How our brains shape our destiny

have you ever wondered

what helped to shape the person you are

today for the decisions that you make

the habits that you hold how you like to

spend your time

with who and where even your deeply held

beliefs

your ideology and your identity what

helped

to create those many of us might like to

believe that we are masters of our own

destiny

but increasingly neuroscience is

challenging that idea

we can now peer into the brain and see

how vast swords

of our complex behavior are biologically

ingrained

and for me what all this touches on and

dances around

are some key questions about what it

means to be human

it’s about fate it’s about free will and

it’s about

our brains and to kick-start our

exploration

of these great topics i’d like you to

listen to this

complete gobble the goop right okay now

take a listen to this the camel was kept

in a cage at the zoo

poor camel okay now we’re going to

revert to the original file

and suddenly your brain makes sense of

it

it’s because the two files have a

similar cadence or frequency

and your brain is overlaying the sense

sentence

onto the incoming gobbledygook

this helps us to understand how our

brains operate as prediction machines

we use our past experiences our wisdom

our knowledge as a foundation or a lens

a prism by which to view incoming

information

and that creates our current sense of

reality our perception of the world

and it’s that which then helps us to

decide

how to act in the future and how our

life

stories are created

now this concept

helped me to understand my life

trajectory

i used to work as a nursing assistant in

a psychiatric hospital

i was working with children that had

been detained and sectioned under the

mental health act

i fondly remember how they used to play

basketball

in the courtyards they used to

enthusiastically bang on the bongo drums

in music sessions or they’d be quietly

reading harry potter in a corner but my

overriding memory of the place is a

feeling of deep claustrophobia

and frustration for the children

their constant battle with

medication-induced lethargy

the experience created in me a deep

desire to find out more about the brain

and behavior in an effort to try and

discover new treatments that might help

these children and others

and so i joined a growing army of

neuroscientists and i did a phd in

neuropsychiatry and became a fellow

in order to understand more about the

brain

now the brain is generally now agreed

to be our organ of destiny it’s this

majestic organ that only weighs about

1.5 kilograms so that’s just

two percent of your total body mass and

yet it magically

conjures up all of your thoughts your

emotions

and instructs you to interact with the

world in the way that you do

and it does this via 86 billion

nerve cells eight to six billion that’s

a high number it’s about 14

and a half times the number of people on

this planet in terms of nerve cells

in your brain and even more incredible

is that each one of these nerve cells

connects

to up to 10 000 other nerve cells in

order to create the most

intricate electric circuit board

imaginable

