I found this article interesting on how brain scientists are validating Dr Morters findings on how the brain works and how B.E.S.T. reprograms the brain
Exercising
your brain may improve your life
By Wynne Parry
Published February 11, 2013
LiveScience
Throughout life, even shortly before death, the
brain can remodel itself, responding to a person's experiences. This
phenomenon, known as neuroplasticity, offers a powerful tool to improve
well-being, experts say."We now have evidence that engaging in pure mental
training can induce changes not just in the function of the brain, but in the
brain's structure itself," Richard Davidson, a neuroscientist at the
University of Wisconsin-Madison, told an audience at the New York Academy of
Sciences on Thursday (Feb. 6) evening.
The brain's plasticity
does
change over time, Davidson pointed out. For instance, young children have an
easier time learning a second language or a musical instrument, he said.
Exercise for the mind
The idea of training the brain is not a radical
one, said Amishi Jha, a neuroscientist at the University Miami and another
panelist for the discussion.
"How many of you think engaging in certain
kinds of physical activity will change the way the body works? Our cultural
understanding now is that specific types of activity can alter the body in
noticeable ways," Jha said, adding that this cultural understanding may be
shifting to incorporate the mind as well. [
The panel discussion focused on a particular
type of exercise: the practice of mindfulness, which panelist Jon Kabat-Zinn, a
clinical mindfulness expert at the University of Massachusetts Medical School,
defined as awareness.
"Mindfulness is awareness that arises from
paying attention in the present moment, nonjudgmentally," Kabat-Zinn said.
Jha's personal interest in mindfulness arose
from stress. As a young professor and mother under pressure from her job and
family life, she ground her teeth so much that it caused numbness, interfering
with her ability to speak. Jha attended a presentation Davidson gave and was
startled to hear him say meditation
,
which cultivates mindfulness, could promote a positive pattern of electrical
activity in the brain.
"I was like, 'I can't believe he used that
word [meditation] in this auditorium,'" she said. "I had never heard
it in a scientific context."
So, Jha began her own mindfulness practice
,
which not only reduced her stress level, but also inspired her to explore the
topic as a neuroscientist.
Opening the door
There are many doors into mindfulness, said
Kabat-Zinn. He gave two examples: A person can practice mindfulness by focusing
on something, such as his or her own breath, and bringing his or her attention
back to the breath when it begins to wander, Kabat-Zinn said.
It is also possible to practice awareness
without choosing a particular object upon which to focus; however, "that
turns out to be quite a challenging thing to do," he said.
Cultivating mindfulness like this can help break
harmful cycles, such as those that accompany depression
,
in which the mind continues to repeat the same negative thoughts.
"When you see you are not your thoughts or
your emotions, then you have a whole different palette of ways to be,"
Kabat-Zinn said.
Roots in the East
Many would say mindfulness as it is practiced in
Western society has its roots in the East, in Buddhism, noted moderator Steve
Paulsonof the public radio program "To the Best of Our Knowledge."
"Is mindfulness a spiritual practice?"
Paulson asked the panelists.
"For me, I don't talk about spirituality,
because I don't know what spiritual means," the University of Wisconsin's
Davidson said. "I think what we're talking about is part of every human
being's innate capacity."
Buddhist monks, whom Davidson has studied,
provide a "sample of convenience," a group of people who have all
received the same training, an important consideration for research, he said.
The neuroscience
Brain scans of meditating people show different
patterns of activity depending on the practitioner's level of experience. These
patterns also differ depending upon the type of meditation practice used,
Davidson said Work in Davidson's lab indicates a connection between meditation
and resilience. A response to stress becomes problematic when someone
perseverates, or has an emotional reaction long after the problem has ended. In
the brain, this shows up as the prolonged activation of a region known as the
amygdala.
Mindfulness can increase the speed of
recovery in the amygdala
,
and the more hours of formal practice people have, the faster their amygdalas
recover, the data indicate, Davidson said.
This panel was the last of a four-part series
on
consciousness, moderated by public radio host Paulson and presented by the Nour
Foundation.
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