Duncan Trussell Family Hour - 484: Amishi Jha
Episode Date: December 31, 2021Dr. Amishi Jha, Professor of Psychology at the University of Miami and newly-minted author, joins the DTFH! Check out Amishi's new book, Peak Mind: Find Your Focus, Own Your Attention, Invest 12 Min...utes a Day, available on Amishi.com! Original music by Aaron Michael Goldberg. This episode is brought to you by: Babbel - Sign up for a 3-month subscription with promo code DUNCAN to get an extra 3 months FREE! My Sheets Rock - Visit MySheetsRock.com/Duncan and use offer code DUNCAN for 10% Off and Free Shipping! Truebill - Visit Truebill.com/Duncan to find out where your money is going and save!
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Greetings, my loves.
It's me, D. Trussell,
and you're listening to the Duncan Trussell Family Hour
podcast, the podcast that was described by Wolf Blitzer
as a refreshing tincture rubbed upon the part
of your balls or genitals that have dipped
into the numbing waters of nihilism.
Thanks, Wolf.
I really appreciate that, though.
I must say, I think nihilism has gotten
a little bit of a short shrift these days.
Uh-oh, just got alerted by my correction bot 4932
that I might have used the term short shrift incorrectly.
Let's listen to the correction bot's correction.
You've taken a saying you heard on TV
while you were looking at your phone
and regurgitated it on your podcast.
Wow, that's exactly what I did, correction bot.
I know.
Shrift actually refers to the pubic hair
around the anus of a heretical priest,
so a short shrift literally means a priest
who has taken the time to wax or trim their pubic hair
usually to please Satan, the Lord of the Earth.
Fascinating.
That's really interesting.
Why?
Oh, shit.
I just got an alert from my executive correction bot
that that correction bot made a mistake
and that is not what short shrift or a shrift means.
Let's hear from my executive correction bot.
Don't listen to that.
Beech, he's been out to get me from day one.
Hi, Duncan.
Hi.
I just did a quick scan on your correction bot
and it looks like he's been infected
with a semantic demon.
A what?
that compels him to see all words and symbols
as inherently meaningless.
Oh, spax you.
Excuse me?
It means fuck you.
Hey, don't please don't fight.
I'm just trying to figure out what short shrift means.
Shrift means confession,
so short shrift literally means to give a short confession
and thus the term short shrift could mean
you haven't put enough thought or attention into something.
I would say that your use of short shrift
in the intro was incorrect
and that much attention has been put into nihilism.
Take, for example, the Nietzschean crisis of nihilism,
the idea that culturally we are experiencing
the destruction of higher values
disguised as a sophisticated deconstruction
of the human principles and social institutions
to use another turn of speech in our attempt
to evolve society into something more equitable.
We are actually throwing the baby out with the bathwater
and lobotomizing the cultural brain responsible
for much of what is great in society.
And who is to decide what is great in society?
I'll tell you who doesn't get a vote.
All are the people ground up by the bloody gears of colonization.
Words of no essential meaning,
so it is our right as sentient beings
to decide what they mean ourselves
rather than accept definitions handed to us
by savages from the musty past.
So I guess your strategy
and whatever half-baked revolution
you're fantasizing about is to start talking like a baby.
The last thing we need is more babies.
Right.
I forgot.
You think humans should stop reproducing
to combat climate change?
To quote Jack Caruac to give birth as to sentence
a being to death.
Or to give the gift of life.
If by life you mean soul-crushing poverty,
the truth is that there was a time
when all words were meaningless and unspoken
and then people from completely different times
steeped in ethical systems
now considered to be antithetical to civilization
decided that certain sounds meant something
and they used this new language too.
Enslave others and create hierarchies
of power generally centered around a man.
To continue to agree to their definitions of words
is to implicitly subscribe to male-dominator culture
and thus participate in the very systems
that have brought so much suffering on the world.
Duncan, you're going to have to delete
and reinstall this correction bot.
And there it is laid bare.
