Want to be smarter? Gotta get 'dumb' first!
Seriously - this is amazing stuff! Plenty of
possibilities!
BTW: You can buy something similar
to this here: SHAKTI Also,
there's a good WIRED story on the 'God Spot' here: EMS Study Review
Hooked
up to the Medtronic Mag Pro, a test subject begins the series of tests to show
the effect of transcranial magnetic stimulation.
The
research of a test in which a research subject was asked to draw a picture of a
dog four times, at different stages of his exposure to transcranial magnetic
stimulation.
In a concrete basement at
the University of Sydney, I sat in a chair waiting to have my brain altered by
an electromagnetic pulse. My forehead was connected, by a series of electrodes,
to a machine that looked something like an old-fashioned beauty-salon hair dryer
and was sunnily described to me as a ''Danish-made transcranial magnetic
stimulator.'' This was not just any old Danish-made transcranial magnetic
stimulator, however; this was the Medtronic Mag Pro, and it was being operated
by Allan Snyder, one of the world's most remarkable scientists of human
cognition.
Nonetheless,
the anticipation of electricity being beamed into my frontal lobes (and the
consent form I had just signed) made me a bit nervous. Snyder found that
amusing. ''Oh, relax now!'' he said in the thick local accent he has acquired
since moving here from America. ''I've done it on myself a hundred times. This
is Australia. Legally, it's far more difficult to damage people in Australia
than it is in the United States.''
''Damage?'' I groaned.
''You're not going to be
damaged,'' he said. ''You're going to be enhanced.''
The Medtronic was
originally developed as a tool for brain surgery: by stimulating or slowing down
specific regions of the brain, it allowed doctors to monitor the effects of
surgery in real time. But it also produced, they noted, strange and unexpected
effects on patients' mental functions: one minute they would lose the ability to
speak, another minute they would speak easily but would make odd linguistic
errors and so on. A number of researchers started to look into the
possibilities, but one in particular intrigued Snyder: that people undergoing
transcranial magnetic stimulation, or TMS, could suddenly exhibit savant
intelligence -- those isolated pockets of geniuslike mental ability that most
often appear in autistic people.
Snyder is an impish
presence, the very opposite of a venerable professor, let alone an
internationally acclaimed scientist. There is a whiff of Woody Allen about him.
Did I really want him, I couldn't help thinking, rewiring my hard drive? ''We're
not changing your brain physically,'' he assured me. ''You'll only experience
differences in your thought processes while you're actually on the machine.''
His assistant made a few final adjustments to the electrodes, and then, as
everyone stood back, Snyder flicked the switch.
A series of
electromagnetic pulses were being directed into my frontal lobes, but I felt
nothing. Snyder instructed me to draw something. ''What would you like to
draw?'' he said merrily. ''A cat? You like drawing cats? Cats it is.''
I've seen a million cats
in my life, so when I close my eyes, I have no trouble picturing them. But what
does a cat really look like, and how do you put it down on paper? I gave it a
try but came up with some sort of stick figure, perhaps an insect.
While I drew, Snyder
continued his lecture. ''You could call this a creativity-amplifying machine.
It's a way of altering our states of mind without taking drugs like mescaline.
You can make people see the raw data of the world as it is. As it is actually
represented in the unconscious mind of all of us.''
Two minutes after I
started the first drawing, I was instructed to try again. After another two
minutes, I tried a third cat, and then in due course a fourth. Then the
experiment was over, and the electrodes were removed. I looked down at my work.
The first felines were boxy and stiffly unconvincing. But after I had been
subjected to about 10 minutes of transcranial magnetic stimulation, their tails
had grown more vibrant, more nervous; their faces were personable and
convincing. They were even beginning to wear clever expressions.
I could hardly recognize
them as my own drawings, though I had watched myself render each one, in all its
loving detail. Somehow over the course of a very few minutes, and with no
additional instruction, I had gone from an incompetent draftsman to a very
impressive artist of the feline form.
