Medicine-Science-Books : The Brain That Changes Itself

The Brain That Changes Itself

CDN$ 8.66


The Resurrection of Sigmund Freud - The history of Sigmund Freud s approach to the mechanisms of the mind has exhibited some tumultuous changes over the past century. Norman Doidge reminds us that Freud developed a thesis about the mind s plasticity over time. Freud s psychotherapy - irrespective of some questionable methods - was designed to allow the mind to search within itself and change outward behaviour by identifying memories hidden or repressed. However, after Freud, researchers using diagnoses of stroke or brain-injury victims, mapped areas in the brain for function. The first of these was the speech-producing region now named Broca s Area, after Paul Broca, its discoverer in the mid-19th century. Brain modularity, or localization as Doidge deems it, became the norm in brain research for decades following Broca. In this fine account of the history or recent brain studies, Doidge addresses a new concept being used to both treat and train - brain plasticity.Rewiring of the brain isn t a new concept. Among the more famous examples of how the brain reacts to challenges from the rest of the body is the concept known as phantom limbs. Patients suffering amputations have complained of itchiness or pain seeming to emanate from the lost limb. V.S. Ramachandran and his colleagues have described this phenomenon in detail. Rama is but one of the researchers Doidge parades in a receiving line of innovative cognitive specialists. One of his more noteworthy is Michael Merzenich, who Doidge declares is the world s leading researcher in brain plasticity. Merzenich followed the work of Wilder Penfield at McGill University in Montreal. Penfield used electrical probes to map the regions of the brain to identify which areas produced specific reactions. Penfield s work reinforced the consensus regarding localization. Doidge goes so far as to deem neuroscience as long dominated by localizationism - a form of dogma. Merzenich, on the other hand used more refined equipment than available to Penfield, has made vast strides with closer detail. His work also demonstrated that lost areas in the brain have their duties taken up in other regions. The brain, he demonstrated, can re-wire itself - and in more than one way. The brain, then, isn t dominated by genetically assigned localizations. It s plastic and able to change, through training or even using its own resources. In a sense, Freud s original concept has been vindicated by recent research.Doidge follows the work of dozens of researchers who have revealed examples of this re-mapping activity. They investigate how stroke patients can learn to use limbs rendered unresponsive. The treatment seems bizarre - restrain the good limb so it will not replace the useless one. In a short time, the unresponsive limb begins to respond as the brain is forced to seek new pathways. Patient recovery has been almost spectacular, according to Doidge. He stresses that the theme is use it or lose it throughout the book, but is especially true in stroke victims. Where traditional therapy enhanced the capabilities of the working limb, brain plasticity demonstrates that recovering use of an affected limb should be favoured. This new therapy can be successfully applied months, or even years, after the stroke event. In this author s hands, these accounts read like a script for a car-salesman sitcom. He may be correct in his views, but nothing in brain sciences is entirely positive, as history has demonstrated.There s more than just therapy in brain plasticity achievements. In Asia, particularly Japan, babies are born with ability to form the sound for the letter L. Since Japanese doesn t contain any words with that sound, children lose the capacity to pronounce it. A new programme, using slowly sounded words can actually recover the pronunciation in immigrants to North America. The technique is an indicator of what Doidge refers to as plasticity competition. Although the brain appears to re-route signals throughout the brain simply during daily use, there is also the possibility of patterns settling in and resisting change. Doidge refers to this as the plastic paradox, and sees it as the way habits are formed and retained - even against good sense.While Doidge has provided a comprehensive look at how recent research has overthrown the notion of one area - one behaviour, there are numerous questions remaining. How does the mechanism work? What triggers neurons to reach out to make new connections? Is anything already in place displaced, or are idle synapses or dendrites now put to work? Does the old notion of our using only 10 per cent. of our brain - an cliché long dismissed by neuroscientists - have some validity, after all? Although two Appendices enlarge greatly on this overview - one on culture and another on Progress, brain mechanics in this process remain obscure. This shortcoming requires vast amounts of further research but in no way diminishes Doidge s accomplishment. This book will remain a major element in the history of brain studies for some time. Written for any reader who has a brain, the author deserves the fullest praise for his accomplishment. The five stars is given a bit grudgingly, but this book requires the widest exposure possible. [stephen a. haines - Ottawa, Canada]

Great Book - A great book that covers brain science in easy terms. It would probably be a bit heavy for most readers. I found the authors frequent references to Freud s ideas that have largely been debunked in recent years disconcerting.

Brains Flexibly Reconnect to Allow Optimal Functioning: New Treatments Abound! - This is the most interesting book I ve read about brain science . . . and the most relevant. I highly recommend you read it!If you haven t been following brain science, you may wonder what all the fuss is about. Recent experiments have overturned a long-held tenant of brain science: That specific mental and bodily functions can only be directed from one location in the brain. Destroy that section and physicians have told you that you were out of luck. This conclusion doomed many who had suffered strokes and other brain injuries to having no hope of improvement.The good news, as described in this easy-to-understand popular treatment, is that the brain can actually relocate functions to new areas if the primary site is destroyed. As a result, stroke victims can gain control over movements by therapy designed to disable their abler body areas . . . forcing the brain to establish new circuits to control the areas with little or no control, the blind can learn to see using sensor inputs from other areas of their bodies, those without balance can relearn balance through using other feedback mechanisms, and those with phantom pain tied to missing limbs can trigger elimination of that sensation. The only continuing limitation seems to be that some areas of the brain are only open to maximum flexibility during short periods of life. But promising research suggests that biochemical tools may be able to reopen those pathways to progress.Chances are that your physician won t know about all of these advanced therapies. If you or someone you know has neurological disorders, you should read this book to see where to send them for help.Be sure to check out the sections on how psychoanalysis can be used to rewire the brain to change sensations, reactions, and behavior, and the appendices on cultural impacts on the brain and the potential for perfectibility.

An excellent and insightful read - Dr. Doidge s book provides you with an excellent insight into the world of neuroplasticity, or the world of the malleable brain. Although it has many great examples illustrating the plasticity of the brain, the reader should have some backround knowledge of the nervous system to fully comprehend the concepts, although it is explained to some extent in the book. An excellent read, one that i would encourage all to read

The Review That Wrote Itself - A revolution is now sweeping through the field of brain science, and this book chronicles the stories of the men and women who have ushered in a new age. The brain is no longer viewed as a machine that is hard-wired early in life, unable to adapt and destined to wear out with age. Instead, we learn that scientists are beginning to unlock the secrets of the powerful, lifelong, adaptability - or plasticity - of the brain. The implications are enormous for treating neurological conditions, for addressing the aging process and for dramatic improvements in human performance. Author Norman Doidge is a psychiatrist on the Columbia faculty and he tells one spell-binding story after another, as he travels the globe interviewing the scientists and their subjects who are on the cutting edge of these developments. Each story is interwoven with the latest in brain science, told in a manner that is both simple and compelling. It may be hard to imagine that a book so rich in science can also be a page-turner, but this one is hard to set down.




The Brain That Changes Itself