Reader's Digest Asia Pacific

Get on Board the Brain Health Revolution

Science now says we can power new brain-cell connection­s, avoid Alzheimer’s and never lose sharpness Life experience­s shape your brain. Here’s what landmark studies say about staying sharp – and, dare we say, wise – for life

- BY DAVID EAGLEMAN

Every human being enters the world with a remarkably unfinished brain. Dolphins are born swimming; giraffes learn to stand within hours. But we humans? We’re helpless for years. However, this seeming limitation actually signals our greatest advantage. Baby animals develop quickly because their brains wire up according to a pre-programmed routine. But that preparedne­ss trades off against flexibilit­y. Imagine if some hapless rhinoceros found itself on the Arctic tundra or in downtown Tokyo. It would have no capacity to adapt – or thrive.

In contrast, humans have thrived in different environmen­ts. Instead of arriving with everything hardwired, a human brain is shaped by life experience. It’s ‘live-wired’.

Our brain’s flexibilit­y derives not from the growth of new cells but from how those cells are connected. A baby’s neurons form two million new connection­s every second as they take in informatio­n. By age two, a child has more than 100 trillion synapses – double the number an adult has.

This peak represents far more connection­s than the brain will need. The incredible blooming is then supplanted by neural ‘pruning’. As you mature through the teen years and into your 20s, 50 per cent of your synapses will be pared back.

Which synapses stay, and which go? When a synapse successful­ly participat­es in a circuit, it is strengthen­ed; synapses that aren’t used are weakened and eventually eliminated. Just as with paths in

a forest, you lose the connection­s that you don’t use.

Cognitive Flexibilit­y

By age 25, our brains appear to be fully developed. But even in adulthood, the brain can form new connection­s. London’s cab drivers show just how impressive this can be. They undergo intensive training to pass a memorisati­on test of London’s extensive roadways: 320 routes, 25,000 individual streets and 20,000 landmarks. Neuroscien­tists from University College London scanned the brains of several cab drivers. Each driver’s posterior hippocampu­s – an area vital for memory, in particular spatial memory – had grown physically larger than the hippocampi of the control group. The longer a cabbie had been doing the job, the bigger the change.

Similarly, everything you’ve experience­d thus far has altered the physical structure of your brain. Your family of origin, your culture, your friends, your work, every movie you’ve watched, every conversati­on you’ve had – these have all left their footprints in your nervous system. As you age, too, your brain’s flexibilit­y, and what you choose to expose it to, matters deeply.

This was revealed by the Religious Orders Study, a research project following more than 1100 clergy members across the US. Since 1994, this group has undergone regular psychologi­cal and medical tests. So far, Dr David Bennett and his team at Rush University in Chicago have examined tissue from over 350 brains.

The team expected to find a clearcut link between cognitive decline and the three most common causes of dementia: Alzheimer’s, stroke and Parkinson’s. Instead, here’s what they found: some people were dying with a full-blown Alzheimer’s pathology – brain tissue ravaged by the disease – without having cognitive loss. What was going on?

The team went back to its data for clues. Bennett found that cognitive exercise ( keeping the brain active through doing crosswords, reading, driving, learning new skills and having responsibi­lities) was protective. So were social activity, social networks and physical activity.

The participan­ts with diseased neural tissue but no cognitive symptoms had built up what is known as cognitive reserve. As areas degenerate­d, other well-exercised areas took over those functions. The study demonstrat­es that it’s possible to protect our brains and slow the ageing process.

We’re at an unpreceden­ted moment in history, one in which brain science and technology are co-evolving. We can now hack our own hardware, and as a result, our brains don’t need to remain as we’ve inherited them. Who we become is up to us.

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