with around 100 trillion connections in

it now why am i calling it a circuit

board

because each one of those nerve cells

uses

the power of electricity pumping sodium

and potassium ions in and out of the

membrane

across the whole circuit of your brain

in order to dictate your emotions your

behaviors

and allow you to process information and

there’s a lovely

albeit slightly mean experiment that

helps demonstrate the power of

electricity in our nervous system

so this is an electric shock panel and

if we apply it to a nerve cell not in my

brain

but into my body there’s a collection of

nerve cells called the ulnar nerve tract

which runs from shoulder to wrist

to control movement in my hand it’s

usually under the control of the motor

cortex here

what we’re going to do is apply a small

electric shock to the ulnar nerve

through the skin switching it on

and off and on

and off and this is happening

quite quickly so the electricity the

signal is being conveyed about speeds of

120 miles an hour and it’s now causing

some pain and distraction for me

um now around 100 or so years ago

a new field of cartography started

mapping not the oceans or the land or

the skies

but mapping the nerve cells in our

bodies and the muscles that they

innovate

skip forwards to today and we’re now

starting to map

these connections within our mind this

neural circuitry of our brain

and what that information is telling us

is that we can now start to use this map

and employ it on people that have been

suffering for many years from symptoms

of depression

or obsessive compulsive disorder or

heroin addiction

these patients opt to undergo brain

surgery and have a minuscule version of

this electric shock panel

embedded deep in discrete regions and

circuits within the brain

to apply an electric current which will

instantaneously switch

off their symptoms offering real relief

to people that have been suffering for

years

but was there anything about these

people’s brains that predisposed them

to suffer in this way we’re actually

also living in a genomics revolution so

we can now sequence

really quickly the 3.2 billion base

pairs that makes up

our individual blueprints for life our

dna code

and what this sequencing information is

telling us is that there’s

huge numbers of our complex behaviors

that are also biologically ingrained

so not just our predisposition to mental

ill health

but also complex traits like our

intelligence or how long we might live

there’s a high genetic biological

element to this

it might be hundreds or thousands of

genes working in tandem

and the majority of these genes are

involved in dictating

how that neural circuitry is laid down

in the first place

in exciting new technological

developments

we can now even peer into the brain

as it’s being built and what scientists

are finding

is that in the human brain 20 weeks

before the birth of a baby you can see

these anatomical signatures these

changes

in the brain that correlate with the

genes that predispose

to symptoms as complex as autism or

attention deficit hyperactivity disorder

adhd

or even symptoms that might not emerge

for decades down the line

