Read Welcome to Your Brain Online
Authors: Sam Wang,Sandra Aamodt
Tags: #Neurophysiology-Popular works., #Brain-Popular works
yourself. Your brain lets you watch a sunset, learn a language, tell a joke, recognize a friend, run from
danger, and read this sentence.
In the last twenty years, neuroscientists have learned a lot about how your brain does all these
things. It’s a complicated subject, but we think it doesn’t have to be intimidating. This book will give
you the inside scoop on how your brain really works—and how you can help it work better.
Your brain has many ways of doing its job, including tricks and shortcuts that help it work
efficiently—but may lead you to make predictable mistakes. By reading this book, you’ll find out how
you accomplish the things you do every day. Along the way we’ll explode some of the myths that you
might believe because “everybody knows” they’re true. For instance, you don’t really use only 10
percent of your brain. (Come on.)
Knowing your brain better can be both fun and useful. We will show you simple changes that will
allow you to do more with your brain and help you lead a happier and more productive life. We’ll
also show you how disease can damage your brain—and suggest ways to prevent or repair this
damage.
This book is like a guided tour: we’ll see all the best sights and most important spots. But you
don’t have to start at the beginning. You can dip in anywhere and read this book in small pieces
because each chapter stands on its own. In each one, you’ll find fun facts, cocktail party-ready stories
to amuse your friends, and practical tips to help you use your brain better.
• In
part 1
, we introduce the star of the show, your brain. We pull aside the curtain to show what is
happening behind the scenes and explain how your brain helps you survive in the world.
• In
part 2
, we take a tour of your senses, explaining how you see, hear, touch, smell, and taste.
• In
part 3
, we show how your brain changes through life, from birth to old age.
• In
part 4
, we examine your brain’s emotional systems, focusing on how they help you navigate life
effectively.
• In
part 5
, we discuss your reasoning abilities, including decision making, intelligence, and gender
differences in cognition.
• In
part 6,
we examine altered states of your brain—consciousness, sleep, drugs and alcohol, and
disease.
Leave this book by your bedside or on your coffee table, and dip in anywhere, anytime. We hope
you’ll be enlightened and entertained, and that after reading a few pages you will want to read the
whole book. Now pull up a chair and get ready to find out about your brain—and about yourself!
Your Brain and the World
Gray Matter and the Silver Screen: Popular Metaphors of How the Brain Works
Thinking Meat: Neurons and Synapses
Fascinating Rhythms: Biological Clocks and Jet Lag
Bring Your Swimsuit: Weight Regulation
Can You Trust Your Brain?
Your brain lies to you a lot. We’re sorry to have to break the news to you, but it’s true. Even
when your brain is doing essential and difficult stuff, you’re not aware of most of what’s going on.
Your brain doesn’t intend to lie to you, of course. For the most part, it’s doing a great job,
working hard to help you survive and accomplish your goals in a complicated world. Because you
often have to react quickly to emergencies and opportunities alike, your brain usually aims to get a
half-assed answer in a hurry rather than a perfect answer that takes a while to figure out. Combined
with the world’s complexity, this means that your brain has to take shortcuts and make a lot of
assumptions. Your brain’s lies are in your best interest—most of the time—but they also lead to
predictable mistakes.
One of our goals is to help you understand the types of shortcuts and hidden assumptions that your
brain uses to get you through life. We hope this knowledge will make it easier for you to predict when
your brain is a source of reliable information and when it’s likely to mislead you.
The problems start right up front, when the brain takes in information from the world through the
senses. Even if you are sitting quietly in a room, your brain receives far more information than it can
hold on to, or than you need to decide how to act. You may be aware of the detailed pattern of colors
in the rug, the photographs on the wall, and the sounds of birds outside. Your brain perceives many
other aspects of the scene initially but quickly forgets them. Usually these things really aren’t
important, so we don’t often notice how much information we lose. The brain commits many lies of
omission, as it discards most of the information in the world as soon as it is deemed to be
unremarkable.
Lawyers know this principle. Eyewitnesses are notoriously unreliable, in part because they
imagine—as most of us do—that they see and remember more details than they really can. Lawyers
can use this knowledge to discredit witnesses by tempting them to say they saw something that the
lawyer can disprove, casting doubt on the rest of the witness’s testimony.
Did you know? Looking at a photograph is harder than playing chess
You may think that you know what your brain does, but you actually notice only a small
fraction of its activity—and what your brain accomplishes behind your back is some of its
hardest work. When computer scientists first began trying to write programs to mimic
human abilities, they found that it was relatively easy to get computers to follow logic rules
and do complex mathematics, but very hard to get them to figure out what they were seeing
in a visual image or to move smoothly through the world. Today’s best computer chess
programs can beat a grand master, at least some of the time, but any normal toddler can kick
the butt of the top programs when it comes to making sense of the visual world.
One difficult step, as it turns out, is identifying individual objects in a visual scene.