Snyder looked over my
shoulder. ''Well, how about that? Leonardo would be envious.'' Or turning in his
grave, I thought.
As
remarkable as the cat-drawing lesson was, it was just a hint of Snyder's work
and its implications for the study of cognition. He has used TMS dozens of times
on university students, measuring its effect on their ability to draw, to
proofread and to perform difficult mathematical functions like identifying prime
numbers by sight. Hooked up to the machine, 40 percent of test subjects
exhibited extraordinary, and newfound, mental skills. That Snyder was able to
induce these remarkable feats in a controlled, repeatable experiment is more
than just a great party trick; it's a breakthrough that may lead to a revolution
in the way we understand the limits of our own intelligence -- and the
functioning of the human brain in general.
Snyder's work began with a
curiosity about autism. Though there is little consensus about what causes this
baffling -- and increasingly common -- disorder, it seems safe to say that
autistic people share certain qualities: they tend to be rigid, mechanical and
emotionally dissociated. They manifest what autism's great ''discoverer,'' Leo
Kanner, called ''an anxiously obsessive desire for the preservation of
sameness.'' And they tend to interpret information in a hyperliteral way, using
''a kind of language which does not seem intended to serve interpersonal
communication.''
For
example, Snyder says, when autistic test subjects came to see him at the
university, they would often get lost in the main quad. They might have been
there 10 times before, but each time the shadows were in slightly different
positions, and the difference overwhelmed their sense of place. ''They can't
grasp a general concept equivalent to the word 'quad,''' he explains. ''If it
changes appearance even slightly, then they have to start all over again.''
Despite these limitations,
a small subset of autistics, known as savants, can also perform superspecialized
mental feats. Perhaps the most famous savant was Dustin Hoffman's character in
''Rain Man,'' who could count hundreds of matchsticks at a glance. But the truth
has often been even stranger: one celebrated savant in turn-of-the-century
Vienna could calculate the day of the week for every date since the birth of
Christ. Other savants can speak dozens of languages without formally studying
any of them or can reproduce music at the piano after only a single hearing. A
savant studied by the English doctor J. Langdon Down in 1887 had memorized every
page of Gibbon's ''Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.'' At the beginning of
the 19th century, the splendidly named Gottfried Mind became famous all over
Europe for the amazing pictures he drew of cats.
The conventional wisdom
has long been that autistics' hyperliteral thought processes were completely
separate from the more contextual, nuanced, social way that most adults think, a
different mental function altogether. And so, by extension, the extraordinary
skills of autistic savants have been regarded as flukes, almost inhuman feats
that average minds could never achieve.
Snyder argues that all
those assumptions -- about everything from the way autistic savants behave down
to the basic brain functions that cause them to do so -- are mistaken. Autistic
thought isn't wholly incompatible with ordinary thought, he says; it's just a
variation on it, a more extreme example.
He first got the idea
after reading ''The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat,'' in which Oliver Sacks
explores the link between autism and a very specific kind of brain damage. If
neurological impairment is the cause of the autistic's disabilities, Snyder
wondered, could it be the cause of their geniuslike abilities, too? By shutting
down certain mental functions -- the capacity to think conceptually,
categorically, contextually -- did this impairment allow other mental functions
to flourish? Could brain damage, in short, actually make you brilliant?
In a 1999 paper called
''Is Integer Arithmetic Fundamental to Mental Processing? The Mind's Secret
Arithmetic,'' Snyder and D. John Mitchell considered the example of an autistic
infant, whose mind ''is not concept driven. . . . In our view such a mind can
tap into lower level details not readily available to introspection by normal
individuals.'' These children, they wrote, seem ''to be aware of information in
some raw or interim state prior to it being formed into the 'ultimate
picture.''' Most astonishing, they went on, ''the mental machinery for
performing lightning fast integer arithmetic calculations could be within us
all.''
