sanjuro_ronin
09-14-2007, 08:37 PM
Kind of an old article from Time, but something that shows the value of meditation and visualization training:
How The Brain Rewires Itself
By Sharon Begley
It was a fairly modest experiment, as these things go, with volunteers
trooping into the lab at Harvard Medical School to learn and practice a
little five-finger piano exercise. Neuroscientist Alvaro Pascual-Leone
instructed the members of one group to play as fluidly as they could,
trying to keep to the metronome's 60 beats per minute. Every day for
five days, the volunteers practiced for two hours. Then they took a test.
At the end of each day's practice session, they sat beneath a coil of
wire that sent a brief magnetic pulse into the motor cortex of their
brain, located in a strip running from the crown of the head toward each
ear. The so-called transcranial-magnetic-stimulation (TMS) test allows
scientists to infer the function of neurons just beneath the coil. In
the piano players, the TMS mapped how much of the motor cortex
controlled the finger movements needed for the piano exercise. What the
scientists found was that after a week of practice, the stretch of motor
cortex devoted to these finger movements took over surrounding areas
like dandelions on a suburban lawn.
The finding was in line with a growing number of discoveries at the time
showing that greater use of a particular muscle causes the brain to
devote more cortical real estate to it. But Pascual-Leone did not stop
there. He extended the experiment by having another group of volunteers
merely think about practicing the piano exercise. They played the simple
piece of music in their head, holding their hands still while imagining
how they would move their fingers. Then they too sat beneath the TMS coil.
When the scientists compared the TMS data on the two groups--those who
actually tickled the ivories and those who only imagined doing so--they
glimpsed a revolutionary idea about the brain: the ability of mere
thought to alter the physical structure and function of our gray matter.
For what the TMS revealed was that the region of motor cortex that
controls the piano-playing fingers also expanded in the brains of
volunteers who imagined playing the music--just as it had in those who
actually played it.
"Mental practice resulted in a similar reorganization" of the brain,
Pascual-Leone later wrote. If his results hold for other forms of
movement (and there is no reason to think they don't), then mentally
practicing a golf swing or a forward pass or a swimming turn could lead
to mastery with less physical practice. Even more profound, the
discovery showed that mental training had the power to change the
physical structure of the brain.
OVERTHROWING THE DOGMA
FOR DECADES, THE PREVAILING DOGMA IN neuroscience was that the adult
human brain is essentially immutable, hardwired, fixed in form and
function, so that by the time we reach adulthood we are pretty much
stuck with what we have. Yes, it can create (and lose) synapses, the
connections between neurons that encode memories and learning. And it
can suffer injury and degeneration. But this view held that if genes and
development dictate that one cluster of neurons will process signals
from the eye and another cluster will move the fingers of the right
hand, then they'll do that and nothing else until the day you die. There
was good reason for lavishly illustrated brain books to show the
function, size and location of the brain's structures in permanent ink.
The doctrine of the unchanging human brain has had profound
ramifications. For one thing, it lowered expectations about the value of
rehabilitation for adults who had suffered brain damage from a stroke or
about the possibility of fixing the pathological wiring that underlies
psychiatric diseases. And it implied that other brain-based fixities,
such as the happiness set point that, according to a growing body of
research, a person returns to after the deepest tragedy or the greatest
joy, are nearly unalterable.
But research in the past few years has overthrown the dogma. In its
place has come the realization that the adult brain retains impressive
powers of "neuroplasticity"--the ability to change its structure and
function in response to experience. These aren't minor tweaks either.
Something as basic as the function of the visual or auditory cortex can
change as a result of a person's experience of becoming deaf or blind at
a young age. Even when the brain suffers a trauma late in life, it can
rezone itself like a city in a frenzy of urban renewal. If a stroke
knocks out, say, the neighborhood of motor cortex that moves the right
arm, a new technique called constraint-induced movement therapy can coax
next-door regions to take over the function of the damaged area. The
brain can be rewired.
The first discoveries of neuroplasticity came from studies of how
changes in the messages the brain receives through the senses can alter
its structure and function. When no transmissions arrive from the eyes
in someone who has been blind from a young age, for instance, the visual
cortex can learn to hear or feel or even support verbal memory. When
signals from the skin or muscles bombard the motor cortex or the
somatosensory cortex (which processes touch), the brain expands the area
that is wired to move, say, the fingers. In this sense, the very
structure of our brain--the relative size of different regions, the
strength of connections between them, even their functions--reflects the
lives we have led. Like sand on a beach, the brain bears the footprints
of the decisions we have made, the skills we have learned, the actions
we have taken.
