ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Amishi Jha - Neuroscientist
As a neuroscientist specializing in the brain mechanisms of attention, Amishi Jha researches mindfulness techniques to optimize focus, even under high stress.

Why you should listen

Neuroscientist Amishi Jha studies how to keep the brain’s attention systems in peak shape over high-pressure intervals. In her laboratory at the University of Miami, she uses functional MRI, electrophysiological recordings and behavioral analysis techniques to understand why our attention sometimes fails us, and if it can be trained for greater focus and less distractibility.

In 2008, Jha launched the first-ever study to offer mindfulness training tools to active duty military service members as they prepared for deployment. What she has discovered over the past 10 years of research on this topic is that without intervention, soldiers’ attention and working memory are compromised, and their attentional lapses increase. She has found similar patterns in students and athletes, too. The good news is that engaging in mindfulness training to cultivate greater present moment awareness protects against these effects. Her research is continuing to explore how attention can be trained for optimal performance and well-being. In her TED Talk, Jha unpacks how attention becomes vulnerable under stress and the mechanisms that allow it to be strengthened with mindfulness training.

More profile about the speaker
Amishi Jha | Speaker | TED.com
TEDxCoconutGrove

Amishi Jha: How to tame your wandering mind

Filmed:
4,149,461 views

Amishi Jha studies how we pay attention: the process by which our brain decides what's important out of the constant stream of information it receives. Both external distractions (like stress) and internal ones (like mind-wandering) diminish our attention's power, Jha says -- but some simple techniques can boost it. "Pay attention to your attention," Jha says.
- Neuroscientist
As a neuroscientist specializing in the brain mechanisms of attention, Amishi Jha researches mindfulness techniques to optimize focus, even under high stress. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:14
Consider the following statement:
0
2372
2231
00:16
human beings only use 10 percent
of their brain capacity.
1
4627
3867
00:21
Well, as a neuroscientist, I can tell you
2
9230
2299
00:23
that while Morgan Freeman
delivered this line
3
11553
2103
00:25
with the gravitas
that makes him a great actor,
4
13680
2976
00:28
this statement is entirely false.
5
16680
2277
00:30
(Laughter)
6
18981
1080
00:32
The truth is, human beings use 100 percent
of their brain capacity.
7
20085
4685
00:37
The brain is a highly efficient,
energy-demanding organ
8
25348
3555
00:40
that gets fully utilized
9
28927
2222
00:43
and even though it is
at full capacity being used,
10
31173
4491
00:47
it suffers from a problem
of information overload.
11
35688
2484
00:50
There's far too much in the environment
than it can fully process.
12
38196
3565
00:53
So to solve this problem of overload,
13
41785
3088
00:56
evolution devised a solution,
14
44897
1960
00:58
which is the brain's attention system.
15
46881
1983
01:01
Attention allows us
16
49332
2086
01:03
to notice, select and direct
the brain's computational resources
17
51442
4516
01:07
to a subset of all that's available.
18
55982
2400
01:10
We can think of attention
as the leader of the brain.
19
58799
2603
01:13
Wherever attention goes,
the rest of the brain follows.
20
61871
3039
01:16
In some sense, it's your brain's boss.
21
64934
2534
01:19
And over the last 15 years,
22
67879
1600
01:21
I've been studying
the human brain's attention system.
23
69503
2539
01:24
In all of our studies,
I've been very interested in one question.
24
72066
3368
01:28
If it is indeed the case
that our attention is the brain's boss,
25
76037
4056
01:32
is it a good boss?
26
80117
1293
01:33
Does it actually guide us well?
27
81434
2067
01:36
And to dig in on this big question,
I wanted to know three things.
28
84244
3627
01:39
First, how does attention
control our perception?
29
87895
3967
01:44
Second, why does it fail us,
30
92688
1945
01:46
often leaving us feeling
foggy and distracted?
31
94657
3260
01:50
And third, can we do anything
about this fogginess,
32
98760
2992
01:53
can we train our brain
to pay better attention?
33
101776
3178
01:57
To have more strong and stable attention
in the work that we do in our lives.
34
105312
5234
02:03
So I wanted to give you a brief glimpse
35
111593
3675
02:07
