Howard Eaton’s Blog

October 3, 2008

Focus of Blog

This blog focuses on topics related to neuroplasticity, brain training, education, learning disabilities and attention disorders.  A primary interest for this blog will be on topics related to neuroplasticity and learning difficulties in children and adults.  If you are interested in being informed on these issues please take part in this blogs activity.  I look forward to adding articles, opinions, research to this blog and responding to questions or insights from readers.

April 23, 2009

Learning How To Read A Clock Face

There are times in our lives that we wish we could go back in history and apologize for our mistakes either as a parent or as a teacher.   The Arrowsmith Program, created by Barbara Young, often makes me reflect on the students I have worked with in the past and how much they would have benefited from her program.  Here is just one example of a brain exercise created by Ms. Young many years ago and how it relates to new findings from neuroscience.

For the last 30 years Ms. Young has used the Clocks brain exercise to develop the reasoning abilities of children with learning disabilities.  This brain exercise improves various achievement abilities (reading comprehension and math problem solving) and overall school success.   I have observed reasoning and intelligence measures improve significantly after the Clocks exercise has been completed within the Arrowsmith Program.  Updated psycho-educational assessments show sharp improvements in fluid reasoning and perceptual reasoning abilities of children who have completed the Clocks exercise.  Research in neuroscience, as described below, indirectly highlights some of the reasons why this might be happening.

In 1992, I was a first year Special Education teacher in the small town of Truro, Massachusetts.  I recall telling parents at Individual Educational Program meetings not to worry if their child could not read a clock face.  These parents would come visit my classroom and say, “Sarah can’t tell time and she is in Grade 4.  I am really worried about this.  She has been trying to learn to tell time for 4 years and can’t get it.”  I often said, “don’t worry about it – there are digital watches now.”

I now realize that reading a clock face is an important indicator of a child’s ability to understand multiple concepts and to improve reasoning abilities.  A concept is a general idea derived or inferred from specific instances or occurrences.   The clock face is quite abstract and requires a number of concepts to be understood (such as a 24 hour day, 60 minutes in an hour, 60 seconds in a minute and the knowledge that the hands of a clock face signify a placement in time that is constantly moving forward).  Of course, there are other concepts, such as before and after, that need to be understood when reading a clock.  What is critical for the child is that all of these concepts need to converge into the ability to look at a clock and tell the time.  If the child is struggling to analyze the relationships of all these concepts, it often means they will also struggle with reading comprehension and math problem solving, as these achievement abilities also require the ability to analyze and synthesize a number of concepts simultaneously.

Back in 1992, I was telling parents that these concepts were not important to learn, as their child could simply wear a digital wrist watch; in other words, a child could bypass this problem by using technology or an accommodation (i.e. someone else could tell them the time).  I was also not giving the child the chance to build brain capacities to understand multiple concepts and improving general reasoning ability.  I should have been trying to teach the child how to tell time on a clock face with significant repetition and review.

Current research in neuroscience is indirectly linking the ability to draw and/or imagine clock faces to the location in the brain responsible for this activity.  It is even more fascinating that this is the same region of the brain that differentiates average reasoners from superior reasoners.

In Germany, at the Departments of Neurology and Neuroradiology at the Klinikum der Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universitat, Frankfurt, the areas of the brain used to imagine clocks were identified by researchers. Luigi Trojano and his colleagues were interested in finding out which area of the brain was involved in spatial analysis when no visual stimulus was present. Their findings were published in Cerebral Cortex (May 2000), which is published by Oxford University Press. These researchers studied seven right-handed post-graduate students ages 23 to 32. The subjects were asked to imagine two analogue clock faces based on times presented to them verbally by the examiner. As they were doing this visual imaging, their brains were being scanned. These researchers noted: “The most striking results of our two experiments demonstrated that cortical activation (as measured by an increase of the fMRI BOLD signal) during the mental clock test was the most prominent in the posterior parietal lobes of both hemispheres.” I will get back to why the activation of the posterial parietal cortex is so important in relationship to the Clocks exercise used with the Arrowsmith Program.

In Japan, at the Department of Neurology and Department of Radiology, Rakuwakai-Otowa Hospital in Kyoto, the areas of the brain that are most activated during the drawings of clocks were identified. Dr. Tadashi Ino and his colleagues studied 18 right-handed volunteers as they drew the hands of a clock while undergoing fMRI. Their findings were published in the journal Neuroscience Research in January of 2003. They discovered that the brain utilized numerous neurological pathways for drawing a clock; however, the most strongly activated areas during clock drawing were the posterial parietal cortex and the dorsal premotor area. The evidence from fMRIs points to the posterial parietal cortex as being a primary cortical location for tasks involved in clocks – whether drawing or imagining.