How The Brain Rewires Itself
By Sharon Begley
It was a fairly modest experiment, as these things go, with volunteers
trooping into the lab at Harvard Medical School to learn and practice a
little five-finger piano exercise. Neuroscientist Alvaro Pascual-Leone
instructed the members of one group to play as fluidly as they could,
trying to keep to the metronome's 60 beats per minute. Every day for
five days, the volunteers practiced for two hours. Then they took a test.
At the end of each day's practice session, they sat beneath a coil of
wire that sent a brief magnetic pulse into the motor cortex of their
brain, located in a strip running from the crown of the head toward each
ear. The so-called transcranial-magnetic-stimulation (TMS) test allows
scientists to infer the function of neurons just beneath the coil. In
the piano players, the TMS mapped how much of the motor cortex
controlled the finger movements needed for the piano exercise. What the
scientists found was that after a week of practice, the stretch of motor
cortex devoted to these finger movements took over surrounding areas
like dandelions on a suburban lawn.
The finding was in line with a growing number of discoveries at the time
showing that greater use of a particular muscle causes the brain to
devote more cortical real estate to it. But Pascual-Leone did not stop
there. He extended the experiment by having another group of volunteers
merely think about practicing the piano exercise. They played the simple
piece of music in their head, holding their hands still while imagining
how they would move their fingers. Then they too sat beneath the TMS coil.
When the scientists compared the TMS data on the two groups--those who
actually tickled the ivories and those who only imagined doing so--they
glimpsed a revolutionary idea about the brain: the ability of mere
thought to alter the physical structure and function of our gray matter.
For what the TMS revealed was that the region of motor cortex that
controls the piano-playing fingers also expanded in the brains of
volunteers who imagined playing the music--just as it had in those who
actually played it.
"Mental practice resulted in a similar reorganization" of the brain,
Pascual-Leone later wrote. If his results hold for other forms of
movement (and there is no reason to think they don't), then mentally
practicing a golf swing or a forward pass or a swimming turn could lead
to mastery with less physical practice. Even more profound, the
discovery showed that mental training had the power to change the
physical structure of the brain.
OVERTHROWING THE DOGMA
FOR DECADES, THE PREVAILING DOGMA IN neuroscience was that the adult
human brain is essentially immutable, hardwired, fixed in form and
function, so that by the time we reach adulthood we are pretty much
stuck with what we have. Yes, it can create (and lose) synapses, the
connections between neurons that encode memories and learning. And it
can suffer injury and degeneration. But this view held that if genes and
development dictate that one cluster of neurons will process signals
from the eye and another cluster will move the fingers of the right
hand, then they'll do that and nothing else until the day you die. There
was good reason for lavishly illustrated brain books to show the
function, size and location of the brain's structures in permanent ink.
The doctrine of the unchanging human brain has had profound
ramifications. For one thing, it lowered expectations about the value of
rehabilitation for adults who had suffered brain damage from a stroke or
about the possibility of fixing the pathological wiring that underlies
psychiatric diseases. And it implied that other brain-based fixities,
such as the happiness set point that, according to a growing body of
research, a person returns to after the deepest tragedy or the greatest
joy, are nearly unalterable.
But research in the past few years has overthrown the dogma. In its
place has come the realization that the adult brain retains impressive
powers of "neuroplasticity"--the ability to change its structure and
function in response to experience. These aren't minor tweaks either.
Something as basic as the function of the visual or auditory cortex can
change as a result of a person's experience of becoming deaf or blind at
a young age. Even when the brain suffers a trauma late in life, it can
rezone itself like a city in a frenzy of urban renewal. If a stroke
knocks out, say, the neighborhood of motor cortex that moves the right
arm, a new technique called constraint-induced movement therapy can coax
next-door regions to take over the function of the damaged area. The
brain can be rewired.
The first discoveries of neuroplasticity came from studies of how
changes in the messages the brain receives through the senses can alter
its structure and function. When no transmissions arrive from the eyes
in someone who has been blind from a young age, for instance, the visual
cortex can learn to hear or feel or even support verbal memory. When
signals from the skin or muscles bombard the motor cortex or the
somatosensory cortex (which processes touch), the brain expands the area
that is wired to move, say, the fingers. In this sense, the very
structure of our brain--the relative size of different regions, the
strength of connections between them, even their functions--reflects the
lives we have led. Like sand on a beach, the brain bears the footprints
of the decisions we have made, the skills we have learned, the actions
we have taken.