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The left brain vs. right brain myth - Elizabeth Waters

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    Behold the human brain,
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    it's lumpy landscape visibly split into
    a left and right side.
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    This structure has inspired one of
    the most pervasive ideas about the brain,
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    that the left side controls logic
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    and the right, creativity.
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    And yet, this is a myth unsupported
    by scientific evidence.
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    So how did this misleading idea
    come about
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    and what does it get wrong?
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    It's true that the brain has a right
    and a left side.
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    This is most apparent
    with the outer layer, or the cortex.
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    Internal regions, like the striatum,
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    hypothalamus,
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    thalamus,
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    and brain stem
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    appear to be made from continuous tissue,
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    but in fact, they're also organized
    with left and right sides.
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    The left and the right sides of the brain
    do control different body functions,
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    such as movement and sight.
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    The brain's right side controls the motion
    of the left arm and leg and vice versa.
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    The visual system is even more complex.
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    Each eye has a left
    and right visual field.
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    Both left visual fields are sent
    to the right side of the brain,
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    and both right fields
    are sent to the left side.
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    So the brain uses both sides to make
    a complete image of the world.
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    Scientists don't know for sure
    why we have that crossing over.
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    One theory is it began soon after animals
    developed more complex nervous systems
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    because it gave the survival advantage
    of quicker reflexes.
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    If an animal sees a predator coming
    from its left side,
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    it's best off escaping to the right.
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    So we can say that vision
    and movement control are two systems
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    that rely on this left-right structure,
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    but problems arise when we over-extend
    that idea to logic and creativity.
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    This misconception began in
    the mid 1800s
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    when two neurologists, Broca and Wernicke,
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    examined patients who had problems
    communicating due to injuries.
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    The researchers found damage to
    the patients' left temporal lobes,
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    so they suggested that language is
    controlled by the left side of the brain.
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    That captured the popular imagination.
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    Author Robert Louis Stevenson
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    then introduced the idea
    of a logical left hemisphere
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    competing with an emotional
    right hemisphere
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    represented by his characters
    Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
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    But this idea didn't hold up when doctors
    and scientists
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    examined patients who were missing
    a hemisphere
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    or had their two hemispheres separated.
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    These patients showed a complete
    range of behaviors,
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    both logical and creative.
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    Later research showed that one side
    of the brain is more active than the other
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    for some functions.
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    Language is more localized to the left
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    and attention to the right.
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    So one side of the brain may do more work,
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    but this varies by system
    rather than by person.
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    There isn't any evidence to suggest
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    that individuals have dominant
    sides of the brain,
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    or to support the idea
    of a left-right split
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    between logic and creativity.
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    So people may be particularly logical
    or creative,
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    but that has nothing to do with sides
    of their brains.
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    And even the idea of logic and creativity
    being at odds with each other
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    doesn't hold up well.
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    Solving complex math problems requires
    inspired creativity
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    and many vibrant works of art
    have intricate logical frameworks.
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    Almost every feat of creativity and logic
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    carries the mark of the whole brain
    functioning as one.
Title:
The left brain vs. right brain myth - Elizabeth Waters
Speaker:
Elizabeth Waters
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:12

English subtitles

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