neuroscience of learning

59
Neuroscience of Learning 2005

Upload: dominic54

Post on 18-Nov-2014

455 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

 

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Neuroscience of Learning

Neuroscience of Learning

2005

Page 2: Neuroscience of Learning

What is learning?

CHANGING the structure & actions of NEURONS so

they HOLD INFORMATION in LONG TERM MEMORY inTEMPORAL & PARIETAL

LOBES of the CORTEX

Page 3: Neuroscience of Learning
Page 4: Neuroscience of Learning

LEARNING requires NEURONS to CHANGE

Page 5: Neuroscience of Learning

Learning requires MANYneuron changes

BUT two major changes are1 Changing the amounts of neurotransmitters that neurons produce

2 Changing the connections between neurons

Page 6: Neuroscience of Learning

(1) Learning requires neurons to make MORE & LESS & DIFFERENT transmitters

Page 7: Neuroscience of Learning

(2) Learning requires neurons to make NEW LINKS & DELETE EXISTING LINKS with other neurons

Page 8: Neuroscience of Learning

+ & -

Bad News & Good News for Teachers

in Current Neuroscience Findings

Page 9: Neuroscience of Learning

4 important negative findings from neuroscience

5 important positive findings from neuroscience

4 NEGATIVES & 5 POSITIVES

Page 10: Neuroscience of Learning

Bad news finding # 1

WE HAVE NO INTRINSIC

MOTIVATION TO LEARN

ACADEMIC MATERIAL

Page 11: Neuroscience of Learning

We are motivated to LEARNLEARN to get 4 PRIMARY BODY REWARDS:

Food Water Sex

Drugs of Abuse

Page 12: Neuroscience of Learning

And we are motivated to LEARNLEARN to get 5 Primary Social Rewards

Feel pleasant touch (Rolls et al. 2003)

See attractive faces (Aharon et al. 2001)

Hear positive words (Hamann & Mao 2002)

Interact with others (Rilling et al. 2002)

Gain social status (Tooby & Cosmides, 2002)

Page 13: Neuroscience of Learning

Human motivation system

Rewarding experiences trigger amygdala activity trigger dopamine release trigger frontal lobe activity

Page 14: Neuroscience of Learning

AMYGDALA

Computes Emotional intensity of an experience

Degree of negative or positive emotion

Page 15: Neuroscience of Learning

Increased Dopamine ISIS the Reward

Page 16: Neuroscience of Learning

FRONTAL LOBE

Stores the reward value of experience

Activates behaviors leading to the most rewarded outcome

Page 17: Neuroscience of Learning

All other complex experiences are conditioned with primary rewards

$$USE OF MONEY

WORKING

LEARNING

FOLLOWING RULES

Page 18: Neuroscience of Learning

Motivation to Learn School Subjects is Conditioned

Most cultures condition children

with 3 primary rewards for successful learning using foodteacher & parent approvalincreased peer social status

Page 19: Neuroscience of Learning

Bad news finding # 2

THERE IS NO EVIDENCE

FOR LEARNING TRANSFER

Page 20: Neuroscience of Learning

Reviews of research show no evidence for learning transfer

Barnett & Ceci (2002 )Clement & Lecoutre (2004)

Dixon & Dohn (2003) Mayer (2004)

Page 21: Neuroscience of Learning

No transfer means no free lunch

NO SPECIFIC TRANSFER means Learning to add DOES NOT make

learning to divide easierNO GENERAL TRANSFER meansLearning math DOES NOT make

you a better learner “in general”

Page 22: Neuroscience of Learning

Bad news finding # 3

THERE IS NO EVIDENCE

FOR MULTIPLE

INTELLIGENCES

Page 23: Neuroscience of Learning

Gardner’s 11 Total Intelligences

Linguistic, Musical, Logical-mathematical, Spatial,Bodily-kinesthetic, Personal, Naturalistic, Spiritual,

Existential,Mental Searchlight, Laser

Page 24: Neuroscience of Learning

Gardner’s Newest Intelligences

Existential = feeling at one with the cosmos

Mental Searchlight = people with high IQ test scores scan widely

Laser = artists and artisans “who generate the advances (as well as the catastrophes) of society”

Page 25: Neuroscience of Learning

Gardner Admits No Supporting Data Exists for Multiple Intelligences

Allix (2000) no evidenceJie-Qi Chen (2004) no evidenceGardner (2004) no evidenceGardner and Connell (2000, p.

