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Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

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Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London. Neuroscience, Neuroeducation and Neuromyths. Themes. 1. What can neuroscience say about the developing brain and mind? 2. Some educational neuromyths 3. Drugging and enhancing children - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London Neuroscience, Neuroeducation and Neuromyths
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Page 1: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Professor Steven RoseThe Open University &

Gresham College London 

Neuroscience, Neuroeducation and Neuromyths

Page 2: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Themes1. What can neuroscience say about the

developing brain and mind?2. Some educational neuromyths3. Drugging and enhancing children4. Has neuroscience anything useful to say to

teachers and educationalists?

Page 3: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

The developing brain and mind

Page 4: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Can you spot the difference?

Steven and the chimp are 98.8% genetically identical

Page 5: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

But that doesn’t mean much

Steven is also about 35% genetically identical to a daffodil and has about the same number of genes (20000) as a fruitfly

Page 6: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Chimps and Children ComparedKanzi can construct

simple sentences to express wants….but can get no further

Mali and Saul can handle abstract concepts, discuss distant future plans…and will go on growing

Page 7: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

The key lies in development

The key is neither genes nor environment as opposites (so called nature/nurture), but development, a process that engages both genes and environment in ontogeny

Ontogeny is an active process, in which organisms construct themselves within constraints.

This is autopoiesis

Page 8: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Human and Chimp Brains

Page 9: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Humans v ChimpsLong-livedSocialTheory of mindParenting/teachingNeotenousTool-usersSymbol-users

BothBothBothHuman alloparents- Hrdy Humans more soHumans more soOnly humans

Page 10: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

The meaning of neotenyHumans born prematurely, like pigs, unlike ratsBrain weight at birth 25% adult (350g)At 6 months 50% of adultAt 1 year 60% At 2.5 years 75%At 6 years 90%At 10 years 95%At puberty 1250g girls, 1375 boysAverage adult weight 1300-1500g

Page 11: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Human Brain Development

Page 12: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Forest of Neurons

Page 13: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Entering the Brain

Page 14: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Some Numbers20,000 genes

100,000 proteins100,000,000,000 neurons100,000,000,000,000 synapses

Page 15: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

50mm3 cortex contains:

5 million neuronsUp to 50 billion synapses22km dendrites220 km axons

Page 16: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

And some systemsThe brain consists of a multitude of mini-organs,

massively interconnectedFor instance, there are about 30 different

‘modules’ in the visual cortex, each responsible for analysing one feature of the environment - colour, shape, motion, etc.

Problem - how are all these bound together?Is there a homunculus?

Page 17: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London
Page 18: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Central command? or self-organisation?

It used to be thought that all these regions ‘reported’ upwards to some command centre in the brain - a so-called homunculus

We now know there is no homunculus - the brain is a self-organising multiply reentrant system; brain and body in constant interaction

The brain is embodied, the person is embedded

Page 19: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Developing CompetencesForget ‘innateness,’ gene/environment

dichotomies, and think autopoiesis.In the first three years of life the baby has to

learn motor coordination, recognition of others especially care-givers, ‘theory of mind,’ speech, walking, memory…

These are the so-called sensitive periods NOT ‘CRITICAL’!

Page 20: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Baby becomes Infant

The day-old baby has to be a competent suckler and to become a chewing infant - harder than you might imagine!

Page 21: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

SpecificityEye and brain

grow at different rates postnatally, so connections are continually being broken and remade, but orderly vision remains

Page 22: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Dynamics and Plasticity

The brain is highly dynamic both millisecond by millisecond and over a lifetime in response to experience. This is brain plasticity - the key to our survival as individuals and as a species

Page 23: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Plasticity

Our perception is shaped by experience, for instance, rural versus urban

Page 24: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Memory - eidetic versus linear

Page 25: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

M Carreiras et al. Nature 461, 983-986 (2009) doi:10.1038/nature08461

The effect of literacy on brain structure.

Page 26: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Learning makes new connections in the brain

Page 27: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Some NeuromythsYou only use 10% of your brainOnce damaged, brain recovery is impossible‘Brain gyms’ and IQ supplementsLeft brain is cognitive, right brain emotionalMen are left brained, women right brainedMen’s brains are heavier than women’s

Page 28: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Magnetoencephalography

SQUIDS detect the minute magnetic fields around the brain - a billionth of the earth’s field

Page 29: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Supermarket Choices

Page 30: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Shopping Lights up the Brainactive regions over the first second when making a supermarket choice

Page 31: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Remembering and Choosing

Page 32: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Another Myth – Brain Gyms

Page 33: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Drugging Children?

Page 34: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

The strange case of ADHDchildren with AD/HD .. disturb their parents and teachers

because their classroom achievement is erratic… a source of exasperation to the ...teacher. .. ..This is the pupil who never seems to be in his or her seat, who is constantly bothering classmates, and can be relied upon for little other than being generally off task. All categories can be frustrating to teach because of their apparent unpredictability; their failure to conform to expectations, and their tendency not to learn from their mistakes (Paul Cooper, educationalist)

Page 35: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

The strange case of ADHD and ritalin

Increase in US ADHD diagnoses

1988: 500,000

2011: 5,400,000(9.5% of all US children)

Increase in UK ritalin prescriptions

1991 2000

1997 92,0002011 660,000

Page 36: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Enhancing Children?

Page 37: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation

Page 38: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

So what are the ethical issues?Trading Ritalin in the playground?

Putting current across your child’s head?

Buying extra coaching or private education?

Page 39: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Some brain truths (or what we currently believe!)

Children’s brains are not miniature adultsBoys’ and girls’ brains mature at slightly different

ratesCulture and technology change brainsWe get slower as we get older, our brains shrink a

bit and neurons die offBut we go on learning and changing our brains

throughout our livesUse it or lose it!

Page 40: Professor Steven Rose The Open University & Gresham College London

Has neuroscience anything useful to say to teachers and educationalists?

To be frank, not much you didn’t know already

But on the other hand teachers and educationalists have a lot to teach neuroscientists!


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