into how we're going to look at this.
36
115292
1817
02:09
A very poignant example
37
117133
1978
02:11
of how our attention
ends up getting utilized.
38
119135
2958
02:15
And I want to do it using the example
of somebody that I know quite well.
39
123410
4541
02:20
He ends up being part of a very large
group of people that we work with,
40
128919
3564
02:24
for whom attention
is a matter of life and death.
41
132507
2538
02:27
Think of medical professionals
42
135571
2301
02:29
or firefighters
43
137896
1496
02:31
or soldiers or marines.
44
139416
2421
02:34
This is the story of a marine captain,
Captain Jeff Davis.
45
142173
3449
02:38
And the scene that I'm going to share
with you, as you can see,
46
146347
2968
02:41
is not about his time in the battlefield.
47
149339
2057
02:43
He was actually on a bridge, in Florida.
48
151744
2484
02:46
But instead of looking
at the scenery around him,
49
154871
2388
02:49
seeing the beautiful vistas
50
157283
1596
02:50
and noticing the cool ocean breezes,
51
158903
2563
02:53
he was driving fast and contemplating
driving off that bridge.
52
161490
3920
02:58
And he would later tell me that it took
all of everything he had not to do so.
53
166410
4807
03:03
You see, he'd just returned from Iraq.
54
171685
1857
03:06
And while his body was on that bridge,
55
174082
2039
03:08
his mind, his attention,
was thousands of miles away.
56
176145
3238
03:11
He was gripped with suffering.
57
179407
1643
03:13
His mind was worried and preoccupied
58
181736
2706
03:16
and had stressful memories
and, really, dread for his future.
59
184466
3459
03:20
And I'm really glad
that he didn't take his life.
60
188862
3056
03:25
Because he, as a leader,
knew that he wasn't the only one
61
193069
2961
03:28
that was probably suffering;
62
196054
1404
03:29
many of his fellow marines
probably were, too.
63
197482
2174
03:31
And in the year 2008, he partnered with me
in the first-of-its-kind project
64
199680
5247
03:36
that actually allowed us to test and offer
something called mindfulness training
65
204951
4594
03:41
to active-duty military personnel.
66
209569
1992
03:44
But before I tell you about
what mindfulness training is,
67
212030
3216
03:47
or the results of that study,
68
215270
1713
03:49
I think it's important to understand
how attention works in the brain.
69
217007
3641
03:54
So what we do in the laboratory
70
222395
1825
03:56
is that many of our studies of attention
involve brain-wave recordings.
71
224244
4309
04:00
In these brain wave recordings,
people wear funny-looking caps
72
228950
3246
04:04
that are sort of like swimming caps,
that have electrodes embedded in them.
73
232220
3746
04:07
These electrodes pick up
the ongoing brain electrical activity.
74
235990
3611
04:12
And they do it with millisecond
temporal precision.
75
240117
2706
04:15
So we can see these small yet detectable
voltage fluctuations over time.
76
243268
4674
04:20
And doing this, we can very precisely
plot the timing of the brain's activity.
77
248929
5396
04:26
About 170 milliseconds
78
254969
2757
04:29
after we show our research participants
a face on the screen,
79
257750
3510
04:33
we see a very reliable,
detectable brain signature.
80
261284
3722
04:37
It happens right at the back of the scalp,
81
265030
2388
04:39
above the regions of the brain
that are involved in face processing.
82
267442
3206
04:43
Now, this happens so reliably
and so on cue,
83
271260
4095
04:47
as the brain's face detector,
84
275379
1959
04:49
that we've even given
this brain-wave component a name.
85
277362
2581
04:51
We call it the N170 component.
86
279967
2048
04:54
And we use this component
in many of our studies.
87
282427
2784
04:57
It allows us to see the impact
that attention may have on our perception.
88
285235
5044
05:03
I'm going to give you a sense
of the kind of experiments
89
291022
2707
05:05
that we actually do in the lab.
90
293753
1499
05:07
We would show participants
images like this one.
91
295276
2595
05:09
You should see a face and a scene
overlaid on each other.
92
297895
3658
05:14
And what we do is we ask our participants
93
302037
2079
05:16
as they're viewing a series
of these types of overlaid images,
94
304140
3723
05:19
to do something with their attention.
95
307887
1839
05:22
On some trials, we'll ask them
to pay attention to the face.
96
310212
2915
05:25
And to make sure they're doing that,
97
313759
1819
05:27
we ask them to tell us,
by pressing a button,
98
315602
2578
05:30
if the face appeared to be male or female.
99
318204
2312
05:33
On other trials,