292) conceded that “there is little hard evidence for Multiple Intelligences theory” (2000, p. 292)

Page 26: Neuroscience of Learning

NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH REFUTES MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCES

There is consistent significant evidence for a general intelligence factor G that appears to be working memory —this stands against Multiple Intelligences(Colom et al. 2004)

There is consistent significant evidence that brain systems for cognitive functions are overlapping —this stands against Multiple Intelligences (Lieberman, 2002)

Page 27: Neuroscience of Learning

NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH REFUTES MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCES, cont.

There is evidence for specific innate cognition modules (Gallistel, 2003)

1 Fast-mapping of word to object2 Person recognition of face, voice,

clothes3 Obligation computation of what we

owe others and what they owe us4 Imitation of all aspects of the behavior

of others

Page 28: Neuroscience of Learning

ADAPTED COGNITION MODULES STAND AGAINST MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCES

Each adapted cognition module is supported by evidence of its neural operations (MI intelligences are not).

A given adapted cognition module, like Mirror Neuron Tissue, operates using our vision, hearing, speaking, gesturing, social awareness—this combines parts of 4 of Gardner’s intelligences—thus negating their individual existences

Page 29: Neuroscience of Learning

Bad news finding # 4

EVERY SINGLE MEMORY WE HAVE

IS COMPLETELY UNSTABLE

Page 30: Neuroscience of Learning

Heraclitus was right

Page 31: Neuroscience of Learning

You cannot step into the same river twice

EVERY TIME YOU REMEMBER SOMETHING, IT IS A

DIFFERENT MEMORY, BECAUSE THE ACT OF

RECALL IS A RECONSTRUCTION

Page 32: Neuroscience of Learning

RECALL TRANSFORMS RECALL TRANSFORMS OUR MEMORIES OUR MEMORIES

When we Remember our brainTakes the memory

apart, Updates the memory, Brings the memory to

consciousnessThen makes new

proteins for a new structure for the memory as it goes back into long-term storage.

Page 33: Neuroscience of Learning

Good news findings # 1, 2, 3, 4, 5

Neuroscience research has found 5 promoter mechanisms whereby short term learning changes into long

term learning

Page 34: Neuroscience of Learning

5 major promoters of learning =

INNATE LEARNING PROGRAMS (Gallistel, 2003)

REPETITION of INFORMATION(Squire and Kandel, 2000)

EXCITEMENT at the time of learning (Cahill & Gorski, 2003; LeDoux, 2002)

EATING CARBOHYDRATES at time of learning (Korol, 2002)

8-9 HOURS OF SLEEP after learning (Kuriyama, Stickgold, & Walker, 2004)\

Page 35: Neuroscience of Learning

The first promoters are innate learning programs called ADAPTED COGNITION MODULES

SPECIALIZED BRAIN MODULES EVOLVED TO COMPUTE SPECIFIC INFORMATION OUTSIDE OUR CONSCIOUSNESS IN ORDER TO MAKE THAT PROCESS EASIER AND FASTER BECAUSE THOSE COMPUTATIONS HAVE BEEN IMPORTANT FOR OUR SURVIVAL

Page 36: Neuroscience of Learning

INNATE PROGRAMS = Adapted Cognition Modules are very specific computation systems

Adapted cognition modules promote quick and easy learning of certain types of information:

●We learn people’s faces, typical movements, voices, clothing, odors very easily because we have FACE RECOGNITION TISSUE in our temporal lobes

● We learn speech and tool use motor skills more easily because we have special MIRROR NEURONS in our frontal lobes that copy the speech and movements of others

Page 37: Neuroscience of Learning

ADAPTED COGNITION MODULES ALSO INCLUDE

COMPUTING FREQUENCIESBASIC COUNTING SKILLSCOMPUTING WHAT OTHERS OWE

US AND WHAT WE OWE THEMFAST MAPPING OF WORD LABEL TO

OBJECTS AND SITUATIONSCOMPUTING SOCIAL STATUS AND

INSULTS TO SOCIAL STATUS

Page 38: Neuroscience of Learning

The 2nd Learning Promoter is REPETITION

Squire & Kandel (2000) Reviewed neurobiology of learning

Brain forms long term memories depending on

“the number of times the event or fact is repeated”