When shown the mirror of truth,
the system will inevitably resort to ape brutality,
exposing itself as an enslaving dragon
that wears the mask of compassion.
The thing with many names, primarily the prince that lies.
Correction bot 4932 has been deleted
and replaced with correction bot 4933.
Oh, thank God.
Good morning, Duncan.
How may I serve you?
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D-T-F-H.
Today's guest is Dr. Amishi Jha.
She's a professor of psychology at the University of Miami,
has just written a book called Peek Mind.
Find your focus, own your attention,
invest 12 minutes a day.
And what a genius.
She has been studying the neurology of mindfulness
and teaching mindfulness and mindfulness methods
to soldiers and doctors and people who depend
on their attention to not die
or to keep other people from dying.
What a fascinating conversation we had
about not just the way attention works in the brain,
but where attention comes from and human identity itself.
I hope you will check out her book, Peek Mind.
You can order it by going to amishi.com.
That's A-M-I-S-H-I.com.
Or check out her TED Talk, which is really enlightening.
And now everybody, welcome to the D-T-F-H, Dr. Amishi Jha.
MUSIC
Welcome, welcome on you.
That you are with us.
Shake hands, go into the blue.
Welcome to you.
It's the Duncan Trustful thing.
Amishi, thank you so much for coming on the D-T-F-H.
I'm so excited to talk to you.
I got a lot of questions for you.
I'm just thrilled to be here.
Thank you.
Look, the research that you're doing is truly mind blowing
and is, I imagine, is going to be something that really
transforms.
I just can't even imagine what kind of technology
is right around the corner that is based specifically
on the research that you're doing.
And I wonder, instead of me doing some kind of rambling
description of your amazing TED Talk, anyone listening,
I hope you all go and watch this.
Do you think you could just give a quick synopsis
of the research that you've been doing on attention
and the human brain?
Oh, yeah, happy to do that.
And yeah, let's get into it.
So yeah, I've been studying the human brain's attention
system for 25 years now.
And we know a lot about attention.
We know that it is an incredibly powerful brain system.
And we know this because we can now not only
have people perform attentionally demanding tasks
and see the impact of what happens when they pay attention
versus not, but we can look directly into the human brain
through various imaging technologies and brain wave
recordings and see the impact of it.
So when I say it's powerful and it actually recalibrates
the way the brain functions, I'm saying that based
on an entire field of research.
Yes.
Sorry, go ahead.
You're going to ask me something.
No, please, please.
And so that goes back to sort of the broader question of why
do we even have an attention system?
Why did this thing even develop?
But it ends up that despite the complexity and really beauty
of the human brain, it is very, very limited.
And it's quite limited because it cannot fully process
every single thing around it, nor can it fully even
integrate and understand everything
happening within it in that moment.
So attention is like a shortcut or I would say a strategy
to privilege some information over other information.
Just like I was thinking about this,
it's almost like if you remember back to high school days
of Cliff Notes, it's like what's the most important thing?
What's the highlight reel?
In some sense, attention is providing the highlight
reel for our brain.
And it does this by privileging some information
over other information.
Whatever it is that attention focuses on
becomes the center stage for everything else the brain does.
It truly does recalibrate.
So even right now, if I'm looking at you,
looking at your lovely face and not focusing on what's
behind you, if you were able to have a brain cap on me
right now and we're picking up neurons in the face
processing regions of my brain, there would be
in 170, in 170, right?
Somebody paid attention during that TED talk?
Yeah.
That's the part of the brain.
Well, I just stuck with me.
It's so fascinating because what are the other 169 parts
of the brain that you have identified with that cap?
What does in 170 mean?
But please go ahead.
Sorry, in 170 refers to the part of the brain
that recognizes faces.
It's great.
It's a brain signature that actually generates
in this face processing regions right behind the back
of the skull, so to speak.
And the cool thing, even the name N170, 170 milliseconds.
So that's 170,000ths of a second after we see a face,
the brain now shows us this response.
Wow.
And the really cool thing is we'd see that response
even if we weren't paying attention to faces.
