The Opportunities of Being Elderly

In his book The Mature Mind: The Positive Power of the Aging Brain, Gene Cohen identified many areas where the brain of elderly people has an advantage over the brains of younger people.

For example, Cohen shows that as we age our brains become more flexible. (This happens because of a greater connection between the left and right hemispheres of our brains.) One of the results of this is that the older we become the easier it is to resolve apparent contradictions in opposing and seemingly incompatible views. Elderly people also find it easier to grasp the ‘big picture’, seeing the forest instead of just the trees. Continue reading

Speech and Elderly Self-Perception

In the mid-1990s Becca Levy began a series of experiments to show the importance of how we think about aging.

Levy, who was an associate professor of epidemiology and psychology at Yale University at the time, later published her findings in a 2002 edition of The Journal of Personal and Social Psychology.

Her research involved exposing elderly people to subliminal messages about aging and then asking them to perform a task. Those who had been exposed to negative words such as “decrepit” were found to walk slower, have poorer handwriting, and other behaviors associated with negative stereotypes of aging. On the other hand, those who were first primed with positive words about aging (like ‘wisdom’) performed better. Continue reading

Earning Your Confidence As You Grow Old

Positive thinking plays an important role in our self-perception as we age. In fact, research shows that we often become the people we expect ourselves to be.

Now it’s important to understand that when I talk about the power of positive thinking, I don’t mean a simply “Believe in yourself and you’ll succeed.” As I explained in my earlier post about confidence, a person can spend all day imagining that he is a successful NFL quarterback, but if he doesn’t actually train, he’ll be lucky if he can even throw a complete pass. While self-belief and confidence are important for success, if our confidence isn’t earned, our self-belief can be little more than self-deception. Continue reading

Soft-Wired

On this blog we have had frequent occasion to refer to Dr. Michael Merzenich’s ground-breaking research on neuroplasticity and to channel his insights into the EPPP preparation materials we produce for you.

It was therefore a great delight to recently learn that Dr. Merzenich’s book Soft-Wired: How the New Science of Brain Plasticity Can Change your Life is now available in paperback and on Kindle.

In this book Dr. Merzenich explains how to take control of your brain’s evolution and utilize your own neuroplasticity in a way that will improve your life. Continue reading

Fiction and Emotional Intelligence

In our previous post, I shared about a study that was done in Liverpool last January. The study had found that reading authors like Shakespeare is good for the brain.

This study was echoed last October by further research that was published in Science Magazine. This research showed that reading literary fiction increases the type of emotional intelligence needed to empathize with others.

Pam Belluck summarized the study’s findings in the New York Times. Belluck reported that the study

Continue reading

Prepare for EPPP with Shakespeare

Okay, we’ve encouraged you not to drink soda when preparing for your EPPP, and to avoid all energy drinks that might lead to sleep deprivation.

“What will I do without soda?” you may ask. The answer is simple: read Shakespeare.

While studies are showing that sugary drinks can make you dumber, evidence is also pointing to the fact that reading Shakespeare can increase cognitive functioning.

Writing in the Sunday Telegraph earlier this year, Julie Henry reported the results of a study conducted at Liverpool university which used scanners to monitor brain activity on volunteers as they read works by Shakespeare, as well as other English writers such as William Wordsworth and T.S Eliot. Continue reading

Summary of Recent Posts on Neuroplasticity and EPPP Prep

In our series on study skills, we kept returning to the principle of brain plasticity in offering tips to help you study effectively to pass your EPPP. My overall point was simple: understanding how the brain works, and then acting on that understanding, puts you in a better position to optimize cognitive functioning and succeed when you come to sit your EPPP.

But appreciating the science of brain-plasticity goes beyond simply giving you a leg-up in your EPPP prep. The implications are actually quite broad and affect every area of life. This is something I have been trying to convey in our recent series of posts on neuroplasticity. Now that this series has finished, I thought it might be helpful to summarize the ground we have covered.

In this series I have been showing how cutting-edge research in the science of brain-plasticity can help us to understand ourselves better, and can also give valuable insight into what happens when we learn. Continue reading

Ed Cooke on Forgetting, Revision and the Spacing Effect

In an article for The Telegraph, Grand Master of Memory, Ed Cooke, makes the following observations about the spacing effect:

The reason that forgetting is so rife is that memories fade in time – and only those memories that get repeated are strengthened for the long term. This is usually a good thing, since repetition correlates with importance. Meaningful or important things tend to happen again; random things tend not to. By forgetting what doesn’t repeat, we sort the wheat from the chaff.

The problem with most education lies in a distinction between two ways to go about repetition: spaced and massed. Massed repetition (“cramming”) is when you repeat something over and over in a short period of time. Spaced repetition is where the repetitions are spaced out.

To understand which is better, think of memories as plants in the garden of your memory. Think of repetition as watering. Massed repetition is like watering a plant over and over all at once, and then failing to do so for months. Spaced repetition is like watering the plant once a week for a period of months. The same amount of total watering leads to two very different plants at the end of the story, only one of which is dead. So it is with memory.

A century of scientific research has shown that the very best way to space repetition of material in the service of efficient, long-term learning is in fact to water memories just before they’re about to shrivel, and with gaps that increase with time. Optimally, we want to revisit a new memory roughly after a minute, five minutes, an hour, a day, a week, a month, three months, a year: always catching the memory just before it expires.

Algorithms are the best way to handle this scheduling, but there are two simple things that can be done to worked into an exam revision plan.

First, review what you learn continuously as you learn. After each page of a text book, look back over the main points. After each chapter, review all of its contents. This obviously sounds really boring. But in reality it can be pleasurable, and you’ll learn far faster.

And during revision blasts, look over what you do each day at the end, and each week too. The positive results are staggering: rather than constantly resuscitating dead memories, or over-watering them pointlessly, you can reduce the net amount of time spent by as much as a factor of three.

Further Reading

EPPP Materials: Learning and Memory Tools

The phenomenon of “fire together wire together” lies at the root of some of the memory theories we have seamlessly embedded within the TSM learning process.

One of these memory theories is Mnemonics, where information you are trying to remember gets paired with rhymes, phrases, acronyms or rules. This helps to embed the information in your memory because of the neurological power of associations.

The basic process was explained in a helpful article I came across not too long ago titled ‘Making a Memory: The Power of Association, Imagery and Linking in the Brain’:

Continue reading

Where “Fire Together, Wire Together” Meet the EPPP test

As your prepare to pass your EPPP test through the TSM study process, you will take roughly 4000 questions throughout the course of your studies. There’s a reason we make sure you answer this many questions before ever taking your EPPP test and it has to do with what I’ve been sharing about the brain.

Tests are normally associated with stress and anxiety. The very thought of taking a test is often enough to evoke negative memories from your school days, or to invoke stressful memories from your more recent time in graduate school.

In neurological terms, we might say that the idea of test-taking fires up the anxiety feeling in the cingulate gyrus, located deep inside the brain’s cortex. When the former fires up, the later fires up: test-taking and anxiety have become “wired” together in the brain. Continue reading