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- This file is copyright of Jens Schriver (c)
- It originates from the Evil House of Cheat
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- Essay Name : 1069.txt
- Uploader : Lucky McIntyre
- Email Address : Lucky4150@aol.com
- Language : English
- Subject : Biology
- Title : Two Brains?
- Grade : B+ (89%)
- School System : URI
- Country : USA
- Author Comments : Long time researching... But came out really good
- Teacher Comments : Interesting approach to the topic. Well researched!
- Date : Jan. 6 1993
- Site found at : www.Yahoo.com
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- Two Brains?
-
- Your brain has two sides. And each has a distinctly different way of
- looking at the world.
-
- Do you realize that in order for you to read this article, the two
- sides of your brain must do completely different things? The more we
- integrate those two sides, the more integrated we become as people.
- Integration not only increases our ability to solve problems more
- creatively, but to control physical maladies such as epilepsy and migranes,
- replace certain damaged brain functions and even learn to "thin" into the
- future. Even more startling is evidence coming to light that we have
- become a left-brain culture.
-
- Your brain's right and left side have distinctly different ways of
- looking at the world. Your two hemispheres are as different from each
- other as, oh, Micheal Wilson and Shirley Maclean. The left brain controls
- the right side of the body (this is reversed in about half of the 15
- percent of the population that is left-handed) and, in essence, is logical
- analytical, judgemental and verbal. It's interested in the bottom line, in
- being efficent. The right brain controls the left side of the body and
- leans more to the creative, the intuitive. It is concerned more with the
- visual and emotional side of life.
-
- Most people, if they thought about it, would identify more with
- their left brain. In fact, many of us think we are our left brains. All
- of that non-stop verbalization that goes on in our heads is the dominant
- left brain talking to itself. Our culture- particularly our school system
- with its emphasis on the three Rs (decidedly left-brain territory) -
- effectively represses the intuitive and artistic right brain. If you don't
- believe it, see how far you get at the office with the right brain activity
- of daydreaming.
-
- As you read, your left-side is sensibly making connections and
- analysing the meaning of the words, the syntax and other complex relation-
- ships while putting it into a "language" you can understand. Meanwhile,
- the right side is providing emotional and even humerous cues, decoding
- visual information and maintaining an integrated story structure.
-
- While all of this is going on, the two sides are constantly
- communicating with each other across a connecting fibre tract called the
- corpus callosum. There is a certain amount of overlap but essentially
- the two hemispheres of the brain are like two different personalities
- that working alone would be somewhat lacking and overspecialized, but
- when functioning together bring different strengths and areas of expertise
- to make an integrated whole.
-
- "The primitive cave person probably lived solely in the right
- brain," says Eli Bay, president of Relaxation Response Inc., a Toronto
- organization that teaches people how to relax. "As we gained more control
- over our environment we became more left-brain oriented until it became
- dominant." To prove this, Bay suggests: "Try going to your boss and saying
- "I've got a great hunch." Chances are your boss will say, "Fine, get me
- the logic to back it up."
-
- The most creative decision making and problem solving come about
- when both sides bring their various skills to the table: the left brain
- analysing issues, problems and barriers; the right brain generating fresh
- approaches; and the left brain translating the into plans of action.
-
- "In a time of vast change like the present, the intuitive side of
- the brain operates so fast it can see what's coming," says Dr. Howard
- Eisenberg, a medical doctor with a degree in psychology who has studied
- hemispheric relationships. "The left brain is too slow, but the right
- can see around corners."
-
- Dr. Eisenberg thinks that the preoccupation with the plodding left
- brain is one reason for the analysis paralysis he sees affecting world
- leaders. "Good leaders don't lead by reading polls," he says. "They have
- vision and operate to a certain extent by feel."
-
- There are ways of correcting out cultural overbalance. Playing
- video games, for example, automatically flips you over to the right brain
- Bay says. "Any artistic endavour, like music or sculpture, will also do
- it."
-
- In her best-selling book "Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain
- (J.P. Tarcher Inc., 1979), Dr. Betty Edwards developed a series of exercises
- designed to help people tap into the right brain, to actually see or process
- visual information, differently. She cites techniques that are as old as
- time, and modern high-tech versions such as biofeedback.
-
- An increasing number of medical professionals beieve that being in
- touch with our brain, especially the right half, can help control medical
- problems. For examplem Dr. Eisenberg uses what he calls "imaginal
- thinking" to control everything from migranes to asthma, to high blood
- pressure. "We have found," he says, "that by teaching someone to raise to
- raise their temperature - by imaging they are sunbathing or in a warm bath
- - they can control their circulatory system and terefore the migrane."
-
- Knowledge of our two-sided brain began in the mid-1800's when
- French neurologist Paul Broca discovered that injuries to the left side of
- the brain resulted in the loss of speech. Damage to the right side,
- however did not. Doctors speculated over what this meant. Was the brain
- schizophrenically divided and non-communicative?
-
- In the early 1960s, Nobel Prize winner Dr. Roger Sperry proved that
- patients who had their corpus callosum severed to try and control epileptic
- seizures could no longer communicate between their hemispheres. The
- struggle can be seen quite clearly in the postoperative period whe the
- patient is asked to do a simple block design. This is a visual, spacial
- task that the left-hand (controlled by the right brain in most of us) can
- do very well but the right hand (controlled by the language-oriented left
- brain) does poorly. The right hand may even intervene to mix up the
- design.
-
- Some people with epilepsy can control their seizures by concentrating
- activity on the hemisphere that is not affected. In the case of left lobe
- epilepsy, this can be done by engaging in a right-brain activity such as
- drawing.
-
- One intriguing question is why we have two hemispheres at all? "In
- biology you always have the same thing on one side as the other - ears,
- lungs, eyes, kidneys, etc." explains Dr. Patricia De Feudis, director of
- psychology at Credit Valley Hospital in Mississauga, Ont. "But with the
- brain there is more specialization. You can have something going on one
- side and not not be aware of it in the other."
-
- Our knowledge of the brain is general is only beginning. We know
- even less about how the hemispheres operate, Getting in touch with how the
- two sides work can only do us good, if just to keep us from walking around
- "half-brained".
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-