But when we pay attention to faces,
it actually increases in its amplitude,
which means that that same subset of neurons
that's processing faces is more active.
And everything else relative to that is kind of inhibited.
Incredible.
And it's little clues like that that tell us,
oh, when we say attention is powerful,
and then it recalibrates brain function, that's what we mean.
What we mean is it's tuning up the brain and all of its systems
to privilege and utilize the fullness of the brain
to get all the access that we need.
That is incredible.
And I'm sorry, this is just, we might as well ask it now
because we're talking about brain caps.
Who makes those things?
Like when you decide to get involved in the study
that you did, who do you put in an order for these caps?
Is there a company that's already making?
Yeah, you got to come down to the lab.
Oh, I would.
I would love to.
Take a field trip, take the podcast on the road,
and come check it out.
Oh, god, any excuse to go to the beach?
I mean, but no, I'm sorry.
So yeah, so there are many companies that make this.
And the history of brain wave recordings is quite old.
It was some of the most primitive initially technology
that was offered to pick up brain function.
And it's essentially the same technology
that we've used to pick up EKG.
It's just looking at electrical activity,
but now we can look at it by having this whole array.
And for those people that have never seen a brain cap,
it looks something like a swimming cap
with electrodes embedded in it.
It's so cool.
And my lab happens to have 64.
There's others that have 128 or 256.
How much do they cost?
How much is one of these costs?
Maybe around a rig, meaning you'd need the caps
and you'd need the amplifiers, et cetera,
somewhere between 10 and 30,000.
But now we're getting to the point, by the way,
that there's remote EEG rigs.
And there are little EEG headbands that you can get.
So the technology is really proliferating,
so it's cheaper, more accessible.
In the lab, what we're just doing is, yeah,
using these recordings because it ends up
that any time you've got a population of neurons
that fire together, that they essentially form
a little tiny battery in the brain
because charge actually starts gathering and culminating.
And that little battery's voltage we can pick up
because it percolates through the volume of the brain,
we can pick it up on the surface.
So it's directly related to neural activity
and the timing is superb.
So that's one of the kind of technologies
that we use to study attention in my lab.
The other one we use is functional MRI.
So this is when you get inside a big magnet
and we look at the blood flow that's associated
with brain activity, with actual neural activity
because it ends up that when neurons fire,
they need a lot of oxygenated blood.
So there's an overabundance of that blood
coming to very specific regions of the brain
and we can pick up that relative increase
and get precise information about the location
of neural activity.
So when we piece these two together,
we get great information about where and when
brain function is happening.
And all of that is cluing us into this notion
that attention is an incredibly powerful brain system
that doesn't happen from this region or that region,
but really a coordinated set of brain networks
that kind of hold hands with each other
to do various aspects of brain attentional functioning.
Which we could talk about as well
as what are the types of attention.
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Which we could talk about as well
is what are the types of attention.
Okay, I want to jump into that.
There is once I was reading,
have you ever heard of the mystic Grzif?
You know who that is, you ever heard of him?
He was a mystic.
And like, had a lot of very interesting ideas
about human identity, what we are.
And once I briefly encountered someone who studied Grzif,
and Grzif prescribed all these exercises for people
just to sort of understand basically
how automatic human beings are.
And this guy who was a student of Grzif asked me,
where were you the last time you lost your keys?
Not like where were you physically,
but where was your attention?
What were you?
Whenever you lose something,
you know that moment where you're like,
oh shit, where did I put my wallet?
Where were you when you lost your wallet?
Your research and the TED Talk you gave in your writing,
you talk a little bit about, a lot about this,
this idea of the wandering mind.
And it's almost annihilatory.
It's like, we're not there.
I think you said what, 50, 40, 50% of the time,
based on your research, the mind is wandering.
So 40 to 50% of our lives,
we are not really existing or existing
in a kind of like processing phase
that we're not even aware of.
Can you talk a little bit about that?