major depressive disorder bipolar or

even schizophrenia

you may have heard of the phrase

you’re wired that way well it’s not just

a metaphor

and there’s another new exciting

area of research called epigenetics

that’s helping us to understand

exactly how utterly intertwined nature

and nurture can be

and there’s a lovely example that helps

us to appreciate this

so mice usually love the sweet smell of

cherries

a waft of it reaches their nose and it

sends an electric signal

from the nose to the nucleus accumbens

the region that’s involved in pleasure

motivating the mice to scurry around in

order to hunt out this sweet treat

now researchers wafted in the smell of

cherry and then

shortly afterwards applied a mild

electric shock

and very quickly the mice associated

these memories and learnt to freeze in

anticipation of a shock whenever they

smelt cherries

after this the researchers let the mice

be they had a wonderful happy life

they settled down had children those

pups left home

and they went on to have nice lives and

have children of their own

so now we’re talking about the

grandchildren

of the original mice and it seems as

though this traumatic memory had

cascaded across the generations

via biology there was a change in the

grandfather’s sperm

not in the code itself but in the shape

of its dna and this shape change

altered the way that enzymes could

access different genes

within that sperm and that affected the

way that the neural circuitry of the

pups

and the grand pups brain circuit was put

together

and this sent the electric circuit from

the nose

re-routing it to the amygdala a

different brain region that’s involved

in the fear response

and so the pups learnt through this

mechanism

to be highly sensitive to the smell of

cherries

okay but how does this relate to us

humans

well prisoners of war from the u.s civil

war

when they return home and have children

their sons

have an 11 percent higher mortality rate

by the age of 42

compared to descendants of other

veterans

and in a very fascinating but very small

study those people that survived the

holocaust

their descendants carry an epigenetic

mark

of the memory there’s a change in the

way that the gene

for cortisol a hormone that’s involved

in the stress

response is expressed

okay so our fate our destiny

can be written into our dna entwined in

the way that it’s structured and

expressed

and we can carry memories across

generations

but thankfully not all of our fate

is written in stone in its entirety

there is still potential for change

and this occurs by this wonderful

mechanism called plasticity

as you learn something new a new

connection forms between one nerve cell

and another

as that learned thing becomes a memory

it becomes the default

route within your brain by which to

process information and it becomes a

stable connection

and what you can see in this movie here

are proteins being

shuttled across a nerve cell to help

with that laying down of

new memories within the mind

and that new passageway of thinking

can then become a habit in your behavior

but it’s not as simple as that sometimes

it can be very

difficult to allow people to change

