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The Scientific American Day in the Life of Your Brain. a 24 Hour Journal of What's Happening in Your Brain
Horstman, J.
1ª Edición Septiembre 2009
Inglés
Tapa dura
256 pags
1000 gr
null x null x null cm
ISBN 9780470376232
Editorial WILEY
LIBRO IMPRESO
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Description
Have you ever wondered what’s happening in your brain as you go through
a typical day and night? This fascinating book presents an hour-by-hour round-the-clock
journal of your brain’s activities. Drawing on the treasure trove of information
from Scientific American and Scientific American Mind magazines as well as original
material written specifically for this book, Judith Horstman weaves together
a compelling description of your brain at work and at play.
The Scientific American Day in the Life of Your Brain reveals what’s going
on in there while you sleep and dream, how your brain makes memories and forms
addictions and why we sometimes make bad decisions. The book also offers intriguing
information about your emotional brain, and what’s happening when you’re
feeling love, lust, fear and anxiety—and how sex, drugs and rock and roll
tickle the same spots.
Based on the latest scientific information, the book explores your brain’s remarkable ability to change, how your brain can make new neurons even into old age and why multitasking may be bad for you.
Your brain is uniquely yours – but research is showing many of its day-to-day cycles are universal. This book gives you a look inside your brain and some insights into why you may feel and act as you do.
The Scientific American Day in the Life of Your Brain is written in the entertaining, informative and easy-to-understand style that fans of Scientific American and Scientific American Mind magazine have come to expect.
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments.
- Preface.
- Introduction.
- You gotta know the territory: A short tour of your brain.
- Your neurotransmitters.
- Charting the day: Your body clocks.
- The best of times?
- Coming to consciousness: Awake and aware. 5:00 A.M. to 8:00 A.M.
- 5:00 A.M. Waking to the world.
- Your inner alarm clocks.
- Your brain chemicals.
- Larks and owls.
- Coming to our senses.
- An orchestra of sensory harmony.
- Touch and movement: Feeling our way.
- Varieties of touch.
- 6:00 A.M. Coming to consciousness.
- The seat of consciousness.
- Emotion, memory, and consciousness.
- It’s always about networking.
- Little gray cells and big white matter: Myelin in your brain.
- Prime time for heart attack and stroke.
- 7:00 A.M. Those morning emotions.
- Reason needs a neurochemical boost.
- Can meditation help master those emotions?
- Is there a God spot in your brain?
- Practice makes compassion.
- 8:00 A.M. Finding your way.
- Why his brain may not ask directions.
- How we know where to find our lost keys.
- Engaging the world: Getting out and about. 9:00 A.M. to Noon.
- 9:00 A.M. Encountering others.
- That face, that familiar face.
- Friend or foe? Read my face.
- Mirror, mirror: Copycat neurons in the brain.
- The broken mirror: Autism insights from mirror neurons and face perception.
- 10:00 A.M. Peak performance-or stress?
- Stress in the brain.
- The alarm that doesn’t stop: Why chronic stress is so bad.
- Stress destroys neurons.
- Stress ups the risk of Alzheimer’s disease.
- The very thought of it is enough.
- Multitasking-again?
- The limits of multitasking.
- How your brain helps your job kill you.
- You can lull your brain away from stress.
- Flow versus stress.
- 11:00 A.M. Decisions, decisions, and more decisions.
- The brain’s CEO.
- "Chemo brain" can ambush your CEO.
- Choosing economically.
- Making an emotional moral choice.
- Choosing wearies your brain.
- The brain has a section for regret.
- Noon The hungry brain.
- How hunger works in your brain.
- We’re losing our scents.
- Still hungry? When hunger goes awry.
- Why calories taste delicious.
- Addicted to _______ (fill in the blank).
- Self-control sucks your energy.
- Yes, there is such a thing as brain food.
- The guts of the day: Getting down to business. 1:00 P.M. to 4:00 P.M.
- 1:00 P.M. The tired brain.
- Partial recall: Why memory fades with age.
- Can you help your brain stay young(er)?
- Predicting Alzheimer’s disease.
- How forgetting is good for the brain.
- Asleep at the wheel-almost? It could be narcolepsy.
- 1:54 P.M. Just time for a six-minute power nap.
- 2:00 P.M. Bored bored bored.
- Can’t get no satisfaction? Maybe it’s ADHD.
- ADHD and risk taking could be good--sometimes.
- Wired and hooked: Addicted to technology.
- 3:00 P.M. Your pain is mainly in the brain.
- How pain hurts your brain.
- Mind under matter, mind over brain.
- Is hypnosis real?
- A window into traumatic forgetting.
- 4:00 P.M. Exercise your brain.
- Exercise grows neurons and improves memory.
- Why we get food cravings.
- The most dangerous time for teens.
- The teen brain is still changing.