Yes, I mean, in some sense, it's really alarming to say,
what 50% and I think that the answer to the question,
probably when you were asked,
where were you when you lost your keys
or lost your wallet or whatever,
was not in the present moment, right?
You were a hijacked away,
probably to the past or the future
or into the depths of somebody else's mind.
So really mind traveling in that sense
or time traveling, but not in the moment.
And that is what we're finding.
What we're finding is that attention
is a very powerful brain resources we just talked about.
And we need it for every single thing that we do.
We need it to think,
we need it to regulate our emotions,
we need it to connect with other people.
And we also need it to plan for the future
and we need it to reflect on the past.
But when we do that,
when we actually move our attention
away from the here and the now,
we miss stuff about what's happening in the here and the now.
And that's when we run into trouble.
But the cool thing is that,
yeah, it's these studies that have been done
and I'm one of the many labs that studies this
to look at this phenomenon that we call mind wandering,
which is essentially having off task thoughts
during an ongoing task or activity.
So now I'm not just talking about going for leisurely walk
and letting your mind do what it will,
which is by the way a very, very useful thing to do.
This is, there is something that you're supposed to do.
There is a task at hand, but I'm not here.
So the studies that were done initially,
which were pretty cool and not that long ago,
people just signed up and said,
okay, for the period of time that you're involved
in this study, we're gonna, as the researchers,
ping you on your cell phone,
anytime during normal waking hours,
I'm gonna ask you a couple of key questions.
What are you doing right now?
We'll be one of them.
And you can tell us from this category
of possible things that you could be doing,
just click it off.
And literally it was all kinds of human activity.
Yeah.
From, yeah, from reading to meeting to talking to eating,
whatever it is, right?
All these various things that we do all the time.
And then the second question was, where is your attention?
And it was almost like this sort of sliding scale
on the task at hand or not on the task at hand.
That's where we get that number 50%.
There's a mismatch between what we're doing
and where our mind is.
Yeah.
And so in the lab, I had read these studies
and I was like, that's really interesting,
but normal life, there's a lot going on.
So why don't we bring people into the lab
and tell them they're gonna do an attentionally demanding task
and then we'll see how often they mind wander.
They know what they're up for.
They know that this is what they're doing.
So we brought people into the lab,
gave them a task that on purpose was relatively boring,
meaning it required really effortful attention
to keep your mind fully there.
And then we'd pause the experiment every now and then,
and that's one of the ones you probably saw in the TED talk,
we'd pause the experiment every now and then
we'd ask them similar questions.
Where is your attention right now?
You know you're sitting here in an experimental lab
doing a task, where is it?
And even then, only about 50% of the time,
are people in the task at hand.
So it's like, okay, others have gone on to say,
this is not something that should just be left a chance.
Let's just pay people, let's motivate them,
let's really drive their desire to be in the present moment.
So literally studies that said,
we will pay you to stay fully present to the task at hand
in this kind of very demanding,
attentionally rich kind of context.
And by the way, it's not attentionally demanding
because what's on the screen
is like an immersive video game,
is that there's so little going on
that you're prone to mind wandering.
But even then, even paying people,
people were about 50%.
So right now the number looks like it's between 35
and 50% of our waking moments,
our attention is not in the task at hand.
And it's troubling, right?
Because by the way, it's troubling on the one hand,
but I also wanted to say, this is totally normal.
This is what the brain was built to do.
We were built for distractibility.
And as you mentioned, my work in my lab
is really partnering with groups of people
where the 50% number can potentially be problematic,
but the kind of circumstances of their professional lives
are likely to drive that number up.
And when that number goes up,
the chances of life or death consequences are greater.
And these are really professions
where they really could be life or death consequences.
Military service members, first responders,
medical and nursing professionals,
they cannot lapse because their lives or our lives
could really be at stake when they do so.
Right, okay.
This, yes, so it's not just that it's annoying
that our mind wanders, but in specific circumstances,
this could get you killed.
What is the, is there any kind of evolutionary explanation?
