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The New Brain: How the Modern Age Is Rewiring Your Mind

The New Brain: How the Modern Age Is Rewiring Your Mind
By Richard Restak M.D.

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Now Available in Paperback!

The era of the New Brain is upon us! Already our brains are working differently than they did just one hundred years ago. Drugs are already available that work in the brain to prevent us from feeling drowsy, depressed, anxious, or fearful, or that enhance concentration and memory. Dramatic treatments to repair damage in the brain are becoming common. In The New Brain, neurologist, neuropsychiatrist, and bestselling author Dr. Richard Restak tells how technology and biology are converging to influence the evolution of the human brain.

Dr. Restak describes the dramatic advances that now are possible, as well as the potential for misuse and abuse, examining such questions as: Is Attention Deficit Disorder a "normal" response to the modern world's demand that we attend to several things at once? What happens in our brains when images replace language as the primary means of communication? How does exposure to violent imagery affect our brains? Are we all capable of training our brains to perform at a superior level?


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #265959 in Books
  • Published on: 2004-10-06
  • Released on: 2004-09-23
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 240 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Restak (Mozart's Brain), a neurosurgeon and popular science writer on the brain, focuses on new technology for examining the physiology of the brain (such as MRI) and how it allows us to monitor and control a far wider range of activities than was formerly possible. Recent work holds the potential for, among other things, reducing the use of psychopharmacological drugs that have unpredictable side effects; substituting one sense (touch) for another (sight); and direct repair of brain and other neurological damage. Restak also demonstrates how the brain is modified the old-fashioned way, such as by practicing a skill. The negative aspects of recent work are invoked in more polemical than scientific prose, such as the specter of social control through "medicalization" of everything, and how the overstimulation of our brains by modern society is giving us all ADD. Hackles will rise the farthest over the author's proclamation that it is proven that TV violence affects our brains in ways that lead to violent behavior without even mentioning the word "censorship." A compact if sometimes oversimplified introduction to its subject, Restak's latest is best when it stays close to the data.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Scientific American
Pity the poor neurologists of yesteryear, saddled as they were with their conviction that our brains are hardwired after childhood. Then celebrate today’s scientists, who are exploiting brain-imaging technologies to show that our brains are capable of profound and permanent alterations throughout our lives. Neurologist Richard Restak does just that in The New Brain: How the Modern Age Is Rewiring Your Mind, even as he argues that we are being negatively altered by the sound-bite, techno environment in which we live. Technology such as functional magnetic resonance imaging, Restak begins, can now demonstrate that as a musician practices for many hours, certain neural pathways are strengthened. He then moves to a profound implication, namely that all kinds of technological stimuli are forging brain circuits that may hurt us instead of helping us. For instance, he cites correlations between positron emission tomography scans of violent people and normal experimental subjects who are simply thinking about fighting, then asserts that repeated viewing of violence on television and in video games can set up brain circuits that make us more likely to initiate realworld fisticuffs. Unfortunately, such brain imaging may leave more questions than answers. As Restak himself points out, the technology does not provide "neurological explanations," just "important correlations." Yet he is whipped up enough to diagnose all of modern society with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, the probable result of brain changes we are initiating in our media-saturated world. He reminds us of the antidote, though: we are still in control of what we allow ourselves to see and hear. In the end, Restak fails to create a sense that scientists have revealed a new way of understanding the brain. And the images that inspire speculation in the book still await research that may finally reveal the mechanisms of such phenomena as memory and aggression.