100
321046
1222
05:34
we ask them to tell what the scene was --
was it indoor or outdoor?
101
322292
3798
05:38
And in this way,
we can manipulate attention
102
326704
2064
05:40
and confirm that the participants
were actually doing what we said.
103
328792
3182
05:45
Our hypotheses about attention
were as follows:
104
333371
2581
05:49
if attention is indeed doing its job
and affecting perception,
105
337014
4357
05:53
maybe it works like an amplifier.
106
341395
2200
05:56
And what I mean by this
107
344252
1175
05:57
is that when we direct
attention to the face,
108
345451
2199
05:59
it becomes clearer and more salient,
109
347674
2628
06:02
it's easier to see.
110
350326
1620
06:03
But when we direct it to the scene,
the face becomes barely perceptible
111
351970
3953
06:07
as we process the scene information.
112
355947
2031
06:10
So what we wanted to do
113
358823
1214
06:12
is look at this brain-wave component
of face detection, the N170,
114
360061
4094
06:16
and see if it changed at all
115
364179
2026
06:18
as a function of where our participants
were paying attention --
116
366229
3008
06:21
to the scene or the face.
117
369261
1439
06:23
And here's what we found.
118
371323
1246
06:24
We found that when they paid
attention to the face,
119
372974
2437
06:27
the N170 was larger.
120
375435
1519
06:29
And when they paid attention to the scene,
as you can see in red, it was smaller.
121
377276
3841
06:33
And that gap you see
between the blue and red lines
122
381141
2631
06:35
is pretty powerful.
123
383796
1240
06:37
What it tells us is that attention,
124
385060
1946
06:39
which is really the only
thing that changed,
125
387030
2084
06:41
since the images they viewed
were identical in both cases --
126
389138
2810
06:43
attention changes perception.
127
391972
1787
06:45
And it does so very fast.
128
393783
1944
06:47
Within 170 milliseconds
of actually seeing a face.
129
395751
3143
06:51
In our follow-up studies,
we wanted to see what would happen,
130
399911
2889
06:54
how could we perturb
or diminish this effect.
131
402824
2380
06:57
And our hunch was that if you put people
in a very stressful environment,
132
405775
4548
07:02
if you distract them with disturbing,
negative images,
133
410347
2889
07:05
images of suffering and violence --
134
413260
2595
07:07
sort of like what you might see
on the news, unfortunately --
135
415879
2922
07:10
that doing this might
actually affect their attention.
136
418825
2558
07:13
And that's indeed what we found.
137
421407
1622
07:15
If we present stressful images
while they're doing this experiment,
138
423053
3159
07:18
this gap of attention shrinks,
its power diminishes.
139
426236
3651
07:22
So in some of our other studies,
140
430506
2334
07:24
we wanted to see, OK, great --
141
432864
1509
07:26
not great, actually, bad news
that stress does this to the brain --
142
434397
3143
07:29
but if it is the case that stress
has this powerful influence on attention
143
437564
4005
07:33
through external distraction,
144
441593
1873
07:35
what if we don't need
external distraction,
145
443490
2008
07:37
what if we distract ourselves?
146
445522
1889
07:39
And to do this,
147
447435
1309
07:40
we had to basically come up
with an experiment
148
448768
2159
07:42
in which we could have people
generate their own mind-wandering.
149
450951
3523
07:46
This is having off-task thoughts
150
454498
1825
07:48
while we're engaged
in an ongoing task of some sort.
151
456347
3534
07:52
And the trick to mind-wandering
is that essentially, you bore people.
152
460657
3914
07:56
So hopefully there's not a lot
of mind-wandering happening right now.
153
464879
3492
08:00
When we bore people,
154
468395
1317
08:01
people happily generate all kinds
of internal content to occupy themselves.
155
469736
4634
08:06
So we devised what might be considered
156
474394
1826
08:08
one of the world's
most boring experiments.
157
476244
2000
08:10
All the participants saw
were a series of faces on the screen,
158
478268
3047
08:13
one after another.
159
481339
1198
08:14
They pressed the button
every time they saw the face.
160
482561
2493
08:17
That was pretty much it.
161
485078
1151
08:18
Well, one trick was that sometimes,
the face would be upside down,
162
486253
3350
08:21
and it would happen very infrequently.
163
489627
1842
08:23
On those trials they were told
just to withhold the response.
164
491493
2896
08:26
Pretty soon, we could tell that
they were successfully mind-wandering,
165
494752
3286
08:30
because they pressed the button