So, what is the big deal? Here is the connection between using clocks for a brain exercise and the development of reasoning. In 2005, the journal Neuroimage published a research article on intelligence and which specific neural pathways may be involved in reasoning. The research had been conducted in South Korea at the Seoul National University. Various departments were involved, including the School of Biological Sciences, Department of Biology Education. Additionally, the Korea Institute of Brain Science and Department of Psychiatry at the Catholic University in Seoul were also involved. Finally, Yale University and the Department of Psychology were also a part of the study. The lead researcher was Dr. Kun Ho Lee from the School of Biological Sciences at the Seoul National University.

Dr. Lee noted in his study that the parietal, and later prefrontal, cortices have been noted by other researchers as playing a role in fluid reasoning, the control of attention, and working memory. Dr. Lee and his colleagues wanted to discover the brain location for fluid reasoning of intellectually gifted adolescent students. Could they discover the brain region or pathway that was responsible for general intelligence? Dr. Lee studied 36 gifted adolescents from Busan, Korea. Busan is the largest port city in South Korea and is located at the southereastern most tip of the country. It has a population of over 3.6 million and is known as the capital of baseball in South Korea. The 36 gifted adolescent students were from the National Academy of Gifted Adolescents. The students were given the Weschler Adult Intelligence Scale – Revised (Korean version) and the Raven’s Advanced Progressive Matrices (RAPM), which is a standard test for general fluid intelligence. The control group were students from a local high school.

The experimental and control groups were then given fMRI tasks related to reasoning. The students would be placed in the fMRI machine and asked to perform these specific tasks that had increasing levels of reasoning complexity. As they were performing these tasks, the fMRI showed their brain activity, which was being recorded by the researchers. What was their main finding? Dr. Lee and his colleagues wrote: “The main finding of the current study emphasized the role of the posterial parietal region (specifically, bilateral SPL and right IPS (BA 7/40) among the entire network components of g [general intelligence].” The students with the higher levels of intelligence showed greater activation of the posterial parietal regions as the complexity of the reasoning tasks increased. They continued, restating, “In addition, our results demonstrated that the posterior parietal regions including bilateral SPL and right IPS could be the neural correlates for superior general intelligence. These findings would be the early step toward the development of biological measures of g [general intelligence] which leads to new perspectives for behaviour interventions improving general cognitive ability”.

It is important to note that the prefrontal lobes of these students were also activated. There is a specific frontal-parietal relationship, due to the fact that the brain has to think, which is a prefrontal or executive function task. Interestingly, as students become more adept at the various levels of reasoning, the prefrontal activity decreased.

This research, and the findings from the implementation of the Arrowsmith Program at the Eaton Arrowsmith School, highlight how important it is not to ignore the importance of teaching children how to read a clock face. The ability to read a clock face is one of the first indicators of a child’s reasoning capacities and can predict whether long-term educational frustrations might be developing. We have also learned that reasoning can improve dramatically in children with learning disabilities. Children’s reasoning abilities are not fixed, they can change.

Trojan, L., Grossi, Dario., Linden, E.J., Formisano, E., Hacker, H., Zanella, E.F., Goebel, R., Di Salle, D., 2000. Matching Two Imagined Clocks: the Functional Anatomy of Spatial Analysis in the Absence of Visual Stimulation. Cerebral Cortex. 10, 473-481.

Ino, T., Asada, T., Ito, J., Kimura, T., Fukuyama, H., 2002. Parieto-frontal networks for clock drawing revealed with fMRI. Neuroscience Research. 45, 71-77.

Lee, K.H., Choi, Y.Y., Gray, J.R., Cho, S.H., Chae, J., Lee, S., Kim, K., 2005. Neural correlates of superior intelligence: Stronger recruitment of posterior parietal cortex. Neuroimage 29: 578-586.

January 7, 2009

Neuroplasticity and Critical Thinking

The July 2008 Kaohsuing Journal of Medical Sciences published a series of articles on neuroplasticity and critical thinking.  The lead article, entitled Neuroplasticiy and Critical Thinking outlines the articles that were peer-reviewed.  See link and download:

http://ajws.elsevier.com/ajws3/a260607.asp?journal_issn=1607-551X&volume=24&issue=7&year=2008&month=7

I found it interesting to note that the Arrowsmith Program can build reasoning ability.  This can take from 6 months to 3 years of intervention depending on the severity of the reasoning or critical thinking issue.  Students who are targeted to improve reasoning are asked to do cognitive exercises that build this area of brain functioning.  The exercises ask them to look at the “big picture” first and then come up with conclusions or summaries about this information – both through language analysis and visual-perceptual reasoning.  This builds the students reasoning or conceptual thinking abilities over time.  As well, significant repetition is required to improve a cognitive weakness in this area of neurological functioning.  Read these articles for insight into this area of neuroplasticity.