And so Snyder
turned to TMS, in an attempt, as he says, ''to enhance the brain by shutting off
certain parts of it.''
''In a way, savants are
the great enigma of today's neurology,'' says Prof. Joy Hirsch, director of the
Functional M.R.I. Research Center at Columbia University. ''They exist in all
cultures and are a distinct type. Why? How? We don't know. Yet understanding the
savant will help provide insight into the whole neurophysiological underpinning
of human behavior. That's why Snyder's ideas are so exciting -- he's asking a
really fundamental question, which no one has yet answered.''
If Snyder's suspicions are
correct, in fact, and savants have not more brainpower than the rest of us, but
less, then it's even possible that everybody starts out life as a savant. Look,
for example, at the ease with which children master complex languages -- a
mysterious skill that seems to shut off automatically around the age of 12.
''What we're doing is counterintuitive,'' Snyder tells me. ''We're saying that
all these genius skills are easy, they're natural. Our brain does them
naturally. Like walking. Do you know how difficult walking is? It's much more
difficult than drawing!''
To prove his point, he
hooks me up to the Medtronic Mag Pro again and asks me to read the following
lines:
A bird in
the hand
is worth
two in the
the bush
''A bird in the hand
is worth two in the bush,'' I say.
''Again,'' Snyder says,
and smiles.
So once more:
''A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.'' He makes me repeat it five or
six times, slowing me down until he has me reading each word with aching
slowness.
Then he switches
on the machine. He is trying to suppress those parts of my brain responsible for
thinking contextually, for making connections. Without them, I will be able to
see things more as an autistic might.
After five minutes of
electric pulses, I read the card again. Only then do I see -- instantly -- that
the card contains an extra ''the.''
On my own, I had been
looking for patterns, trying to coax the words on the page into a coherent,
familiar whole. But ''on the machine,'' he says, ''you start seeing what's
actually there, not what you think is there.''
Snyder's theories are
bolstered by the documented cases in which sudden brain damage has produced
savant abilities almost overnight. He cites the case of Orlando Serrell, a
10-year-old street kid who was hit on the head and immediately began doing
calendrical calculations of baffling complexity. Snyder argues that we all have
Serrell's powers. ''We remember virtually everything, but we recall very
little,'' Snyder explains. ''Now isn't that strange? Everything is in there'' --
he taps the side of his head. ''Buried deep in all our brains are phenomenal
abilities, which we lose for some reason as we develop into 'normal' conceptual
creatures. But what if we could reawaken them?''
Not all of Snyder's
colleagues agree with his theories. Michael Howe, an eminent psychologist at the
University of Exeter in Britain who died last year, argued that savantism (and
genius itself) was largely a result of incessant practice and specialization.
''The main difference between experts and savants,'' he once told New Scientist
magazine, ''is that savants do things which most of us couldn't be bothered to
get good at.''
Robert
Hendren, executive director of the M.I.N.D. Institute at the University of
California at Davis, brought that concept down to my level: ''If you drew 20
cats one after the other, they'd probably get better anyway.'' Like most
neuroscientists, he doubts that an electromagnetic pulse can stimulate the brain
into creativity: ''I'm not sure I see how TMS can actually alter the way your
brain works. There's a chance that Snyder is right. But it's still very
experimental.''
Tomas
Paus, an associate professor of neuroscience at McGill University, who has done
extensive TMS research, is even more dubious. ''I don't believe TMS can ever
elicit complex behavior,'' he says.
But even skeptics like
Hendren and Paus concede that by intensifying the neural activity of one part of
the brain while slowing or shutting down others, TMS can have remarkable
effects. One of its most successful applications has been in the realm of
psychiatry, where it is now used to dispel the ''inner voices'' of
schizophrenics, or to combat clinical depression without the damaging side
effects of electroshock therapy. (NeuroNetics, an Atlanta company, is developing
a TMS machine designed for just this purpose, which will probably be released in
2006, pending F.D.A. approval.)