when that face was upside down.
166
498062
2969
08:33
Even though it's quite plain to see
that it was upside down.
167
501055
2858
08:35
So we wanted to know what happens
when people have mind-wandering.
168
503937
3169
08:39
And what we found was that,
169
507130
2054
08:41
very similar to external stress
170
509208
1842
08:43
and external distraction
in the environment,
171
511074
2451
08:45
internal distraction,
our own mind wandering,
172
513549
2988
08:48
also shrinks the gap of attention.
173
516561
2372
08:50
It diminishes attention's power.
174
518957
2135
08:54
So what do all of these studies tell us?
175
522149
2245
08:56
They tell us that attention
is very powerful
176
524895
2612
08:59
in terms of affecting our perception.
177
527531
2101
09:02
Even though it's so powerful,
it's also fragile and vulnerable.
178
530323
3262
09:06
And things like stress
and mind-wandering diminish its power.
179
534038
3722
09:10
But that's all in the context of these
very controlled laboratory settings.
180
538243
3545
09:13
What about in the real world?
181
541812
1421
09:15
What about in our actual day-to-day life?
182
543257
2049
09:17
What about now?
183
545330
1150
09:18
Where is your attention right now?
184
546855
1944
09:21
To kind of bring it back,
185
549196
1207
09:22
I'd like to make a prediction
about your attention
186
550427
2356
09:24
for the remainder of my talk.
187
552807
1445
09:26
Are you up for it?
188
554276
1468
09:27
Here's the prediction.
189
555768
1682
09:29
You will be unaware of what I'm saying
for four out of the next eight minutes.
190
557474
4229
09:33
(Laughter)
191
561727
1001
09:34
It's a challenge,
so pay attention, please.
192
562752
2698
09:37
Now, why am I saying this?
193
565474
2285
09:40
I'm surely going to assume
that you're going to remain seated
194
568577
3698
09:44
and, you know, graciously keep
your eyes on me as I speak.
195
572299
2874
09:47
But a growing body of literature suggests
that we mind-wander,
196
575665
4515
09:52
we take our mind away
from the task at hand,
197
580204
2302
09:54
about 50 percent of our waking moments.
198
582530
2600
09:57
These might be small,
little trips that we take away,
199
585625
2762
10:00
private thoughts that we have.
200
588411
1523
10:02
And when this mind-wandering happens,
201
590649
2619
10:05
it can be problematic.
202
593292
1174
10:06
Now I don't think there will be
any dire consequences
203
594490
2497
10:09
with you all sitting here today,
204
597011
1565
10:10
but imagine a military leader missing
four minutes of a military briefing,
205
598600
3540
10:14
or a judge missing
four minutes of testimony.
206
602164
4306
10:18
Or a surgeon or firefighter
missing any time.
207
606494
2160
10:20
The consequences
in those cases could be dire.
208
608678
2539
10:24
So we might ask why do we do this?
209
612030
1904
10:25
Why do we mind-wander so much?
210
613958
1709
10:27
Well, part of the answer is that our mind
is an exquisite time-traveling master.
211
615691
5827
10:34
It can actually time travel very easily.
212
622079
1966
10:36
If we think of the mind as the metaphor
of the music player, we see this.
213
624069
3484
10:39
We can rewind the mind to the past
214
627577
1755
10:41
to reflect on events
that have already happened, right?
215
629356
2692
10:44
Or we can go and fast-future, to plan
for the next thing that we want to do.
216
632688
3780
10:49
And we land in this mental
time-travel mode of the past or the future
217
637021
4540
10:53
very frequently.
218
641585
1238
10:54
And we land there often
without our awareness,
219
642847
2365
10:57
most times without our awareness,
220
645236
1635
10:58
even if we want to be paying attention.
221
646895
1865
11:00
Think of just the last time
you were trying to read a book,
222
648784
2769
11:03
got to the bottom of the page
with no idea what the words were saying.
223
651577
3316
11:06
This happens to us.
224
654917
1267
11:08
And when this happens, when we mind-wander
without an awareness that we're doing it,
225
656782
5897
11:14
there are consequences.
226
662703
1785
11:16
We make errors.
227
664512
1150
11:18
We miss critical information, sometimes.
228
666135
2333
11:20
And we have difficulty making decisions.
229
668912
2394
11:24
What's worse is when we experience stress.
230
672492
3063
11:28
When we're in a moment of overwhelm.
231
676061
2421
11:30
We don't just reflect
on the past when we rewind,
232
678506
3270
11:33
we end up being in the past
ruminating, reliving or regretting
233
681800
4594
11:38
events that have already happened.
