Amishi Jha: How to tame your wandering mind
As a neuroscientist specializing in the brain mechanisms of attention, Amishi Jha researches mindfulness techniques to optimize focus, even under high stress. Full bio
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of their brain capacity.
delivered this line
that makes him a great actor,
of their brain capacity.
energy-demanding organ
at full capacity being used,
of information overload.
than it can fully process.
the brain's computational resources
as the leader of the brain.
the rest of the brain follows.
the human brain's attention system.
I've been very interested in one question.
that our attention is the brain's boss,
I wanted to know three things.
control our perception?
foggy and distracted?
about this fogginess,
to pay better attention?
in the work that we do in our lives.
ends up getting utilized.
of somebody that I know quite well.
group of people that we work with,
is a matter of life and death.
Captain Jeff Davis.
with you, as you can see,
at the scenery around him,
driving off that bridge.
all of everything he had not to do so.
was thousands of miles away.
and, really, dread for his future.
that he didn't take his life.
knew that he wasn't the only one
probably were, too.
in the first-of-its-kind project
something called mindfulness training
what mindfulness training is,
how attention works in the brain.
involve brain-wave recordings.
people wear funny-looking caps
that have electrodes embedded in them.
the ongoing brain electrical activity.
temporal precision.
voltage fluctuations over time.
plot the timing of the brain's activity.
a face on the screen,
detectable brain signature.
that are involved in face processing.
and so on cue,
this brain-wave component a name.
in many of our studies.
that attention may have on our perception.
of the kind of experiments
images like this one.
overlaid on each other.
of these types of overlaid images,
to pay attention to the face.
by pressing a button,
was it indoor or outdoor?
we can manipulate attention
were actually doing what we said.
were as follows:
and affecting perception,
attention to the face,
the face becomes barely perceptible
of face detection, the N170,
were paying attention --
attention to the face,
as you can see in red, it was smaller.
between the blue and red lines
thing that changed,
were identical in both cases --
of actually seeing a face.
we wanted to see what would happen,
or diminish this effect.
in a very stressful environment,
negative images,
on the news, unfortunately --
actually affect their attention.
while they're doing this experiment,
its power diminishes.
that stress does this to the brain --
has this powerful influence on attention
external distraction,
with an experiment
generate their own mind-wandering.
in an ongoing task of some sort.
is that essentially, you bore people.
of mind-wandering happening right now.
of internal content to occupy themselves.
most boring experiments.
were a series of faces on the screen,
every time they saw the face.
the face would be upside down,
just to withhold the response.
they were successfully mind-wandering,
when that face was upside down.
that it was upside down.
when people have mind-wandering.
in the environment,
our own mind wandering,
is very powerful
it's also fragile and vulnerable.
and mind-wandering diminish its power.
very controlled laboratory settings.
about your attention
for four out of the next eight minutes.
so pay attention, please.
that you're going to remain seated
your eyes on me as I speak.
that we mind-wander,
from the task at hand,
little trips that we take away,
any dire consequences
four minutes of a military briefing,
four minutes of testimony.
missing any time.
in those cases could be dire.
is an exquisite time-traveling master.
of the music player, we see this.
that have already happened, right?
for the next thing that we want to do.
time-travel mode of the past or the future
without our awareness,
you were trying to read a book,
with no idea what the words were saying.
without an awareness that we're doing it,
on the past when we rewind,
ruminating, reliving or regretting
thinking to yourself, OK,
and more often.
we can possibly do about this?
and wandering mind is a mindful one.
with paying attention
with awareness.
reactivity of what's happening.
that button right on play
unfolding of our lives.
mode of being to have any benefits.
we're offering people programs
a suite of exercises
of mindfulness in their life.
that we work with, high-stress groups,
medical professionals --
mind-wandering can be really dire.
we offer them very accessible,
to optimize the training,
is track to see what happens,
circumstances that they may have.
to students right around finals season.
to accountants during tax season.
while they're deploying.
is most likely to be vulnerable,
to be in peak shape
a series of attention tests.
of some kind of high-stress interval,
we track them again,
if there's a difference.
mindfulness training?
the lapses in attention
if we don't do anything at all,
of this high-stress interval than before.
we can protect against this.
just like the other groups,
take our training programs
to doing the daily mindfulness exercises
how to be in the present moment,
even though they're in high stress.
is actually important to realize,
are very much like physical exercise:
in mindfulness practice,
to Captain Jeff Davis.
in the very first project
offering mindfulness training.
which was very heartening.
the mindfulness training
Captain Davis shared with us
was the benefit of this program.
they were much more present.
they were really more compassionate
engaging with and each other.
training program we offered
post-traumatic stress disorder
into post-traumatic growth.
that Captain Davis and I --
a decade ago, in 2008 --
to continue practicing mindfulness
from the Marine Corps.
to get remarried,
and transitions and joys of his life,
just a few months ago,
heart attack, at the age of 46.
a few weeks ago.
to tell you something.
who worked on me, they saved my heart,
to stop the ambulance
to the hospital," -- himself,
when there was fear and anxiety happening
were the gifts of mindfulness."
to hear that he was OK.
that he had transformed his own attention.
that nearly drove him off a bridge --
leader and guide,
my call to action to all of you.
as part of your daily wellness toolkit,
to be a trusted guide in your own life.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Amishi Jha - NeuroscientistAs 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.
Amishi Jha | Speaker | TED.com