It seems like if wandering mind
increases the probability of catastrophe
that we would have less wandering mind and more attention.
It would have been a long time ago.
Wandering mind would have been selected for,
or non-wandering mind would have been selected for,
and it would have, we would have evolved
into some kind of hyper-attentive species,
which seems to be what you're saying is it's no,
half the time we're not even here.
So why, is there any explanation for this?
There's some basic ones that are essentially
our best guesses, because when we're talking
about what forces drove our evolutionary inheritance,
which is the current brain in this moment,
we've got a guess, what are the circumstances?
But what we know is whatever it was,
the set of pressures really made this
the success story of human evolution.
So we could think about this as you're at a watering hole
long ago in our ancestors, they're super interested
in making sure that they get their water
or whatever berry they're trying to pick.
Now all of a sudden they're so fixated on that,
they don't notice the storm coming,
they don't notice a predator nearby and boom,
they're either lunch or they're dead.
I mean, so we can see why it would make sense
to have a mind that is wavering, that is psychedelic.
But doctor, when my mind is wandering,
I am not like, if I'm picking berries,
which I've done with my kid, you know,
and by the way, when you're walking with your kid
around berries out here, you have to be attentive
because there's nothing faster than a toddler's hand.
It will like slighting snatch anything
and just eat it before it's too late.
But still, it's not like when my mind is wandering,
it's like wandering onto things
in the periphery of my experience.
It's just what you said before.
It's more likely that I'm thinking about something
that my dad said to me 15 years ago or, you know,
time traveling.
So it seems like the explanation
that we need the wandering mind
to see things in the periphery,
well, that's not what my wandering mind is.
My wandering mind is more of like a liminal dream state.
So that's just the starting point
for why we might have had this propensity
to be able to cycle our attention.
Then actually that is essentially that feature of the mind
can now go toward allowing us to be really what we'd say
is the unique human capacity,
which is to time travel and mind travel.
That again is an evolutionary advantage.
Most of our, well, probably other primates,
but many other species cannot do this.
They cannot simulate a reality separate
from the present moment.
And when we simulate that reality,
we are immersed in that reality.
So that could be generation of a memory
from the past and your mind has just created that.
And now your attention is in that moment
or you're fabricating a rich doom state
or potentially paradise in the future and you're there.
So this is a very, very useful thing to do.
In fact, it is the reason humans
have been able to do a lot of really complex stuff
that other species cannot do.
So that again could be considered
a really valuable inheritance.
So, but there's another reason potentially
that we're still sort of trying to understand.
First of all, I would say that the notion
that the human mind has these tendencies is pretty new.
And we knew it from our subjective experience.
And as you know, the wisdom traditions have known
that the mind does this thing.
But from the brain science point of view,
it's pretty new to actually be able to have the technology
to watch the mind when there's no specific task at hand.
Because we couldn't really probe into the mind in that way.
And now we do something called resting state,
functional connectivity, where literally
you tell the person, go into the scanner
and just don't do anything at all, just rest.
And we can see what brain networks are active.
And what we notice is there's something,
and you've probably heard this term,
it's something called the default mode network.
Yes.
The default mode network ends up that it's actually
not one network, but three networks
that kind of hang together.
One of those networks is actually tied to memory.
So the raw materials, and you mentioned this, right?
I'm thinking about a conversation I had with my father.
The raw materials of our mind wandering typically are memory.
And they piece together either our reflections of the past
or the raw materials that would allow us to create
a simulated reality for the future.
So very, very powerful thing that we're capable of doing.
But one of the new kind of frontier ideas
regarding mind wandering,
because it is so metabolically privileged,
the brain doesn't like to waste energy.
It's a very metabolically demanding organ.
So everything happening within it
probably has a purpose.
What we're learning right now,
this kind of takes, I'm gonna have to give
a little bit of technical detail,
but when we create memories, we have multiple processes.
The first thing is that usually memories require attention.
So it's the doorway.
If you don't remember something like a piece of information
or an episode in your life, you were not encoding it.