234
686418
1659
11:40
Or under stress, we fast-forward the mind.
235
688506
2721
11:43
Not just to productively plan.
236
691251
2246
11:45
But we end up catastrophizing or worrying
237
693521
2061
11:47
about events that haven't happened yet
238
695606
1995
11:49
and frankly may never happen.
239
697625
1658
11:51
So at this point, you might be
thinking to yourself, OK,
240
699307
3611
11:54
mind-wandering's happening a lot.
241
702942
2254
11:57
Often, it happens without our awareness.
242
705220
2475
11:59
And under stress, it's even worse --
243
707719
2221
12:01
we mind-wander more powerfully
and more often.
244
709964
2446
12:04
Is there anything
we can possibly do about this?
245
712434
2286
12:07
And I'm happy to say the answer is yes.
246
715306
2406
12:10
From our work, we're learning
247
718292
1444
12:11
that the opposite of a stressed
and wandering mind is a mindful one.
248
719760
4906
12:17
Mindfulness has to do
with paying attention
249
725387
2650
12:20
to our present-moment experience
with awareness.
250
728061
3191
12:23
And without any kind of emotional
reactivity of what's happening.
251
731553
3566
12:27
It's about keeping
that button right on play
252
735990
2099
12:30
to experience the moment-to-moment
unfolding of our lives.
253
738113
3031
12:33
And mindfulness is not just a concept.
254
741863
2769
12:36
It's more like practice,
255
744656
2080
12:38
you have to embody this mindful
mode of being to have any benefits.
256
746760
4190
12:42
And a lot of the work that we're doing,
we're offering people programs
257
750974
3571
12:46
that give our participants
a suite of exercises
258
754569
3207
12:49
that they should do daily
259
757800
1628
12:51
in order to cultivate more moments
of mindfulness in their life.
260
759452
3504
12:55
And for many of the groups
that we work with, high-stress groups,
261
763895
3119
12:59
like I said -- soldiers,
medical professionals --
262
767038
4198
13:03
for them, as we know,
mind-wandering can be really dire.
263
771260
4921
13:08
So we want to make sure
we offer them very accessible,
264
776895
3341
13:12
low time constraints
to optimize the training,
265
780260
2936
13:15
so they can benefit from it.
266
783220
1555
13:17
And when we do this, what we can do
is track to see what happens,
267
785434
3659
13:21
not just in their regular lives
268
789117
1618
13:22
but in the most demanding
circumstances that they may have.
269
790759
3708
13:26
Why do we want to do this?
270
794491
1254
13:27
Well, we want to, for example, give it
to students right around finals season.
271
795769
3682
13:31
Or we want to give the training
to accountants during tax season.
272
799475
3491
13:34
Or soldiers and marines
while they're deploying.
273
802990
2309
13:37
Why is that?
274
805631
1175
13:38
Because those are the moments
275
806830
1450
13:40
in which their attention
is most likely to be vulnerable,
276
808304
2683
13:43
because of stress and mind-wandering.
277
811011
2677
13:45
And those are also the moments
278
813712
1463
13:47
in which we want their attention
to be in peak shape
279
815199
2450
13:49
so they can perform well.
280
817673
1649
13:51
So what we do in our research
281
819346
1612
13:52
is we have them take
a series of attention tests.
282
820982
2607
13:55
We track their attention at the beginning
of some kind of high-stress interval,
283
823613
3727
13:59
and then two months later,
we track them again,
284
827364
2334
14:01
and we want to see
if there's a difference.
285
829722
2008
14:03
Is there any benefit of offering them
mindfulness training?
286
831754
2849
14:06
Can we protect against
the lapses in attention
287
834627
2157
14:08
that might arise over high stress?
288
836808
2266
14:12
So here's what we find.
289
840244
1524
14:13
Over a high-stress interval,
290
841792
1413
14:15
unfortunately, the reality is
if we don't do anything at all,
291
843229
2878
14:18
attention declines,
292
846131
1255
14:19
people are worse at the end
of this high-stress interval than before.
293
847410
3548
14:22
But if we offer mindfulness training,
we can protect against this.
294
850982
4055
14:27
They stay stable, even though
just like the other groups,
295
855061
3041
14:30
they were experiencing high stress.
296
858126
1676
14:32
And perhaps even more impressive
297
860473
1817
14:34
is that if people
take our training programs
298
862314
2087
14:36
over, let's say, eight weeks,
299
864425
1652
14:38
and they fully commit
to doing the daily mindfulness exercises
300
866101
3758
14:41
