John Medina

Brain Rules: 12 Principles for Surviving and Thriving at Work, Home, and School

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From Publishers WeeklyMultitasking is the great buzz word in business today, but as developmental molecular biologist Medina tells readers in a chapter on attention, the brain can really only focus on one thing at a time. This alone is the best argument for not talking on your cellphone while driving. Medina (_The Genetic Inferno_) presents readers with a basket containing an even dozen good principles on how the brain works and how we can use them to our benefit at home and work. The author says our visual sense trumps all other senses, so pump up those PowerPoint presentations with graphics. The author says that we don't sleep to give our brain a rest—studies show our neurons firing furiously away while the rest of the body is catching a few z's. While our brain indeed loses cells as we age, it compensates so that we continue to be able to learn well into our golden years. Many of these findings and minutiae will be familiar to science buffs, but the author employs an appealing style, with suggestions on how to apply his principles, which should engage all readers. DVD not seen by PW.(Mar.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Review“Oliver Sacks meets Getting Things Done.” --- Cory Doctorow, co-editor of Boing Boing
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Quotes

  • Sara Hilalhas quoted5 months ago
    How much exercise? Once again, a little goes a long way. The researchers showed you have to participate in some form of exercise just twice a week to get the benefit. Bump it up to a 20-minute walk each day, and you can cut your risk of having a stroke—one of the leading causes of mental disability in the elderly—by 57 percent.
  • Sara Hilalhas quoted5 months ago
    exercise can turn Jim into Frank, or at least turn Jim into a sharper version of himself.
  • Sara Hilalhas quoted5 months ago
    Too much exercise and exhaustion can hurt cognition.

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