The point that IQ is not fixed as reasoning and other cognitive functions can be significantly improved is quite evident in this ongoing scientific investigation into the plastic brain.

January 6, 2009

Information on Attention and Meditation

Filed under: ADHD, Meditation, articles, links — howardeaton @ 9:08 pm

There is more and more discussion and research on the benefits on meditation on improving attention.  I thought I would post a few of these links so you can take a look at what is being said in the public domain.

http://www.newsweek.com/id/139206

http://www.livescience.com/health/070507_mental_training.html

http://bipolarblast.wordpress.com/2008/06/19/meditation-and-neuroplasticity/

http://www.mindsite.com/blog/tag/Neuroplasticity/1

http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S155083070500306X

Enjoy some of these articles and blogs.

Back from Writing Book

I am looking forward to the 2009 postings and comments.

I have been busy the last two months working on a book on the Arrowsmith Program and Eaton Arrowsmith School called, “Brain School: Children Who Changed Their Lives Through Educational Neuroplasticity“.  The book will take a look at students who have completed the Arrowsmith Program and have been integrated into public and private schools.  There will be a variety of learning disability and attention disorder subtypes analyzed and remediation methods discussed.  The book will use case studies to provide an interesting insight into cognitive remediation of learning differences.  Let me know if you would like to be on a list of individuals interested in purchasing this book when it comes out in December 2009.

I hope all of you have a wonderful 2009.  I hope to get more information out this year on neuroplasticity, learning disabilities and attention disorders.

All the best,

Howard

October 6, 2008

Scientific American Podcast Interview on Neuroplasticity

Filed under: Neuroplasticity, Podcasts — howardeaton @ 9:22 pm
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Scientific American correspondent Christie Nicholson interviews journalist Sharon Begley about the changing landscape of brain science.

http://www.sciam.com/podcast/episode.cfm?id=465B1677-E7F2-99DF-36E1378B1640D492

Podcast: Neuroplasticity of the Brain – Interview with Sharon Begley

Filed under: Neuroplasticity, Podcasts — howardeaton @ 8:40 pm
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This is an interesting interview with Sharon Begley who is the author of Train Your Mind, Change Your Brain.  Barbara Lewis, host of Sound Medicine conducts the interview.

http://soundmedicine.iu.edu/segment.php4?seg=1146

October 5, 2008

Podcast: Power of Plasticity – Interview with Dr. Jeffrey Schwartz and Dr. Norman Doidge

Filed under: Neuroplasticity, Podcasts — howardeaton @ 4:39 pm
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This is an in-depth interview on neuroplasticity with Dr. Jeffrey Schwartz and Dr. Norman Doidge.  See link below:

http://www.abc.net.au/rn/allinthemind/stories/2008/2359328.htm

October 4, 2008

Broadcast with Dr. Erik Kandel on Memory

Filed under: Broadcast, Neuroplasticity — howardeaton @ 11:23 pm
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This interview with Dr. Erik Kandel focuses on memory, and how memories are formed by the increase in the strength of synapses between neurons and consequential alteration of genes. Dr. Kandel is a leading figure in research on memory and neuroplasticity.  See link below:

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6962604448570511609&q=tvshow%3ACharlie_Rose&pl=true

Podcast Interview with Dr. Norman Doidge

Filed under: Podcasts — howardeaton @ 10:57 pm
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Dr. Doidge is the author of The Brain That Changes Itself.  The book focuses on the remarkable findings of neuroplasticity, and includes a chapter on Barbara Young who created a cognitive remediation program for children with learning disabilities.  Dr. Ginger Campbell interviews Dr. Doidge in this Podcast.  See link.

http://docartemis.com/brainsciencepodcast/2007/12/14/brain-science-podcast-26-author-norman-doidge-md-discusses-neuroplasticity/

Podcast on Neuroplasticity

Filed under: Neuroplasticity, Podcasts, Uncategorized — howardeaton @ 10:48 pm
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Dr. Ginger Campbell does an excellent job reviewing studies conducted on neuroplasticity.  Please see the following link and download Podcast #10 on Neuroplasticity.

http://www.podcastdirectory.com/podshows/1429167

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