When we look at, say, a dinner table, it seems obvious that the water glass is one object
that is in front of another object, like a vase of flowers, but this turns out to be a
sophisticated calculation with many possible answers. You only notice this ambiguity
occasionally, when you see something briefly enough to misidentify it, like when that rock
in the middle of the dark road suddenly turns into the neighbor’s cat. The brain sorts out
these possibilities based on its previous experience with objects, including having seen the
two objects separately and in other combinations. Have you ever taken a picture in which a
tree seemed to be growing out of someone’s head? When you snapped the photo, you didn’t
notice the problem because your brain had efficiently separated the objects based on their
different distances from your eyes. Later on, the two-dimensional photo didn’t contain the
same information about distances, so it looked like the two objects were on top of each
other.
In addition to throwing away information, the brain also has to decide whether to take shortcuts,
depending on how it values speed against accuracy in a particular situation. Most of the time, your
brain favors speed, interpreting events based on rules of thumb that are easy to apply but not always
logical. The rest of the time, it uses the slow, careful approach that’s appropriate for doing math or
solving logic puzzles. Psychologist Daniel Kahneman won the Nobel Prize in Economics for studying
these rules of thumb and how they influence real-life behavior. (His longtime collaborator, Amos
Tversky, passed away before he could share the honor.)
Did you know? Are we in our right minds?
When people talk about the “right brain” and the “left brain,” they’re referring to the
two sides of the cortex. While there are some real differences in function between them, the
distinctions are often misunderstood.
Most people’s speech is controlled by the left side of the brain, which is also
responsible for mathematics and other forms of logical problem solving. Curiously, it is
also the source of many misremembered or confabulated details, and it is the home of the
“interpreter” discussed on the next page. All in all, the left side of the brain seems to have
an intense need for logic and order—so intense that if something doesn’t make sense, it
usually responds by inventing some plausible explanation.
The right side is much more literal and truthful when it reports what happened. It
controls spatial perception and the analysis of objects by touch, and excels at visual-motor
tasks. Rather than being “artistic” or “emotional,” the right brain is simply more grounded.
It’s a Joe Friday type, and if it could talk, it would probably say, “Just the facts,
ma’am.”
The take-home message from their research is that logical thinking requires a lot of effort. For
example, try to solve the following problem quickly: A bat and a ball together cost $1.10. The bat
costs $1 more than the ball. How much does the ball cost? Most people say 10¢, which is intuitive
but wrong. (The bat costs $1.05, and the ball costs 5¢.) Mental shortcuts like this are very common:
in fact, people are likely to use them in almost all situations unless they’re strongly cued that they
should be using logic instead. Most of the time, the intuitive answer is good enough to get by, even
when it is wrong.
In everyday life, we’re not typically asked to solve logic problems, but we are often asked to
make judgments about people we don’t know very well. Kahneman and Tversky used another
approach to show that these judgments aren’t logical either. For example, they would start an
experiment by telling people about Linda: “Linda is thirty-one years old, single, outspoken, and very
bright. She majored in philosophy. As a student, she was deeply concerned with issues of
discrimination and social justice and also participated in antinuclear demonstrations.” Then they
asked people to pick the phrase that seemed most likely to describe Linda from a carefully contrived
list of traits.
Most people thought it was more probable that (a) “Linda is a bank teller who is active in the
feminist movement” than (b) “Linda is a bank teller.” Choice (a) makes intuitive sense because many
of Linda’s other characteristics—concern about social justice and so on—suggest that she might be
active in the feminist movement. Yet that is not the right answer, because everyone who is (a) “a bank
teller who is active in the feminist movement” is also (b) “a bank teller.” And of course the group in
(b) includes other bank tellers who are reactionary or apathetic.
In such a case, even sophisticated participants like graduate students in statistics make the error of
reaching a conclusion that directly contradicts logic. This strong tendency to attribute groups of
related characteristics to people without much evidence is a quick way of estimating likely outcomes,
but it may also be a root cause of many of the stereotypes and prejudices that are common in society.
To make matters worse, many of the stories we tell ourselves don’t even reflect what’s actually
happening in our own heads. A famous study of brain-damaged patients demonstrates this idea. The
patients had been treated for severe epilepsy by a surgical operation that disconnected the right and
left halves of their brain’s cortex, to prevent seizures from spreading from one side to the other. This
meant that the left half literally didn’t know what the right half was doing, and vice versa.
In one experiment, the scientists showed a picture of a chicken claw to the left side of a patient’s
brain, where the language areas are located, and a picture of a snow scene to the right side of the
brain, which cannot produce speech. Asked to pick a related image from another set of pictures, he
correctly chose a shovel with his left hand (controlled by the right side of the brain) and a chicken
with his right hand (controlled by the left side of the brain). When asked to explain his choices, he
responded: “Oh, that’s simple. The chicken claw goes with the chicken, and you need a shovel to
clean out the chicken shed.” The scientists concluded that the left side of the brain contains an
“interpreter” whose job is to make sense of the world, even when it doesn’t understand what’s really
happening.
These problems of throwing away information, taking mental shortcuts, and inventing plausible
stories come together in what psychologists call “change blindness.” For an example, look at the two
photographs. What is the difference between them? (Hint: men of a certain age beware!)