The Brain That Changes Itself

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The Brain That Changes Itself
File:The Brain That Changes Itself --- book cover.jpg
First edition cover
Author Norman Doidge
Country United States
Language English
Subject Neuroplasticity
Genre Non-fiction
Publisher Viking Press
Publication date
2007
Media type Print, e-book
Pages 427 pp.
ISBN 978-8178241753
OCLC 71189897
612.8 22
LC Class QP363.3 .D65 2007

The Brain That Changes Itself: Stories of Personal Triumph from the Frontiers of Brain Science[1] is a book on neuroplasticity by psychiatrist and psychoanalyst Norman Doidge, M.D. It features numerous case studies of patients suffering from neurological disorders and details how in each case the brain adapts to compensate for the disabilities of the individual patients, often in unusual and unexpected ways. Interviews with the patients, clinicians, and research scientists involved in these studies make up a large portion of the contents. Doidge uses examples of previous work carried out by neuroscientists such as Paul Broca, Sigmund Freud, Alexander Luria, Donald O. Hebb, Paul Bach-y-Rita, and Eric Kandel to show that the brain is adaptive, and thus plastic. Through the case studies, Doidge demonstrates both the beneficial and detrimental effects that neuroplasticity can have on a patient, saying, "... neuroplasticity contributes to both the constrained and unconstrained aspects of our nature."[2] However, neuroplasticity "... renders our brains not only more resourceful, but also more vulnerable to outside influences."[3][citation needed]

Skills

An important example of neuroplasticity is how humans gain skills. Doidge presents an experiment performed by Alvaro Pascual-Leone in which he mapped the brains of blind people learning to read Braille. Braille reading is a motor activity, which involves scanning with a reading finger, and a sensory activity, which involves feeling the raised bumps. The brain maintains a representation of these sensory and motor aspects, which are located in different cortices. The blind subjects practiced two hours a day, Monday through Friday, with an hour of homework. The mapping of their brains took place on Monday, after the weekend, and Friday, immediately after their week cram. What the scans ultimately showed is that the maps dramatically increased in size on Friday scans but returned to a "baseline" size on the following Monday. It took six months for the baseline Monday map to gradually increase and by ten months they plateaued. After the blind subjects took a two-month break, they were remapped, and their maps were unchanged from their last Monday mapping. What this shows is that long lasting changes as the result of skill learning took 10 months of repeated practice. The reason why short-term improvements were made based on the Friday mappings, but eventually disappeared, is the result of the type of neuronal connections that were taking place. The Friday mappings were the result of the strengthening of existing neuronal connections. Monday mappings, though showing little progress initially and plateauing at ten months, were the result of the creation of new neural connections.[4]

Reception

The New York Times gave a mostly positive review of the book.[5]

However The International Journal of Psychoanalysis published a negative book review essay critical of Doidge's writings. The review claims that neuroscience is irrelevant to the study of psychoanalysis.[6][7]

See also

References

  1. Doidge, Norman (2007) The Brain that changes itself: stories of personal triumph from the frontiers of brain science. ISBN 978-0-670-03830-5 (hc.) / ISBN 978-0-14-311310-2 (pbk.)
  2. Doidge, N. The Brain That Changes Itself, Appendix 2, p. 318.
  3. Doidge, N. The Brain That Changes Itself, Preface, p. xx.
  4. Pascual-Leone, A., R. Hamilton, J.M. Tormos, J.P. Keenan, and M.D. Catala. 1999. Neuroplasticity in the adjustment to blindness. In J. Grafman and Y. Christen, eds., Neuronal plasticity: Building a bridge from the laboratory to the clinic. New York: Springer-Verlag, pp. 94-108.
  5. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/29/health/29book.html
  6. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1745-8315.12022/abstract
  7. Carmeli, Zvi, and Rachel Blass. "The case against neuroplastic analysis: A further illustration of the irrelevance of neuroscience to psychoanalysis through a critique of Doidge's The Brain that Changes Itself." The International Journal of Psychoanalysis 94.2 (2013): 391-410.

External links