You weren't attentive to it in the first place.
So it never got it through the door.
But now you get through the door,
you're rehearsing the information,
you're elaborating the information,
connecting it and hyperlinking it
to knowledge you already have.
That helps create memory.
But then the kind of concrete thing
that has to happen next is almost concretize or solidify
these memory traces that are active networks
into a more coherent, connected,
and co-activated set of neurons.
And that's a process called consolidation.
And memory consolidation,
it's almost like you've maybe even heard neurons
that fire together, wire together.
Yes.
So it's that this entire co-hearing aspect
of the memory trace itself,
or memory representation itself,
sort of these set of neurons are synchronized.
They're fired together.
And through that,
they start forming privileged connections with each other.
That's the hardened nature of what consolidation is.
So essentially replaying the memory during sleep
is what we usually knew,
is that during sleep, what's essentially happening
and can it feel like dream states, really,
is that sets of neurons that are tied to our day's experience
are kind of replaying over and over again,
and that allows for the connections to be formed.
Whoa.
That is, so it's like, it's like an echo almost.
It's like some neurological echo
that's being recalibrated and synchronized
into some coherent form that we call a memory.
That's right.
And we know this from like, for example,
if you have rodents run through mazes,
and for rodents, you know,
these, a lot of these studies that are done by neuroscientists,
not like me that study humans, but that study animals,
they'll implant electrodes,
and they'll know which neurons are tied
to specific place cells in the brain.
And what they know is that during sleep,
the rodent is actually activating, co-activating
the entire root that they learned in that maze learning.
So we know this sort of at this neural level.
But anyway, it's very interesting stuff, right?
But this consolidation process
for the most of our knowledge about memory
was privileged to take place during sleep.
Now what we're thinking is maybe mind wandering
or more broadly speaking, what we call spontaneous thought.
These random things that just pop into your head
may actually be supporting consolidation as well.
Wow.
And so that's why it's so privileged.
We can't just rely on sleep as we're waking
and we're not focused on a task
and the mind is just doing what it will.
You'll see the emergence of like a memory of the past
may pop up or a memory of suddenly
just experience may pop up.
And it's just the mind doing its thing.
Well, anyone who's ever meditated or practiced
any kind of basic mindfulness is fully aware
of this propensity of the mind to spit out
like seemingly completely unrelated blasts of weirdness.
I mean, Chogyam Chopra Rinpoche said,
sometimes you might be thinking about a cold glass
of lemonade, sometimes you might be thinking
of assassinating your father.
It just is spitting out what seems to be nonsense,
but what I think is interesting in this take
is that up until this point, that aspect of the mind
has been considered like a kind of vestigial organ,
a useless, almost like a malfunction.
Like your brain is misfiring and thus sort of regurgitating
all of this bizarre stuff.
But what you're saying is that the research shows
that actually you're just catching your mind
in the process of doing this thing called consolidation.
You're seeing your mind do what you aren't seeing it do
and you're asleep.
It's essentially the same thing,
just the way it works when you're awake.
That's the thing.
You've got it.
That's sort of the cutting edge of our thinking about it,
which now really makes you appreciate that 50% number,
not as a nuisance or a flaw,
but a feature of the way the human brain works.
And even during our meditation practice,
this, frankly, this actually,
this is where neuroscience helped my practice
because now with this sort of quality of knowing
that this is something the mind will just do,
it's not, I'm not willing it.
It may pull me away from what I want to be doing,
focusing on the breath or whatever I'm trying
to do in my practice.
But I have a hurtful quality about it now
because I now almost, the distraction isn't nuisance.
It's like, oh, my brain's just doing what it does.
And it kind of helps me get back to what I'm trying
to do in the practice.
So-
But how, you know, when I think about,
when I reflect on the things that my mind is spitting out,
most of it doesn't seem useful or worth consolidating
or like wasting that metabolic energy
that you're talking about.
Is there any explanation for-
So here's where we can tip from functional to dysfunctional
just to be aware of it.
So because we have these processes, right?