that allow them to learn
how to be in the present moment,
301
869883
4375
14:46
well, they actually get better over time,
even though they're in high stress.
302
874282
4032
14:50
And this last point
is actually important to realize,
303
878338
2477
14:52
because of what it suggests to us
304
880839
1689
14:54
is that mindfulness exercises
are very much like physical exercise:
305
882552
4311
14:58
if you don't do it, you don't benefit.
306
886887
2214
15:01
But if you do engage
in mindfulness practice,
307
889125
2484
15:03
the more you do, the more you benefit.
308
891633
2310
15:07
And I want to just bring it back
to Captain Jeff Davis.
309
895176
4150
15:11
As I mentioned to you at the beginning,
310
899350
2009
15:13
his marines were involved
in the very first project
311
901383
2512
15:15
that we ever did,
offering mindfulness training.
312
903919
3190
15:19
And they showed this exact pattern,
which was very heartening.
313
907847
2905
15:22
We had offered them
the mindfulness training
314
910776
2071
15:24
right before they were deployed to Iraq.
315
912871
2325
15:27
And upon their return,
Captain Davis shared with us
316
915220
2854
15:30
what he was feeling
was the benefit of this program.
317
918098
3312
15:34
He said that unlike last time,
318
922363
2877
15:37
after this deployment,
they were much more present.
319
925264
2858
15:40
They were discerning.
320
928665
1484
15:42
They were not as reactive.
321
930173
1766
15:43
And in some cases,
they were really more compassionate
322
931963
2525
15:46
with the people they were
engaging with and each other.
323
934512
2841
15:49
He said in many ways,
324
937377
1199
15:50
he felt that the mindfulness
training program we offered
325
938600
2674
15:53
gave them a really important tool
326
941298
1591
15:54
to protect against developing
post-traumatic stress disorder
327
942913
4068
15:59
and even allowing it to turn
into post-traumatic growth.
328
947005
3405
16:02
To us, this was very compelling.
329
950434
1817
16:05
And it ended up
that Captain Davis and I --
330
953458
2147
16:07
you know, this was about
a decade ago, in 2008 --
331
955629
2286
16:09
we've kept in touch all these years.
332
957939
1880
16:12
And he himself has gone on
to continue practicing mindfulness
333
960268
3719
16:16
in a daily way.
334
964011
1150
16:17
He was promoted to major,
335
965748
2366
16:20
he actually then ended up retiring
from the Marine Corps.
336
968138
3349
16:23
He went on to get a divorce,
to get remarried,
337
971511
4142
16:27
to have a child, to get an MBA.
338
975677
1783
16:29
And through all of these challenges
and transitions and joys of his life,
339
977812
4478
16:34
he kept up with his mindfulness practice.
340
982314
2317
16:37
And as fate would have it,
just a few months ago,
341
985138
4016
16:41
Captain Davis suffered a massive
heart attack, at the age of 46.
342
989178
4531
16:46
And he ended up calling me
a few weeks ago.
343
994717
2711
16:49
And he said, "I want
to tell you something.
344
997922
2698
16:52
I know that the doctors
who worked on me, they saved my heart,
345
1000644
4214
16:56
but mindfulness saved my life.
346
1004882
2794
17:00
The presence of mind I had
to stop the ambulance
347
1008184
2908
17:03
that ended up taking me
to the hospital," -- himself,
348
1011116
4191
17:07
the clarity of mind he had to notice
when there was fear and anxiety happening
349
1015331
4846
17:12
but not be gripped by it --
350
1020201
2140
17:14
he said, "For me, these
were the gifts of mindfulness."
351
1022365
2912
17:17
And I was so relieved
to hear that he was OK.
352
1025301
2519
17:19
But really heartened to see
that he had transformed his own attention.
353
1027844
4921
17:25
He went from having a really bad boss --
354
1033252
3698
17:28
an attention system
that nearly drove him off a bridge --
355
1036974
2849
17:31
to one that was an exquisite
leader and guide,
356
1039847
2718
17:34
and saved his life.
357
1042589
1621
17:37
So I want to actually end by sharing
my call to action to all of you.
358
1045238
3857
17:41
And here it is.
359
1049119
1239
17:42
Pay attention to your attention.
360
1050382
2678
17:45
Alright?
361
1053770
1163
17:46
Pay attention to your attention
362
1054957
2303
17:49
and incorporate mindfulness training
as part of your daily wellness toolkit,
363
1057284
5125
17:54
in order to tame your own wandering mind
364
1062433
3215
17:57
and to allow your attention
to be a trusted guide in your own life.
365
1065672
3805
18:01
Thank you.
366
1069817
1152
18:02
(Applause)
367
1070993
4094