their minds

and to think in a new way to learn from

their environment afresh

and this is a neat illusion that helps

demonstrate that point

so when we get to the back end of this

hollow mask the shadow information is

telling us that the eyes

and the nose are pointing backwards but

we’re used to seeing faces in our

environment

and so we ignore those shadow cues and

just see

another face pointing out

in this way we can start to understand

how our brains

make assumptions based on our past

experiences

and sometimes those assumptions can be

so

inbuilt into our identity that in order

for us to see the world afresh it would

require

widespread demolition and rebuilding

work

and it can be sometimes just too costly

for me there’s something quite beautiful

about

viewing all of our behaviors

as this simple output this mechanistic

processing of all the information that’s

coming in from the outside world

being overlaid by our cartography our

unique

dna code that sculpted our brain

to give rise mechanistically to our

behaviors

and our views and also there’s some

promising research coming out of

neuroscience

in the fields of resilience and finding

out how we can cultivate

a more flourishing brain and this gives

me hope

for some of the children that i was

talking about

earlier on also as a first-time

parent i find this neuroscience

knowledge

empowering rather than

constantly worrying about how i can hone

my son’s developing brain

i find it reassuring to think that

actually what’s done is done his brain

is his

and rather than worry in this age of

parental anxiety

actually i should just sit down and play

with him

but biological determinism rightly makes

people nervous

there’s been some aborig acts genocide

and eugenics

but perhaps neuroscience knowledge

should be used instead

by each of us to start to appreciate

how evolution has provided us with this

organ that allows us to display this

vast

breadth of behaviors for each one of us

on this planet to have a very unique and

individual

cartography of the mind which gives rise

to very different behaviors and very

different views

and actually maybe we should appreciate

this neurodiversity

because it’s only when we start to pull

all of that individual different ways of

thinking

that we can truly harness the collective

cognitive capacity that we as a species

are capable of

you

你有没有想过,

是什么帮助塑造了

今天的你,因为你做出的决定,你

养成的习惯,你喜欢和谁一起

度过你的时间

,在哪里,甚至你根深蒂固的

信念,

你的意识形态和你的身份是什么

帮助创造了这些 我们中的许多人可能愿意

相信我们是自己命运的主人,

但越来越多的神经科学正在

挑战这个想法,

我们现在可以窥视大脑,看看

我们复杂行为的巨大利剑是如何在生物学上

根深蒂固的

,对我来说,这一切涉及到什么,

跳舞

是一些关键问题,关于

作为人类的意义

它与命运有关,与自由意志

有关,与

我们的大脑有关,并开始

我们对这些伟大主题

的探索 好吧,

现在听听这个骆驼被关

在动物园的笼子里

可怜的骆驼好吧,现在我们要

恢复到原始文件

,突然你的大脑就

明白了

这是因为这两个文件具有

相似的节奏或频率,

并且您的大脑正在将意义

句子

叠加到传入的 gobbledygook

这有助于我们理解我们的

大脑如何作为预测机器运作

我们使用我们过去的经验 我们的智慧

我们的知识作为基础或镜头

一个棱镜,通过它来查看传入的

信息

,它创造了我们当前的

现实感我们对世界的感知

,它帮助我们决定

未来如何行动,以及我们现在的

生活

故事是如何创造的,

这个概念

帮助我理解 我的人生

轨迹

我曾经在一家精神病院担任护理助理

我正在与

根据《心理健康法》被拘留和隔离的儿童一起工作

我深情地记得他们过去是如何

在他们曾经

热情地敲打的院子里打篮球的

音乐课上的邦戈鼓,或者他们会

在角落里静静地读哈利波特,但我

对 pl 的压倒性记忆 ace 对孩子们来说是

一种深深的幽闭恐惧症

和挫败感

他们不断与

药物引起的嗜睡作斗争

这种经历在我心中产生了一种强烈的