- But don’t forget hormones.
- Time out: Letting go and coming home. 5 P.M. to 8 P.M.
- 5:00 P.M. The dimming of the day.
- Is it really depression? Or just a bad patch?
- Searching for the pathway to depression.
- Maybe you’re just SAD.
- Magnetic energy may work when meds fail.
- A peak time for suicide.
- Good grief: Addicted to grieving.
- 6:00 P.M. Coming home.
- An oxytocin high.
- Nobody home? Loneliness hurts.
- Oh, those comforting cravings. Or is it addiction?
- Bottoms up: Where many alcoholics end.
- Is addiction the result rather than the cause of brain damage?
- Still crazy after all these years? Aging isn’t stopping drug use.
- 7:00 P.M. Gotta sing, gotta dance.
- The musical path to the brain.
- Music survives brain damage.
- Your brain expands to store music.
- So you think you can dance?
- Born to rock.
- The creative brain.
- Right brain, left brain?
- Don’t oversimplify that right brain stuff.
- The musical ear is learned, not born.
- 8:00 P.M. Humor is healthy.
- The best medicine.
- Tracking your internal laugh track.
- TV addiction is no mere metaphor.
- Winding down: Fear, sex, sleep, and dreams. 9:00 P.M. to Midnight.
- 9:00 P.M. Things that go bump in the night.
- How fear works in your brain.
- Who’s afraid? Not these brain cells.
- When the brain decides it’s time to scram.
- The many parts of a violent brain.
- 10:00 P.M. Lust, sex, and love.
- You’ve got that loving feeling . . .
- Your brain on sex.
- Women, men, and orgasms: How alike are they?
- Does the penis have a brain of its own?
- What’s love got to do with it? Plenty, it turns out-for women.
- Are you born gay? Sexual orientation is biology, not choice.
- 11:00 P.M. Falling asleep.
- The five stages of sleep.
- Insomnia: Curse of the night.
- Perhaps less is more?
- Interrupted sleep? Don’t call it insomnia. It’s normal.
- Call me sleepless.
- Still awake? Can you catch up on lost sleep?
- Is insomnia worse for night owls?
- Midnight. Sleeping in the midnight hour.
- Strolling in your sleep.
- Drifting into dreamland.
- Was Freud right about dreams?
- Do banished thoughts resurface in dreams?
- Want to dream more? Try sleep deprivation.
- Night crew at work: 1:00 A.M. to 4:00 A.M.
- 1:00 A.M. Night crew at work.
- Cleaning up your neural garbage.
- Why your brain doesn’t take a break already.
- The 10 percent myth.
- 2:00 A.M. Going against the clock in your brain.
- Disasters on the night shift.
- Lack of sleep affects doctors as much as alcohol.
- Less sleep? More fat.
- Biorhythm and blues: Faulty clocks.
- Resetting your body clock.
- 3:00 A.M. Awake and anxious.
- Where the nightmare begins.
- A false alarm.
- That pill to fix your ills has a price.
- 3:30 A.M. Night nurse on duty.
- 4:00 A.M. Last sleep.
- 4:30 A.M. Awake so early?
- Your brain tomorrow.
- Sources.
- Glossary.
- About the Author.
- Index.
Author Information
Judith Horstman is an award-winning journalist whose work has appeared in publications ranging from USA Today to the Primer on the Rheumatic Diseases (twelfth edition). Horstman's work has also appeared in publications by Harvard, Stanford, and Johns Hopkins universities, numerous magazines, and on the Internet. She has been a Washington correspondent, a Fullbright scholar, a journalism profesor, and is the author of four books.
Reviews
Praise for The Scientific American A Day in the Life of Your Brain
"A Day in the Life of Your Brain takes us on breezy, fact-filled and eye-opening
journey through the neural machinery that navigates us through every moment.
Read it and learn."
—Daniel Goleman, best-selling author of Emotional Intelligence
"A Day in the Life of Your Brain is a fabulous accomplishment. It is practical,
fun, easy to read and filled with interesting, useful information. I highly
recommend this book."
— Daniel G. Amen, MD, bestselling author of Change Your Brain, Change
Your Life
"A Day in the Life of Your Brain is a terrific read––fun and
chock-a-block full of fascinating facts and ideas. Judith Horstman takes us
on a romp through the day and the night, telling us what our brains are doing
on an hourly basis. It also provides some wonderful and solid advice. I learned
from it, and you will too!"
— John E. Dowling, PhD, Gund Professor of Neurosciences, Harvard University,
author of Creating Mind: How the Brain Works
"This book is a fascinating read. It capitalizes on the natural flux of
experiences throughout our day to boldly illustrate the relevance and penetration
of the new brain science in helping us understand ourselves more fully."
—Zindel V. Segal, PhD, Professor of Psychiatry, University of Toronto,
author of The Mindful Way Through Depression
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