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Amishi Jha - Neuroscientist
As a neuroscientist specializing in the brain mechanisms of attention, Amishi Jha researches mindfulness techniques to optimize focus, even under high stress.

Why you should listen

Neuroscientist Amishi Jha studies how to keep the brain’s attention systems in peak shape over high-pressure intervals. In her laboratory at the University of Miami, she uses functional MRI, electrophysiological recordings and behavioral analysis techniques to understand why our attention sometimes fails us, and if it can be trained for greater focus and less distractibility.

In 2008, Jha launched the first-ever study to offer mindfulness training tools to active duty military service members as they prepared for deployment. What she has discovered over the past 10 years of research on this topic is that without intervention, soldiers’ attention and working memory are compromised, and their attentional lapses increase. She has found similar patterns in students and athletes, too. The good news is that engaging in mindfulness training to cultivate greater present moment awareness protects against these effects. Her research is continuing to explore how attention can be trained for optimal performance and well-being. In her TED Talk, Jha unpacks how attention becomes vulnerable under stress and the mechanisms that allow it to be strengthened with mindfulness training.

More profile about the speaker
Amishi Jha | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

This site was created in May 2015 and the last update was on January 12, 2020. It will no longer be updated.

We are currently creating a new site called "eng.lish.video" and would be grateful if you could access it.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to write comments in your language on the contact form.

Privacy Policy

Developer's Blog

Buy Me A Coffee