Chris Jozefowicz

Review

"The wise, witty, and ethical Dr. Restak has given us . . . a book vital to understanding our own role in influencing our ongoing evolution as a species. He guides us gently and humbly through synaptic connections we did not know we had, thus igniting us to insatiable curiosity about our potentials."-- Wilton S. Dillon, Ph.D., senior scholar emeritus, Smithsonian Institution

"This is a book to read and savour... because it makes us think deeply about who we are and why we act the way we do."--Edmonton Journal (Canada)


The wise, witty, and ethical Dr. Restak has given us . . . a book vital to understanding our own role in influencing our ongoing evolution as a species. He guides us gently and humbly through synaptic connections we did not know we had, thus igniting us to insatiable curiosity about our potentials. (Wilton S. Dillon, Ph.D., senior scholar emeritus, Smithsonian Institution )

This is a book to read and savour… because it makes us think deeply about who we are and why we act the way we do. (Edmonton Journal (Canada) )


Customer Reviews

Looking at our future4
Although Restak's book The New Brain has nothing dramatically new with respect to research, it definitely puts what has emerged from recent research into better perspective for the amateur. Essentially it brings together under specific headings much of what has been learned by various mind/brain researchers through fMRI and PET scan studies, and does it in a very readable and understandable form. A neurologist and neuropsychiatrist at George Washington University Medical Center in Washington D. C., Restak has published 18 or more books on the topic of mind science, putting it into public formats like books and popular television programs.

Among the more interesting topics, I found that on the plasticity of the brain the most significant. I started out my career in nursing on a neurology ward, and at the time it was almost a given that damage to the central nervous system was irreparable and deficits that arose from it irreversible. The goal for most of the patients with strokes from occlusion or cerebral bleed was rehabilitation of the functional side of the body and learning to deal with whatever communication problems remained. It was often repeated that whatever deficits had not resolved after the subsidence of cerebral edema would be permanent. The new research indicates that this is not only not true, but that focusing on strengthening the "good" side actually prevented the "bad" side from healing properly. The marvelous sense of hope that the new data provide is incredible. As those familiar with the efforts of Christopher Reeves to overcome the deficits with which he was left by his accident will know, exercising the weaker portions of the body to the extent they are able with the help of others and of mechanical and electrical stimulation seems to show considerable hope for rewiring the damaged nervous system.

The information on attention deficit and technologically driven changes in the wiring of the brain and function of the mind were also interesting. To the extent that it predicts the direction of the human nervous system and behavior, I'm not certain that technology is such a good thing after all, but then I'm not going to be around when life has changed to the degree that such predictions indicate will be the case. I found it intriguing that the biofeedback we receive from our own technology has as much an effect on us as we on it. Certainly, familiar as I am with the notion of early human evolution and tool use/production, I should have found this natural outgrowth unsurprising. Somehow, though, such things "should" be something of the "past" rather than the "now." After all, we feel we are the "finished" product of human evolution. Just how untrue this is, is very obvious when you read this chapter (3) of Restak's book.

Being a part of the health care world, I found the chapter on Cosmetic Psychopharmacology eye opening. Of course when one considers the emotional pain and crippling character of depression one sees the pharmacological interventions as mostly to be desired. With Restak's discussion of the extreme of designer personalities and of simply not feeling or being anything, one can see that use of these chemicals to alter brain chemistry is perhaps not the best plan over all. The problem is, where to we draw the line, who draws it, and for whom do we set these limits and why? These are all ethical questions that will probably be slugged out case by case until over time solutions are found and guidelines created.


Parent, teacher, grandparent? You should read this book5
This is a very thought provoking book about how our brains are wired and how they work.

The book is very readable and does a good job of explaining how our brains work and how research is showing that our brains are much more elastic and dynamic than previously believed.

I believe that any parent or teacher must read the chapter 'More Images Than Ever'. Restak looks at how various parts of the brain work together to control our behavior and the effect of television and movie images on this wiring. He's careful to point out that this is current theory, and not absolute fact.

When I'd finished this chapter I resolved to change the kind of images that I allow myself to be exposed to, and to be much more careful about what my children see.

Overall this is a positive book that looks to a future where we are much more aware of how our brains function and how to use them and expand our capabilities in benefical ways.

An excellent book, needed today5
Our brains are changing, says Dr. Richard Restak in his latest book, an engaging tour of the frontiers of modern brain research. According to him, we are entering the age of the New Brain where new technologies like genetic mapping and imaging technology will reveal to us for the first time the mysterious secrets hidden within our skulls. And he is superbly qualified to lead us on this adventure into neuroscience.