Meanwhile, researchers at
the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke found that TMS
applied to the prefrontal cortex enabled subjects to solve geometric puzzles
much more rapidly. Alvaro Pascual-Leone, associate professor of neurology at the
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston (who, through his work at the
Laboratory for Magnetic Brain Stimulation, has been one of the American
visionaries of TMS), has even suggested that TMS could be used to ''prep''
students' minds before lessons.
None of this has gone
unnoticed by canny entrepreneurs and visionary scientists. Last year, the Brain
Stimulation Laboratory at the Medical University of South Carolina received a $2
million government grant to develop a smaller TMS device that sleep-deprived
soldiers could wear to keep them alert. ''It's not 'Star Trek' at all,'' says
Ziad Nahas, the laboratory's medical director. ''We've done a lot of the science
on reversing cognitive deficiencies in people with insomnia and sleep
deficiencies. It works.'' If so, it could be a small leap to the day it boosts
soldiers' cognitive functioning under normal circumstances.
And from there, how long
before Americans are walking around with humming antidepression helmets and
math-enhancing ''hair dryers'' on their heads? Will commercially available TMS
machines be used to turn prosaic bank managers into amateur Rembrandts? Snyder
has even contemplated video games that harness specialized parts of the brain
that are otherwise inaccessible.
''Anything is possible,''
says Prof. Vilayanur Ramachandran, director of the Center for Brain and
Cognition at the University of California at San Diego and the noted author of
''Phantoms in the Brain.'' Snyder's theories have not been proved, he allows,
but they are brilliantly suggestive: ''We're at the same stage in brain research
that biology was in the 19th century. We know almost nothing about the mind.
Snyder's theories may sound like 'The X-Files,' but what he's saying is
completely plausible. Up to a point the brain is open, malleable and constantly
changing. We might well be able to make it run in new ways.'' Of those who
dismiss Snyder's theories out of hand, he shrugs: ''People are often blind to
new ideas. Especially scientists.''
Bruce L. Miller, the
A.W. and Mary Margaret Claussen distinguished professor in neurology at the
University of California at San Francisco, is intrigued by Snyder's experiments
and his attempts to understand the physiological basis of cognition. But he
points out that certain profound questions about artificially altered
intelligence have not yet been answered. ''Do we really want these abilities?''
he asks. ''Wouldn't it change my idea of myself if I could suddenly paint
amazing pictures?''
It
probably would change people's ideas of themselves, to say nothing of their
ideas of artistic talent. And though that prospect might discomfort Miller,
there are no doubt others whom it would thrill. But could anyone really guess,
in advance, how their lives might be affected by instant creativity, instant
intelligence, instant happiness? Or by their disappearance, just as instantly,
once the TMS is switched off?
As he walked me out of the
university -- a place so Gothic that it could be Oxford, but for the intensely
flowering jacaranda in one corner and the strange Southern Hemisphere birds
flitting about -- and toward the freeway back to downtown Sydney, Snyder for his
part radiated the most convincingly ebullient optimism. ''Remember that old saw
which says that we only use a small part our brain? Well, it might just be true.
Except that now we can actually prove it physically and experimentally. That has
to be significant. I mean, it has to be, doesn't it?''
We stopped for a moment by
the side of the roaring traffic and looked up at a haze in the sky. Snyder's
eyes contracted inquisitively as he pieced together the unfamiliar facts (brown
smoke, just outside Sydney) and eased them into a familiar narrative framework
(the forest fires that had been raging all week). It was an effortless little
bit of deductive, nonliteral thinking -- the sort of thing that human beings,
unaided by TMS, do a thousand times a day. Then, in an instant, he switched back
to our conversation and picked up his train of thought. ''More important than
that, we can change our own intelligence in unexpected ways. Why would we not
want to explore that?''
Posted:
Sun - June 22, 2003 at 04:46 PM