Science Fiction strikes
again. We may never memorize Wikipedia,
but then that is probably a mistake.
Skills on the other hand once learned are readily honed by simple
application. That is never a mistake.
Learning received knowledge runs
the real risk of knowing error which I find a serious flaw with those gifted
with eidetic memories. One becomes blind
to alternatives and dismisses options too soon.
Since the most pleasure in skills
training comes from deftly applying the skill and not from the many failures in
multiple training attempts, this protocol will become widely applied once
mastered. I personally think every youth
should go through a skill mastery program to begin with as a backup to further
intellectual training. This makes it all eminently practical.
Downloading' new skills into our brains like characters on The Matrix
set to become a reality, say scientists
Last updated at 6:05 PM on 9th December 2011
Learning a martial art, how to fly a plane or how to speak a new
language without even being awake is set to become a reality, say researchers.
Scientists at Boston University and ATR Computational Neuroscience
Laboratories in Kyoto, Japan, believe that in the future learning a new
skill might involve nothing more than sitting in front of a computer screen and
waiting for it to ‘upload’.
They have been studying how a functional magnetic resonance machine
(FMRI) can ‘induce’ knowledge in someone through their visual cortex by sending
signals that change their brain activity pattern.
IF FMRI DOESN'T WORK, THERE'S ALWAYS THE MEMORY PILL
Researchers at Baylor
College of Medicine found
recently that if a molecule called PKR is inhibited, it leads to brain
activity that leads to the formation of long-term memories in the adult
brain.
What's more, this molecule can be artificially blocked, leading to
the possibility of a 'memory-enhancing drug'.
Dr Mauro Costa-Mattioli, from Baylor, said: 'It is indeed quite amazing
that we can also enhance both memory and brain activity with a drug that specifically
targets PKR.
'Our identity and uniqueness is made up of our memories. This molecule
could hold the key to how we can keep our memories longer, but also how we
create new ones.'
This process is called Decoded Neurofeedback, or ‘DecNef’.
More...
No medication is needed and the subject doesn’t even have to be
awake, he or she simply has their brain activity changed to a ‘target’ pattern,
which could be anything from that of a star footballer to a master chess
player.
Lead author Takeo Watanabe from the University of Boston
said: ‘Adult early visual areas are sufficiently plastic to cause visual
perceptual learning.’
The researchers knew their technique had worked because the FMRI
volunteers all underwent visual skill tests and had their results compared with
those of people not given the treatment - and the former had far better
scores.
In the The Matrix trilogy the characters learn new skills by having a
computer physically plugged into their brains and new skills directly uploaded.
The day when we are able to do something similar is not too far away,
say the researchers.
The results of their study were published in Science.
Fighting talk: Scientists believe we will one day be able to 'download'
new abilities, such as a martial art
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