential part of understanding medicine itself.

Cognitive Daily,
by Dave Munger

Is it sexist to think men are angrier than women?
Are we more likely to perceive a male face as angry and a female face as happy? A recent study sheds light on the issue.

Neurocritic

Crime, Punishment, and Jerry Springer
Judges and jurors must put aside their emotionally-driven desire for revenge when coming to an impartial verdict. Does neuroimaging (fMRI) add anything to our understanding of justice?

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Alzheimer's Disease and Neurocognitive Health Continue Reading »

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Tags: Alzheimer’s disease, Alzheimers Foundation of America, blood flow, brain, brain activity, brain and mind, brain blog, brain blogs, cognitive health, cognitive screenings, exercise, Flynn effect, general knowledge, ginkgo biloba, illusions, information, intelligence, mind, neurocognitive, neurocognitive health, neurodegenerative, neuroimaging, neuroscience, placebo, Preventing Dementia, Psychology, visual illusions
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Alvaro Fernandez
Dec 4th, 2008

Meditation on the Brain: a Conversation with Andrew Newberg

Dr. Andrew Newberg is an Associate Professor in the Department of Radiology and Psychiatry and Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Department of Religious Studies at theAndrew Newberg University of Pennsylvania. He has published a variety of neuroimaging studies related to aging and dementia. He has also researched the neurophysiological correlates of meditation, prayer, and how brain function is associated with mystical and religious experiences.

Dr. Newberg, thank you for being with us today. Can you please explain the source of your interests at the intersection of brain research and spirituality?

Since I was a kid, I had a keen interest in spiritual practice. I always wondered how spirituality and religion affect us, and over time I came to appreciate how science can help us explore and understand the world around us, including why we humans care about spiritual practices. This, of course, led me to be particularly interested in brain research.

During medical school I was particularly attracted by the problem of consciousness. I was fortunate to meet researcher Dr. Eugene D'Aquili in the early 1990s, who had been doing much research on religious practices effect on brain since the 1970s. Through him I came to see that brain imaging can provide a fascinating window into the brain.

Can we define religion and spirituality -which sound to me as very different brain processes-, and why learning about them may be helpful from a purely secular, scientific point of view?

Good point, definitions matter, since different people may be searching for God in different ways. I view being religious as participating in organized rituals and shared beliefs, such as going to church. Being spiritual, on the other hand, is more of an individual practice, whether we call it meditation, or relaxation, or prayer, aimed at expanding the self, developing a sense of oneness with the universe.

What is happening is that specific practices that have traditionally been associated with religious and spiritual contexts may also be very useful from a mainstream, secular, health point of view, beyond those contexts. Scientists are researching, for example, what Continue Reading »

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Tags: Alzheimers Research and Prevention Foundation, Andrew Newberg, batteries, brain research, Breathing, Cognitive Age, compassion, Consciousness, David Brooks, improve cognition, improve memory, Kirtan Kriya, Learning, manage stress, mbsr, meditation, mindfulness, Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction, National Institute of Health, neuroimaging, Neuropsychology, neuropsychology testing, Philosophy, prayer, relaxation, religion, Richard Davidson, schols, spirituality, Stress, stress management
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Alvaro Fernandez
Oct 18th, 2008

Training Attention and Emotional Self-Regulation - Interview with Michael Posner

Michael I. Posner is a prominent scientist in the field of cognitive neuroscience. He is currently an emeritus professor of neuroscience at the University of Oregon (DepartmentMichael Posner of Psychology, Institute of Cognitive and Decision Sciences). In August 2008, the International Union of Psychological Science made him the first recipient of the Dogan Prize "in recognition of a contribution that represents a major advance in psychology by a scholar or team of scholars of high international reputation."

Dr. Posner, many thanks for your time today. I really enjoyed the James Arthur Lecture monograph on Evolution and Development of Self-Regulation that you delivered last year. Could you provide a summary of the research you presented?

I would emphasize that we human beings can regulate our thoughts, emotions, and actions to a greater degree than other primates. For example, we can choose to pass up an immediate reward for a larger, delayed reward.

We can plan ahead, resist distractions, be goal-oriented. These human characteristics appear to depend upon what we often call "self-regulation." What is exciting these days is that progress in neuroimaging and in genetics make it possible to think about self-regulation in terms of specific brain-based networks.

Can you explain what self-regulation is?

All parents have seen this in their kids. Parents can see the remarkable transformation as their children develop the ability to regulate emotions and to persist with goals in the face of distractions. That ability is usually labeled ‘‘self-regulation.’’

The other main area of your research is attention. Can you explain the brain-basis for what we usually call "attention"?

I have been interested in how the attention system develops in infancy and early childhood.

One of our major findings, thanks to neuroimaging, is that there is not one single "attention", but three separate functions of attention with three separate underlying brain networks: alerting, orienting, and executive attention. Continue Reading »

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Tags: attention, attention training, cingulate gyrus, cognitive science, Cognitive Training, development, diffusion tensor, Dogan Prize, effortful control, emotional self regulation, Emotions, epigenetics, evolution, executive attention, Executive Functions, fMRI, Genetics, grey matter, James Arthur Lecture, meditation, Michael Posner, mindfulness, networks, neuroimaging, neuron, Parenting, Psychology, self regulation, Stroop Test, thoughts, University of Oregon, white matter, Working memory, working memory training
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Alvaro Fernandez
Jul 16th, 2008

Update: The Future of Brain Assessments

Here you are have the twice-a-month newsletter with our most popular blog posts. Please brainremember that you can subscribe to receive this Newsletter by email, simply by submitting your email at the top of this page.