Page 39: Neuroscience of Learning

REPETITION

Squire & Kandel (2000) Reviewed neurobiology of learning

Brain forms long term memories depending on

“the number of times the event or fact is repeated”

Page 40: Neuroscience of Learning

Repetition causes neurons to make MORE and LESS neurotransmitter

Page 41: Neuroscience of Learning

Repetition causes neurons to make MORE and FEWER CONNECTIONS with other neurons

Page 42: Neuroscience of Learning

ORIGIN OF TEACHING IS REPETITION

We all unconsciously repeat important information in conversations

All cultures teach important stories by verbal repetition

Chinese teachers were taught to say everything TWICE…

Most teachers discover that repetition is valuable

Page 43: Neuroscience of Learning

The 3rd learning promoter is EXCITEMENT

LeDoux has studied the brain for 30 years & reported (2002) that “we remember particularly well…those things that arouse our emotions”

Page 44: Neuroscience of Learning

Cahill & Gorski (2003) research

Page 45: Neuroscience of Learning

Excitement automatically increases certain neurotransmitters

Page 46: Neuroscience of Learning

Excitement sets NEURON CONNECTIONS in the “ON” position

Page 47: Neuroscience of Learning

The 4th learning promoter is EATING CARBOHYDRATES

Greenwood and Winocur (2001) research: high-fat diet impairs brain glucose metabolism needed to form long term memory

Korol (2002) research: eating carbohydrates enhanced memory

(Smith, 2003) research: lack of breakfast impairs learning

Page 48: Neuroscience of Learning

Eating carbohydrates gives the brain glucose to organize new synapse locations

Page 49: Neuroscience of Learning

Eating carbohydrates provides glucose to make glycoproteins that bind neurons to one another

Page 50: Neuroscience of Learning

EXTREME DIETING IMPAIRS LEARNING

A majority of young women age 12 to 30 yrs in the US are on fad diets.

During periods of dieting, their learning will be significantly slowed and it will be harder for them to retain information.

Page 51: Neuroscience of Learning

The 5th learning promoter is 8-9 HOURS OF SLEEP

SPECIAL ISSUE of the journal Learning and Memory (2004 V11, N6) reports a wide range of evidence for consolidation of learning during sleep

Page 52: Neuroscience of Learning

Macbeth (2.2.46-51)

Sleep that knits up the ravell’d sleave of care,

The death of each day’s life, sore labour’s bath,

Balm of hurt minds, great nature’s second course,

Chief nourisher in life’s feast.

Page 53: Neuroscience of Learning

SLEEP IS A FREE LEARNING TOOL

DREAMING SLEEP promotes differential strengthening of neurons in networks holding learned information

NON-DREAMING SLEEP activates calcium channels that biologically repeat the neural path of learning to force long term storage

Page 54: Neuroscience of Learning

DREAMING SLEEP causes differential strengthening by altering neurotransmitters

Page 55: Neuroscience of Learning

NON-DREAMING sleep causes new neuron CONNECTIONS to be automatically repeated

Page 56: Neuroscience of Learning

Research shows that TOO LITTLE SLEEP or IMPAIRED SLEEP = IMPAIRED LEARNING

Alcohol ingested after a day of learning inhibits dreaming sleep and impairs memory storage of the day’s information

Drugs of abuse used after learning have similar bad effects on sleep and the day’s learning

A majority of teens, college students and working adults in the US are sleep-deprived

Page 57: Neuroscience of Learning

Of the 5 major learning promoters

INNATE LEARNING PROGRAMS (Gallistel, 2002)

REPETITION of INFORMATION(Squire and Kandel, 2000)

EXCITEMENT at the time of learning (Cahill & Gorski, 2003; LeDoux, 2002)

EATING CARBOHYDRATES at time of learning (Korol, 2002)

8-9 HOURS OF SLEEP after learning (Kuriyama, Stickgold, & Walker, 2004)\

Page 58: Neuroscience of Learning

TEACHERS CAN CONTROL ONLY 2 PROMOTERS

Repetition &

Excitement

Page 59: Neuroscience of Learning

BUT TEACHERS CAN ALSO

PERMIT AND ENCOURAGE

HEALTHY CARBOHYDRATE

SNACKING AND

TALK TO STUDENTS AND PARENTS ABOUT THE

IMPORTANCE OF SLEEP

DR LYNN WATERHOUSE