Read Welcome to Your Brain Online
Authors: Sam Wang,Sandra Aamodt
Tags: #Neurophysiology-Popular works., #Brain-Popular works
adult life. Every day, your kids come home from school—or from basketball practice—with brains
whose neurons are connected slightly differently from when they woke up in the morning.
Did you know? Why are some things easier to learn than others?
Sooner or later, most people discover that a single experience can lead to intense and
sometimes permanent learned responses. For Sandra, it’s orange juice, which didn’t taste
good again for years after the unfortunate college party where it was mixed with excessive
amounts of vodka. For you, it might be the shellfish that you can’t eat anymore, ever since
you ran across that bad oyster at lunch last year. Taste aversion is a vivid example of
prepared learning. It’s easy to develop an intense dislike of what you ate before you got
sick, even if it happened only once, but you never hear anyone say, “I can’t bear to look at
the shirt that my date was wearing the night I was ill.” Logically, this makes sense because
fashion choices are unlikely to make you physically sick (though fashionistas might make a
few exceptions to this rule).
Many types of illness are caused by food. How does the brain know that food has a
special connection to illness? We said in
Chapter 10
that babies’ brains are not sponges
waiting to soak up anything that happens to them. It probably comes as no surprise to hear
that adults also have distinct predispositions for learning. Many of these tendencies—to
learn some things easily and others not at all—seem to be built in at birth, in humans and
other animals. Because evolution selects for outcomes, this approach can be an efficient
way to make sure that an animal is a good fit for its environment, especially when the
details of the surroundings can’t be predicted in advance.
Remember from
chapter 3
that when an electrical signal arrives at the end of an axon, it triggers
the release of a chemical neurotransmitter, which binds to receptors on the neuron at the other side of
the synapse. In most cases, multiple synapses need to be active at once to trigger an action potential in
the next neuron in line. When this happens, all the active synapses are strengthened so that they will
have more influence on the recipient neuron the next time, either by releasing more neurotransmitter
or by having more receptors available to receive the signal. This strengthening process is called long-
term potentiation or LTP. At most synapses, the rule for inducing LTP is similar to one of the common
behavioral rules for learning: stimuli will be associated if they occur close to the same time. In
neurons, by analogy, synapses will be strengthened if they are active at the same time, which is often
the result of receiving two stimuli simultaneously.
Of course, synapses can’t be strengthened indefinitely, or eventually they’d all be maxed out, and
the brain would lose its ability to learn new information. There are a few tricks that the brain uses to
avoid this problem, but the most straightforward is a use-dependent weakening of synaptic
connections called long-term depression or LTD. Synapses are weakened if they become active at a
time when the recipient neuron isn’t receiving enough stimulation to fire an action potential. Another
trick is that on long timescales, new synapses can form and old ones can go away, which allows
connections to be redistributed.
These changes, which are collectively called synaptic plasticity, occur more easily at certain
times, such as infancy. In adults, synaptic plasticity comes more easily to particular parts of the brain
such as the hippocampus, which we’ll discuss further in
Chapter 23
. Your brain has about a dozen
different known ways of learning information, each of which uses a somewhat different combination
of brain regions. For example, learning new facts and places causes changes in your hippocampus and
cortex, while learning a new dance step changes your cerebellum.
Researchers know a lot about the signaling pathways and molecules that are involved in synaptic
plasticity. Scientists have been able to use this knowledge to produce mice that find it harder or
easier to learn, simply because they are missing a single gene from their DNA. This work suggests
that modifying synapses is one of the brain’s most important jobs. There are literally hundreds of
genes that affect learning and dozens that affect overall intelligence. Many pathways perform similar
jobs and can substitute for one another if the need arises, giving a measure of protection against the
complete failure of learning, which would be devastating to an animal.
A particularly well-understood and important type of learning is fear conditioning, the process of
learning to become afraid of stimuli in the environment that predict bad things are about to happen. A
common type of fear-conditioning experiment goes like this: a rat is placed in an unfamiliar cage, a
tone comes on, and then the animal receives a mild electric shock. After a few experiences of this
sort, the rat learns to anticipate the shock by freezing (a typical rodent fear response) whenever it
hears the tone.
Practical tip: Put it out of your mind
Practice makes perfect, or so we hear. Many elite performers, from athletes to actors,
learn to start their training by mentally rehearsing the outcomes that they would like to
achieve. Repeated visualization of a desired experience can be a very effective way to
create a strong mental image in your brain.
Unfortunately, a lot of people end up using essentially this same rehearsal strategy when
remembering bad experiences. It’s unintentional, of course, but the effect of mentally
rehearsing an experience over and over is the same, whether you’re deliberately trying to
increase the intensity of the memory or just doing it by accident because you’re naturally
inclined to think about the bad things that happen to you. Some doctors think that post-
traumatic stress disorder, which we discuss in
chapter 17,
is partly caused by this sort of
mental rehearsal.