News and Analysis

Computerized Cognitive Assessments: opportunities and concerns: health companies and the military are starting to use new tools to assess brain functions in contexts that neither neuroimaging nor traditional neuropsychological testing can reach. This is a critical piece of the brain fitness puzzle that is worth keeping track of, full of opportunities, but also privacy concerns.

Cognitive Health News Roundup: recent news covering studies on mental training and DNA, on nutrition and the brain, and more. Continue Reading »

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Tags: brain development, brain gmes, Brain Science Podcast, Brain teasers, brain tips, cognitive assessments, cognitive fitness, cognitive health, Daniel Goleman, educators, empathy, Ginger Campbell, improve memory, John Medina, Learning, mental training, neuroimaging, neuroplasticity, neuropsychological testing, nutrition and the brain, PBS
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Alvaro Fernandez
Jul 14th, 2008

Computerized Cognitive Assessments: opportunities and concerns

You know your weight. And your physical fitness. And a variety of health-related metrics.

What about your brain fitness?

Two recent announcements bring out how the assessment of cognitive abilities, or brain functions, is increasingly being done thanks to new computerized options:

1) Last week, OptumHealth announced an exclusive 3-year agreement (estimated at $18m) with the Australian company Brain Resource. OptumHealth will be embedding the Brain Resource platform into their overall Behavioral Solutions program.

- OptumHealth Behavioral Solutions will work with Brain Resource to provide clinicians with a Web-based assessment that measures general cognition (how people process information) and social cognition (how people manage their emotions). This 40-minute assessment is based on well-known and validated tests of memory, attention, executive function, and response speed, and mood, social skills and emotional resilience.

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Tags: Alzheimer’s disease, anam, and mood, and response speed, attention, Automated Neuropsychological Assessment, brain age, brain fitness program, Brain Resource, Chilmark Research, CNS Vital Signs, cognitive abilities, cognitive assessments, Cognitive Drug Research, cognitive screening, CogState, computerized cognitive assessments, emotional resilience, executive function, Humana, Humana Posit Science, intelligence, Medicare, memory, neuroimaging, neuropsychological testing, OptumHealth, Posit Science, social skills, Traumatic Brain Injury, wellsphere
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Alvaro Fernandez
Jun 5th, 2008

Your Trading Brain: Expert or Novice

We had the fortune to interview Dr. Brett Steenbarger on Enhancing Trader Performance and The Psychology of Trading as we launched our Neuroscience Interview Series.

Below, Expert Contributor Dr. Janice Dorn provides an in-depth brain-based discussion of the topic, concluding that "The brain is the most powerful structure in the known universe and the only trading tool that the trader needs to become an expert."

No matter whether you are a Pro or Amateur Trader...this will certainly exercise your brain! (Dr. Dorn is preparing more articles on trading performance and the brain...so stay tuned).

This is Your Brain On Trading

-- By Dr. Janice Dorn 

The opening bell sounds, and sixty million traders enter the greatest arena in the world to do battle with each other. They put their money, beliefs and skills on the line as they make decisions to buy and sell. Welcome to the financial markets where billions of dollars are won and lost every day. Volatility compels all to engage their brains in the continuous process of decision making. What separates the winning from losing traders is the way they use their most powerful trading tool—the human brain.

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Tags: affective dissonance, amygdala, brain, brett steenbarger, cognitive dissonance, expert trader, expertise, fMRI, Janice Dorn, Learning, Limbic System, memory, neocortex, neurobehavioral, neuroimaging, Neurons, Neuropsychology, novice trader, synapses, trader performance, trading, trading brain, Trading psychology, train your brain
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Alvaro Fernandez
Apr 23rd, 2008

Brain Research Interview Series

We are working on improving several sections of our website, especially our Resources section. It will look much better in a few days. Our first step has been to re-organize our Neuroscience Interview Series, and below you have how it looks today.

During the last 18 months I have had the fortune to interview over 15 cutting-edge neuroscientists and cognitive psychologists on their research and thoughts. Here are some of our favorite quotes (you can read the full interview notes by clicking on the links): 

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Tags: adolescent brain, aging research, Alexander Luria, Alzheimer’s symptoms, Arthur Lavin, Bradley Gibson, brain research, Brain Training, brett steenbarger, cognition, cognitive reserve, Cognitive Training, crosswords brain training, Daniel Gopher, Elkhonon Goldberg, Emotions, Eric Jensen, Go Hirano, gratitude journal, happiness, James Zull, Jerri Edwards, Judith Beck, Learning, Liz Zelinski, Neurofeedback, neuroimaging, Neurons, neuropsychologist, Robert Emmons, Robert Sylwester, schools, Technion, Torkel Klingberg, traders, Trading psychology, Working memory, Yaakov Stern
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Alvaro Fernandez
Feb 7th, 2008

Major grant to study brain basis of autism and dyslexia

Quick note: Recent announcement that adds hope to the understanding and future treatment of autism and dyslexia: MIT's McGovern Institute researchers awarded $8.5m to study brain basis of autism and dyslexia. Quote:

- "Two researchers at MIT's McGovern Institute for Brain Research will head an ambitious new project to study the origins of autism and dyslexia, supported by a $8.5m grant from the Ellison Medical Foundation. The project leaders, Nancy Kanwisher and John Gabrieli, are prominent experts in neuroimaging and human brain development."

Link: McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT

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Tags: autism, Brain health, dyslexia, Ellison Medical Foundation, human brain development, John Gabrieli, MIT McGovern Institute, Nancy Kanwisher, neuroimaging
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