Sabine Doebel: How your brain's executive function works -- and how to improve it
Sabine Doebel studies the developing mind to understand how experience shapes our thinking and executive control skills. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
when you first learned how to drive?
was so conscious and deliberate?
completely wiped out mentally.
I know that this is because I was using
called executive function.
to consciously control our thoughts,
to break away from habit,
when things go wrong.
poured orange juice on your cereal?
you've missed a meeting?
on the way home from work
instead on autopilot?
in executive function.
every day in all aspects of our lives.
that it predicts all kinds of good things
mental and physical health,
are so interested in understanding it
a huge self-improvement buzzword.
through brain-training iPhone apps
like playing chess.
to train it in the lab
and other things related to it,
about executive function is all wrong.
executive function in a broad sense
exercising it in a narrow way,
in which we actually use it.
function app on your phone,
pouring OJ on your Cheeerios twice a week.
your executive function
how it's influenced by context.
that we use in the lab
in young children
cards in one way --
keep sorting the cards in the old way
them of what they should be doing.
If it's red, put it here.
a different game.
the color game anymore.
and all the trucks go here, OK?
to use her executive function.
and others like it
her executive function outside of the lab?
she'll need to use executive function
between shape and color.
from adding to multiplying
to thinking about her friend.
depends on things
and what your peers are doing.
on the strategies that you execute
in a particular situation.
that context really matters.
from my research.
to do the classic marshmallow test,
of delay of gratification
a lot of executive function.
to go to the other room
that second marshmallow,
How long can they wait?
to look at the effects of context.
a green T-shirt to wear.
waited for two marshmallows,
for two marshmallows
to see how long they waited.
for two marshmallows
that they'd never even met.
I still didn't know
or if it was something deeper than that.
I showed them pictures of pairs of kids,
likes to have things right away,
more of these things."
do you like more
who believed that their group waited
who liked to wait for things.
made them value waiting more.
to help themselves wait,
or turning away from the marshmallow
is just how much context matters.
had good executive function or bad,
helped them use it better.
for you and for your kids?
to learn Spanish.
with other people who also want to learn,
that you really like.
to use executive function.
your child do better on her math homework.
to use executive function
before she starts studying
after studying for an hour.
like context is everything.
and it's shaped by numerous factors.
your executive function
your goals matter more to you,
in that particular situation.
when they said, "Know thyself."
how context shapes your behavior
to change for the better.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Sabine Doebel - Cognitive scientistSabine Doebel studies the developing mind to understand how experience shapes our thinking and executive control skills.
Why you should listen
Sabine Doebel conducts research with children in an effort to understand the nature of the mind, with much of her work focusing on how children develop the cognitive abilities that serve us so well as adults, like controlling impulses, thinking ahead, and staying on task.
Doebel is an incoming assistant professor in the Department of Psychology at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, where she will direct the brand new Developing Minds Lab. She earned her PhD from the Institute of Child Development at the University of Minnesota and subsequently was a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Colorado Boulder. Her research has been funded by the National Institutes of Health and published in Psychological Science, Cognition, Developmental Psychology and Child Development. A full list of her publications can be found here.
Doebel is also a passionate advocate of open science and has received funding from the National Science Foundation to help developmental scientists adopt transparency-enhancing practices that will allow them to build more easily on each other's work.
Sabine Doebel | Speaker | TED.com