The best strategy is easy to state. To develop a strong mental image of something you
want to accomplish, visualize it repeatedly in as much detail as you can. If something is
making you unhappy and you want to get it out of your head, try not to think about it too
much. This is especially true of things that make you afraid.
This strategy can be hard to achieve in practice. One approach to try is to distract
yourself. The approach can be direct: some psychologists recommend wearing a rubber
band around your wrist and snapping it every time the persistent thought enters your head.
Or it can simply involve doing something that you find engaging, whether that’s playing a
team sport or listening to music or going to the races. It will probably help to tell your
friends and family that you’ve decided not to dwell on the problem anymore and ask them
to remind you of that decision if you bring up the subject again. Then go do something
productive or fun, as long as it’s challenging. If the intrusive thought persists, it might be
time to see a therapist, as we discuss in
chapter 17
.
Scientists at New York University showed that auditory signals travel directly from the thalamus
to the amygdala, a small region that is important for emotional responses, particularly fear. Neurons
in a particular region of the amygdala fire more action potentials in response to the tone after
conditioning than they did before the animal had learned to fear the tone. These changes in the
electrical responses of neurons occur around the time that the animals start to show fear behavior,
suggesting that they may cause fear-induced learned freezing. Similarly, rats or people with damage to
the amygdala don’t form normal fear memories.
Fear conditioning can be counteracted by a process called extinction, which is induced by
repeatedly exposing a conditioned animal to the tone without the electrical shock. If this happens
often enough, the animal will learn to stop freezing when it hears the tone, and the amygdala neurons
will stop firing so strongly in response to the tone as well. However, extinction is a second form of
learning that is overlaid onto the original fear conditioning; it does not restore the brain to its original
state. Extinction seems to involve learning in the prefrontal cortex, a brain region that selects
appropriate behaviors in context. Neurons in the prefrontal cortex become more active after
extinction training, and they then suppress the activity of the amygdala neurons in response to the tone.
Rats with damage to the prefrontal cortex can learn to fear a tone, but although extinction reduces
their responses temporarily, the learning doesn’t last, so the next day they act as though the extinction
training never happened. Like other types of learning, extinction is influenced by an animal’s natural
tendencies. It is much more difficult to extinguish fear of stimuli, like snakes or spiders, that were
important sources of danger in the evolutionary history of our species.
The amygdala also mediates the effects of emotions on other types of learning. Emotional arousal
facilitates attention to the most important details of an experience. For instance, victims of armed
robbery usually remember what the gun looked like. Patients with amygdala damage, on the other
hand, may fail to concentrate on relevant details at stressful moments. In rats and humans, transient
stress enhances learning in two ways: via the release of adrenaline and glucocorticoids. Both
hormones act on receptors in the amygdala and hippocampus to enhance synaptic plasticity. However,
chronic stress can greatly impair learning ability. This is another fact that’s worth remembering when
you’re trying to train your dog.
Each of the brain’s different learning systems has its own special properties. In the case of fear
conditioning, the amygdala system allows you to learn one-time occurrences if they induce enough
fear. At the other extreme, consider the number of repetitions necessary for most people to remember
long lists of facts, an incredibly dull task that uses a different system, the hippocampus.
Most tricks for learning facts take advantage of the natural ways that human beings learn. Just as
pigs gravitate toward burying things and chickens tend to peck, we have ways of learning in the
natural world that come more easily to us. As described in
Chapter 6
, humans are exceptionally
visual animals, and at least one-third of our cortex works with visual information in one form or
another. In addition, sequences of events and the physical proximity of objects to one another are
natural groupings for us, since these are the ways that we experience the world. The hippocampus
handles both the learning of facts as well as the learning of events and sequences. One effective
strategy combines several of these tricks: imagine that you are walking through a house, and each fact
that you want to remember is associated with a particular place in the house. If this seems like a
tedious business, you could achieve single-trial learning with the amygdala system. Unfortunately, this
would require you to experience intense fear with every fact that you learn. It’s not worth it.
Reaching the Top of the Mountain: Aging
We hadn’t been paying much attention to the research on aging and how to improve our chances of
keeping our brains healthy for as long as possible. Now we’re glad we wrote this book, because it’s
time for us to make some lifestyle changes that should make our retirement years happier. Let’s start
with the bad news. Even putting aside diseases of aging like dementia, your brain’s performance is
likely to get worse as you get older. There are two main problem areas. The one that everybody
knows about is memory. You may have more trouble keeping track of your car keys than you used to;
this ability starts to deteriorate in your thirties, on average, and continues to decline as you age.
Spatial navigation relies on a part of the brain involved in memory, the hippocampus, and this ability
is also impaired with age in many animals, including humans.
The other problem area is what scientists call “executive function,” which is the set of abilities
that allows you to select behavior that’s appropriate to the situation, inhibit inappropriate behavior,