愿望,即想要了解更多关于大脑

和行为的信息,以努力尝试

发现可能有助于这些疾病的新疗法

孩子和其他人

,所以我加入了越来越多的

神经科学家队伍,我获得了

神经精神病学博士学位,并成为了一名研究员

,以便更多地了解

大脑

现在大脑现在普遍被

认为是我们的

命运器官 重约

1.5 公斤,仅占

您体重的 2%,

但它神奇地

唤起您的所有想法

和情绪,并指导您以

您的方式

与世界互动,它通过 860 亿个

神经细胞 8 到 60 亿,这是

一个很高的数字,就你大脑中的神经细胞而言,它大约

是地球上人口数量的 14 倍半

,甚至 更令人难以置信的

是,这些神经细胞中的每一个都

连接

到多达 10 000 个其他神经细胞,

以创建可以想象到的最

复杂的电路板,

其中包含大约 100 万亿个连接

现在为什么我称它为电路

板,

因为每一个 这些神经细胞

利用电力将钠

离子和钾离子泵入和泵出

整个大脑回路的膜,

以支配你的情绪,你的

行为

,让你处理信息,

有一个可爱的

虽然有点卑鄙的实验可以

帮助你

在我们的神经系统中展示电力的力量,

所以这是一个电击面板,

如果我们将其应用于不是在我的

大脑中

而是在我的身体中的神经细胞,就会有一组

神经细胞,称为尺神经束

,从肩部延伸到腕部

为了控制我手中的运动 它

通常在运动皮层的控制下

我们要做的是应用一个小

电动 通过皮肤对尺神经的冲击,

打开

和关闭,打开

和关闭,这种情况发生

得非常快,所以

电信号正在

以每小时 120 英里的速度传输,现在它

给我造成了一些痛苦和分心,

嗯,现在 大约 100 年前,

一个新的制图领域开始

绘制地图,而不是海洋、陆地

或天空,

而是绘制我们身体中的神经细胞

和它们所创新的肌肉

向前跳到今天,我们现在

开始绘制

这些连接 在我们的脑海中

,我们大脑的这个神经回路

以及这些信息告诉我们的

是,我们现在可以开始使用这张地图

并将其用于多年来一直

患有

抑郁症

或强迫症或

海洛因成瘾症状的人

这些 患者选择接受脑部

手术,并在大脑内的

离散区域和电路深处嵌入这种电击面板的微型版本

以应用 一种电流会

立即

关闭他们的症状

,为多年来一直受苦的人提供真正的缓解,

但这些人的大脑是否有任何东西

使他们

容易以这种方式受苦?我们实际上

也生活在基因组学革命中,所以

我们可以 现在

非常快速地

对构成

我们个人生命蓝图的 32 亿个碱基对进行测序,我们的

dna 代码

和这些测序信息

告诉我们的是,我们有

大量的复杂行为

在生物学上也

根深蒂固,不仅仅是我们对精神病的倾向

健康,

但也有复杂的特征,比如我们的

智力或我们可能活多久,

这有很高的遗传生物学

因素

,可能有成百上千的

基因协同工作

,这些基因中的大多数都

参与了

决定神经回路是如何形成的

首先,

在令人兴奋的新技术

发展中,

我们现在甚至可以 进入大脑

的过程中,科学家们

发现,在婴儿出生前 20 周的人类大脑中

,你可以看到

这些解剖学特征

大脑中的这些变化与

容易

出现复杂症状的基因相关 自闭症或

注意力缺陷多动障碍

adhd

甚至几十年后可能不会出现的症状

重度抑郁症 双相情感障碍

甚至精神分裂症

你可能听说过这样一个短语,

你的联系方式很好,这不仅仅是

一个比喻

,还有另一个令人兴奋的新事物

一个叫做表观遗传学的研究领域

正在帮助我们

准确理解先天和后天是如何完全交织在一起的

,有一个很好的例子可以帮助

我们理解这一点,

所以老鼠通常

喜欢樱桃的甜味

从鼻子到细胞核的电信号伏

在与快乐有关的区域,

激发老鼠

为了寻找这种甜食,

研究人员四处奔走,现在研究人员散发出樱桃的气味

,然后

不久之后施加了轻微的

电击

,老鼠很快将

这些记忆联系起来,并学会了在这之后

每当他们闻到樱桃时就会冻结以期待电击

研究人员让

老鼠过上美好幸福的生活

他们安顿下来有了孩子那些

小狗离开了

家他们继续过上美好的生活并

有了自己的孩子

所以现在我们谈论

的是原始老鼠的孙子

似乎这种创伤性记忆通过

生物学代代相传

,祖父的精子发生了变化,而

不是代码本身,而是

其 dna 的形状,这种形状变化

改变了酶

访问

精子中不同基因的方式, 这

影响了幼崽的神经回路

和大幼崽大脑回路的

组合方式

,这发送了 el

鼻子的电回路将其

重新路由到杏仁核,这是一个与恐惧反应

有关的不同大脑区域

,因此幼崽通过这种机制学会

了对樱桃的气味高度敏感,

好吧,但这与我们人类有什么关系呢?

与其他

退伍军人的后代相比,

他们的儿子

在 42 岁时的死亡率

比其他

退伍军人的后代高出 11%。

后代携带记忆的表观遗传

标记 皮质醇基因的方式发生了变化

一种

参与压力

反应的激素的表达方式

正常,因此我们的命运 我们的命运

可以写入我们的 dna 以

它的结构和表达方式缠绕在一起

我们可以

代代相传,

但幸运的是,并非我们所有的命运

都完全写在石头上,

但仍然存在

这是通过这种称为可塑性的奇妙机制发生的,

当你学习新事物时

,一个神经细胞和另一个神经细胞之间会形成新的连接

,因为学到的东西变成了记忆,

它成为

你大脑中

处理信息的默认路径,它变成 一种

稳定的联系

,你在这部电影中可以看到的

是蛋白质

穿梭在神经细胞中,以帮助

在头脑中建立

新的

记忆,新的思维方式

可以成为你行为的习惯,

但它不是 就这么简单,有时

很难让人们

改变主意

并以新的方式思考以

重新从他们的环境中学习

,这是一个巧妙的错觉,有助于

证明这一点,

所以当我们到达这个的后端时

空心遮罩 阴影信息

告诉我们眼睛

和鼻子指向后方,但

我们习惯于在环境中看到人脸,

并且 o 我们忽略那些阴影线索,

只看到

另一张面孔

以这种方式指出我们可以开始

理解我们的大脑如何

根据我们过去的经验做出假设

,有时这些假设可以

如此

根植于我们的身份中,

以便我们看到 全新的世界 这将

需要

大范围的拆除和重建

工作

,有时对我来说成本太高

将我们所有的行为

视为这个简单的输出,

这种对来自外部世界的所有信息的机械处理

被覆盖,这是一件非常美妙的事情 通过我们的制图,我们

独特的

dna 代码雕刻了我们的大脑,

从而机械地产生了我们的

行为

和观点,并且神经科学在复原力领域也出现了一些

有希望的研究,

找出了我们如何培养

一个更加繁荣的大脑,这给出了

希望我之前谈到的一些孩子

也能成为冷杉 t-time

parent 我发现这种神经科学

知识

赋予了我力量,而不是

一直担心我如何才能磨练

我儿子正在发育的大脑

我应该坐下来

和他一起玩,

但生物决定论理所当然地让

人们感到紧张,

有一些土著行为种族灭绝

和优生学,

但也许

我们每个人都应该使用神经科学知识来开始欣赏

进化如何为我们提供了

这个允许 我们要

为这个星球上的每个人展示如此广泛的行为,

以拥有非常独特和

个性

化的思维制图,这会

产生非常不同的行为和非常

不同的观点

,实际上也许我们应该欣赏

这种神经多样性,

因为只有当 我们开始汲取我们真正能够接受的

所有个体不同的

思维方式

我们作为一个物种

对你有能力的集体认知能力