Dr. Restak is a neurologist and neuropsychiatrist and an expert in brain function and the ongoing research of brain physiology and development. He is a clinical professor of neurology at George Washington Medical Center in the nation's capital and author of more than 15 books on the brain and brain function and appears often in the national media as a popular commentator on scientific research.

What, in general, is the book about? Well, it is about genetic mapping, imaging technology, psychopharmacology, the fact that our brains are working differently from how they did a century ago, in what manner and why the demands of our modern world are bringing about changes in the brain itself, the dramatic new treatments that can repair damage in the brain, the way new drugs can influence how the brain operates and what behaviors can and will result, and the probability that technology, rather than biology, will play the major role in the evolution of the human brain.

This is a compact book (only 212 pages of text) for books dealing with such complex topics, but that may well be to its advantage. It is, after all, written for the ordinary person and not the expert and therein lies its value. Members of the general public need to know what is going on in the area of modern brain research and what impact some of the new technologies in neuroscience may have on their lives. Furthermore, there are potential misuses of and abuses in some of these technologies, there are moral or ethical issues present, and all of us need to have enough knowledge so we can make informed decisions about how we want to permit this new research to affect our lives.

Rather than attempt to provide an overview of all or most of the major topics in Restak's book, let me focus briefly on three revelations that Restak presents from the current research which are sure to be controversial and I found particularly intriguing.

The first one is that it may be possible that brain imaging techniques such as functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) can indicate when you are telling the truth and when you are lying, a tool that would certainly be valuable to a prosecutor and jury if evidence from such a technique was ever accepted by courts of law. Another technique called Brain Fingerprinting, which detects changes in the brain's electrical activity, has already been used in criminal investigations and Restak cites one example where the investigation led to a life sentence in prison. Interesting stuff, that. And the efficacy of such tools will surely be widely debated on the popular media talk-shows.

Another controversial area that Restak explores is that of the influence of violence in the media on brain physiology and behavior. There are, he notes, more than 1,000 studies which support the conclusion "that when children watch violent media they become more aggressive." Without getting into the matter of TV or movie censorship, Restak presents some rather powerful evidence and says "...we know that watching violence -- or even just imagining it -- reduces the functional activity of those parts of our brain that are normally enlisted to inhibit violent impulses." He concludes that "From a practical point of view, it makes a lot of sense...to avoid vivid images of events that, according to what we're learning from new brain research, can lead to psychological harm." I suspect we'll hear a lot more about this research in the future and it will be widely debated.

My personal favorite, however, is his brief discussion regarding the two methods that have traditionally been used to teach children to read. The controversy over which teaching method is best -- phonics or whole-word (aka "look-say") -- has raged for decades. I spent over seventeen years in the public schools and was a strong advocate of phonics, finding myself decidedly in the minority all that time. Now, according to Restak, brain research may have decided the issue. The question he asks is: "Which of the two methods corresponds most closely to what happens in the brain during reading?" The answer, Restak says, is that "recent fMRI studies have largely come down in favor of phonics." I just knew that some day my position on the matter would be vindicated by science. And so it seems.

The only criticism I have of the book regards its subtitle, "How the Modern Age is Rewiring Your Mind." As a philosopher in the tradition of Classical Realism, I make a distinction in kind between the human brain and the human mind. The human brain may be "rewiring" itself, but the human mind cannot do so. It is understandable, however, why Dr. Restak fails to make this distinction; unfortunately, most empirical scientists today also fail to make it. It is interesting, though, that while he uses the term "mind" in his subtitle, no where else in the book do I find him using that term.

This book is a good read. And, I think, an important one considering the nature of the topic and its significance to all our lives. It is generally nontechnical and easily understood, but be aware that it is really an overview of a deeply complex subject. I highly recommend it to everyone.