Making a Good Brain Great: The Amen Clinic Program for Achieving and Sustaining Optimal Mental Performance | Daniel G. Md Amen | Good reference book
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Making a Good Brai...
Making a Good Brain Great: The Amen Clinic Program for Achieving and Sustaining Optimal Mental Performance
Daniel G. Md Amen
Three Rivers Press
, 2006 - 336 pages
average customer review:
based on 36 reviews
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highly recommended
Table Tennis vs. Ping-Pong
I notice that Dr.
Amen
recommends table tennis as the very best sport to improve your
brain
. Of course he is not suggesting that basement ping-pong will do the trick. He recommends investing in a skilled table tennis coach who will teach you the correct strokes. I would add that it should be one who will also teach you the new international, competative rules to gain the maximum benefit for your brain. What other sport combines speed and eye-hand coordination with exercise for every muscle group? This book and this sport recommendation is for every age category.
Great
recommendation Dr. Amen!!!
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Good reference book
This book has some
good
guidelines for
brain
exercises, food, and supplements.
Fine guide to keeping your brain in tip-top shape
I found this a valuable book. Overall, there is fair amount of information. There are no breakthrough insights for optimizing the health of your
brain
. There's just some practical advice along with explanations of the basic science behind the advice. If you are a regular reader of science and health information, you likely already know a fair amount of the info in this book. Eat right. Exercise. Avoid drugs. Don't get a head injury. Take some supplements. Meditate. Listen to relaxing music. And so on. However,
Amen
presents the material in an authoritative way, so his insights seem like the product of a huge amount of experience dealing with patients in his
clinic
.
One thing I liked is that this book does a better job than other health books at working at some level of sophistication in explaining neurophysiological changes going on in the brain. Just to take one example: exercise. Everybody knows exercise improves health and well being. But, for me, I didn't have a real understanding of how aerobic exercise would translate into better brain functioning. One fact I learned is that exercise increases levels of nitric oxide "which helps keep blood vessel walls open and round." If someone is a couch potato, then their levels of nitric oxide will drop and their blood vessels will become constricted and distorted,
making
them less capable of carrying blood to needed areas of the brain. This restricted flow eventually can lead to full-blown strokes which cut off blood flow completely for some time. Again, just a tidbit, nothing revelatory, but this is one more piece of the puzzle of the brain and its functioning. There are a lot of pieces like that are
good
to know. Of course, this is only at one level of explanation. One would have to go much deeper to understand the neurophysiology of healthy brain functioning.
I would have liked a better defense of the use of SPECT (single photon emission computed tomography) imaging. I had never heard of it. I wonder why almost nobody is using it. Such scans are the basis for almost all of the clinical diagnoses throughout the book. If it is as effective as Amen indicates I am surprised that so few doctors use it. Amen does give some reasons why doctors have been slow to adopt SPECT imaging, although it is hard to judge whether his explanation (basically, doctor's are slow adopters) is correct. Dr. Amen could well be a pioneer of a new method of diagnosis which takes advantage of a rich source of information. I'm not qualified to judge the value of SPECT imaging.
There is of course one problem with any book of this sort. On the one hand, I am extremely impressed by the insights of a physician who can call on the experience of having interpreted over 30,000 patients' brain images. On the other hand, there is the problem in having to accept the authority of someone simply because of their credentials. There's no way to know just reading the book that Amen's explanations of the illnesses are correct. Presumably some degree of simplification is necessary to appeal to a popular audience. But a Freudian psychoanalyst could claim to have examined the same number of patients and arrived at an authoritative diagnosis even though much Freudian psychoanalysis is bunk. I wish I could determine whether some of the more controversial claims are warranted. For example, Amen is extremely conservative about the amount of blunt-force impact that is acceptable for a growing brain. He says that if he had his way no child would ever do a drill practicing bouncing soccer balls on her head. He takes pains to point out how his expertise supports this conclusion. This kind of claim is something for which I would have liked to see more evidence to back it up.
Amen does a decent job in many places of citing extensive references for some of his conclusions. For example, he advocates taking supplements to improve brain health, and there are numerous references to studies published in peer-reviewed journals. Here too, however, I found him somewhat ambiguous about the value of some supplements for healthy people. Is the supplement (vinpocetine, Acetyl-L-carnitine, ginkgo biloba, CoQ10, etc.) only indicated for those suffering from or likely to suffer from conditions like senile dementia? Often Amen doesn't say. For example, he says that "the prettiest brains I have seen are those on ginkgo," implying that healthy people might benefit, but he advises only those "at risk for memory problems or stroke or suffer from low energy or decreased concentration" to consider taking ginkgo. Who doesn't suffer from these problems at times? Maybe everyone might benefit. From what I have read, there is mixed evidence for the value of ginkgo for healthy people. Amen doesn't discuss this issue. I found such omissions disappointing. After all, I want to "make a good brain
great
," not just make a bad brain better. Many times I would have liked Amen to be more thorough in his treatment of a topic.
My impression of books of this type is that overall they are a valuable read, although, when I consider the total amount of knowledge I have accumulated having read them, I can't help but feel that I haven't really learned all that much.
All said, this is easy reading. I enjoyed a lot of the research anecdotes, where Amen would give a glimpse of a recent study that had been done. For example I found interesting the "proof" that "beautiful women make men stupid". In one study, men who were shown pictures of beautiful women showed a greater likelihood of accepting $15 immediately rather than waiting a few days for $75. And there is a short explanation of why this might be the case. Again, not terribly complex analysis--just an idea to get you thinking about something. This kind of anecdote is the kind of thing Steven Pinker is a master at (see How the Mind Works). You can also find this style of explanation and citation used well in Daniel Gilbert's Stumbling on Happiness. Amen uses this method to good effect.
All in all, I found this a quick and valuable read. It has some nice tips about tweaking one's
mental
performance
; along the way I think I learned more than a thing or two about how the brain functions.
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I Must Have a Great Brain Already...
This book was given as a present and I noticed it reflected the giver's fears about losing
mental
faculties in the natural, aging process. However, after reading the first few chapters and taking some time to skim over the rest, I found it told me nothing new about how to take care of the physical portion of my mind. It basically said to eat right, exercise, keep learning new things, get enough sleep, avoid over-doing alcohol and drugs, even prescription ones; all obvious (I hope) to anyone interested in keeping their wits about them.
No, I don't recommend this book in particular. However, I will always recommend investigating what can be done to put off old-age befuddlement. And if, for my fellow readers, it means this book, then by all means, grab it and go.
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