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Mind Wide Open: Your Brain and the Neuroscience of Everyday Life.


Steven Johnson. Mind Wide Open: Your Brain and the Neuroscience of Everyday Life. New York: Scribner, 2004.

Steven Johnson believes that learning about the brain's mechanics can widen one's self-awareness as powerfully as any therapy or meditation or drug. In this book, he sets out to prove this by becoming his own test subject--this includes participating in a battery of attention tests, learning to control video games by altering his brain waves, and scanning his brain with a $2 million MRI 1. (application) MRI - Magnetic Resonance Imaging.
2. MRI - Measurement Requirements and Interface.
 machine. Johnson also explores how we "read" other people, how the brain processes frightening events, the neurochemistry neurochemistry /neu·ro·chem·is·try/ (-kem´is-tre) the branch of neurology dealing with the chemistry of the nervous system.

neu·ro·chem·is·try
n.
 that links love and sex, the similarities between endogenous and exogenous drugs, why music evokes powerful emotional responses, and where our most important ideas come from.

Johnson suggests updating Freud's taxonomy of id, ego, and superego (roughly parallel to the unconscious, conscious, and preconscious preconscious /pre·con·scious/ (-kon´shus) the part of the mind not present in consciousness, but readily recalled into it.

pre·con·scious
n.
See foreconscious.
) with a neuroanatomical equivalent--Paul Maclean's model of the "triune brain." This model consists of: a) the brainstem--controlling metabolic functions like heart rate and breathing; b) the limbic limbic /lim·bic/ (lim´bik) pertaining to a limbus, or margin; see also under system.

lim·bic
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or characterized by a limbus.

2.
 system--the seat of emotion and memory For "emotional memory" in Stanislavski's system of acting and American Method acting, see .

Emotion can have a powerful impact on memory. Numerous studies have shown that the most vivid autobiographical memories tend to be of emotional events, which are likely to be recalled more
, comprising chiefly the amygdala amygdala /amyg·da·la/ (ah-mig´dah-lah)
1. almond.

2. an almond-shaped structure.

3. corpus amygdaloideum.


a·myg·da·la
n. pl.
, the hippocampus, and the hypothalamus; and c) the neocortex--the most distinctly human component of the brain's architecture that allows us to engage in abstract thought and communicate in complex sentences. Johnson asserts that mankind's evolutionary march from "brain stem, to limbic system, to neocortex--as E.O. Wilson put it, from heartbeat, to heartstrings, to heartless--is certainly a more accurate assessment of the psyche's inner divisions than the old mythos of id, ego, and superego." (To understand the brain's inner life, Johnson maintains we should also examine the molecules of emotion and affect: ocytocin, cortisol cortisol (kôr`tĭsôl') or hydrocortisone, steroid hormone that in humans is the major circulating hormone of the cortex, or outer layer, of the adrenal gland. , serotonin, etc.--these chemicals constitute the raw material of the brain's value system.)

Mind Wide Open is a lucid and compelling overview of brain science and its impact on the individual. If your brain wants to learn more about itself, I highly recommend you read this book.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Institute of General Semantics
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Levinson, Martin H.
Publication:ETC.: A Review of General Semantics
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Oct 1, 2005
Words:320
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