John Medina

Brain Rules (Updated and Expanded)


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      BRAIN RULES

      BONUS MATERIAL

       www.brainrules.net

       Film featuring John Medina

      Take a lively, 45-minute tour of the 12 original Brain Rules for home, work, and school—from “Exercise boosts brain power” to “Sleep well, think well.”

       Videos guide you through parenting concepts

      John Medina hosts fun videos on speaking in parentese, the cookie experiment, dealing with temper tantrums, and more. Plus, take our parenting quiz.

      JOHN MEDINA is a developmental molecular biologist and research consultant. He is an affiliate professor of bioengineering at the University of Washington School of Medicine. He was the founding director of two brain research institutes: the Brain Center for Applied Learning Research, at Seattle Pacific University, and the Talaris Research Institute, a nonprofit organization originally focused on how infants encode and process information. Medina lives in Seattle, Washington, with his wife and two boys.

      BRAIN RULES. Copyright © 2014 by John J. Medina.

      All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews. Requests for permission should be addressed to:

      Pear Press

      P.O. Box 70525

      Seattle, WA 98127-0525

      U.S.A.

      This book may be purchased for educational, business, or sales promotional use. For information, please visit www.pearpress.com

      SECOND EDITION

       Edited by Tracy Cutchlow

       Designed by Greg Pearson

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available upon request.

      ISBN-13: 978-0-99603-260-5

      10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

       To Joshua and Noah

       Gratitude, my dear boys, for constantly reminding me that age is not something that matters unless you are cheese.

      contents

       Dumb things we do ~ The grump factor ~ Getting you in the loop ~ A brilliant survival strategy ~ Your amazing brain

       Our brains love motion ~ The incredible test-score booster ~ Will you age like Jim or like Frank? ~ How oxygen builds roads for the brain

       The brain doesn’t sleep to rest ~ Two armies at war in your head ~ How to improve your performance 34 percent in 26 minutes ~ Which bird are you? ~ Sleep on it!

       Stress is good, stress is bad ~ Villains and heroes in the toxic-stress battle ~ Why the home matters to the workplace ~ Marriage intervention for happy couples

       Wiring

       Neurons slide, slither, and split ~ Experience makes the difference ~ Furious brain development not once, but twice ~ The Jennifer Aniston neuron

       Attention

       Emotion matters ~ Why there is no such thing as multitasking ~ We pay great attention to threats, sex, and pattern matching ~ The brain needs a break!

       Memory

       Memories are volatile ~ Details get splattered then pieced back together again ~ If you don’t repeat this within 30 seconds, you’ll forget it ~ Spaced repetition cycles are key to remembering

       Sensory integration

       Lessons from a nightclub ~ How and why all of our senses work together ~ Multisensory learning means better remembering ~ What’s that smell?

       Vision

       Playing tricks on wine tasters ~ You see what your brain wants to see, and it likes to make stuff up ~ Throw out your PowerPoint

       Music

       Bringing a man back to life ~ Listening and language skills ~ Fine-tuning emotion detection and empathy ~ Music as therapy

       Gender

       Sexing humans ~ The difference between little girl best friends and little boy best friends ~ Men favor gist when stressed; women favor details ~ A forgetting drug

       Exploration

       Babies are great scientists ~ Exploration is aggressive ~ Monkey see, monkey do ~ Curiosity is everything

       Acknowledgments

       Index

      

survival

      The human brain evolved, too.

      

exercise

      Exercise boosts brain power.

      

sleep

      Sleep well, think well.

      

stress

      Stressed brains don’t learn the same way.

      

wiring

      Every brain is wired differently.

      

attention

      We don’t pay attention to boring things.

      

memory

      Repeat