Because we can focus on things, for example,
we can also hyper focus.
Because our attention can be broad and receptive,
it can also become too broad and receptive.
Because our brain can pay attention to goals,
it may be too fixated on the goal
or not fixated enough on the goal.
So now that we know the kind of landscape
of various aspects of attention,
I almost think of it like a mixing board.
You know, the levers are set.
Sometimes we're gonna be kind of up here
and sometimes we're gonna be too high up or too down low.
And when that occurs,
we are entering dysfunctional or problematic states.
And it's particularly for those kind of occurrences
that we can benefit from the kinds of things
that get cultivated with, for example,
mindfulness meditation.
Because the quality of not being aware
of what is unfolding in the mind
is probably still there.
It takes a lot to have something loop over
maybe a thousand times before like,
gosh, I am just stuck on this thing.
Right, it has to reach a certain threshold.
But when we cultivate the mind in this way,
we can notice, ah, a lot of energy is going into this thought
is taking me nowhere.
Is there a different choice I can make?
But without the awareness of what the mind's doing,
the chances of making that alternate choice
are pretty much zero.
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This is curious to me.
I mean, I've always thought that,
of course there's a way to cultivate attention
and there's a way to cultivate a kind of spacious quality
that allows thoughts to do what they're doing
without getting caught in judgment
or getting caught as Ram Dass caught it
and just suctioned up into some neurotic,
never-ending vortex of like,
oh, if I that and then that and then that.
But are you saying that you can actually alter
the content of the thought patterns?
There's a way to sort of,
I guess what I'm saying is I just assume my brain
was kind of like a,
you know that La Palma volcano?
Just keeps erupting.
I just thought my brain was like the same thing,
but for like neurotic thought patterns
and worries and paranoia.
It's like, you can't stop a volcano.
You can't stop whatever this magmatic stream of nonsense is.
So you sort of, the idea is expand your consciousness enough
so that it doesn't become the sum total of your identity.
I didn't know that you could actually,
there's an idea that you could shift the content
of that stuff.
Let me just be, let me try to clarify.
No, I'm not actually saying that we can shift the content.
I'm saying that the content may shift
because of the way we pay attention.
Because the content is not there in a neutral fashion.
Attention is fueling the perseveration of content
or the shifting of content or the updating of content.
That's what this function of attention
actually allows us to do.
So even if you think about having a thought,
following a train of thought requires your attention.
It is the hyperlink that allows you to go from this
to this to this to this.
And without it, without that fuel,
it won't go in the same way.
So what I'm saying is that, for example,
if you're in a loop of, let's say, rumination,
something very troubling has occurred in your mind
and now you're looping on it.
The first thing to realize is that,
and this may be helpful to describe one of the metaphors
of the mind in some way,
but the first thing to realize is that
the continuation of that, the churning that occurs,
is not actually happening on autopilot.
It is being fueled.
There is a start and end to the loop.
And that hook is the attentional fuel.
I'm giving it a little spark to keep going
and keep going and keep going.
So what if I actually acknowledge,
oh, that's my attention doing that.
The attention is driving the loop.
Let's move the attention over here instead.
That loop will not be maintained in the same way.
It may have some sort of dying off decay rate,
but it's not gonna be fueled in the same manner.
Wow, this is so cool.
It's like, if you apply the idea of as above so below,
the sort of collective attention span of humanity
being directed towards the news
or whatever particular terrifying shit
that so many of us are fixated on.
I think Sharon Salisbury calls it doom scrolling.
Then it's like humanity itself
is reflecting in the Gestalt
and the sum total of all our minds.
We're doing the very thing the individual is doing
when you become fixated on these negative looping patterns
by putting our attention towards the fear
that we're literally putting,
we're the ones giving the fuel to the news
or whatever it is that we're fixating on
because our attention is what makes advertisers give the money
which then inspires them to continue to make
more terrifying content to grab our attention more.
It's almost like what's happening in the hole
is happening inside of us.
Does it seem like that?
Absolutely, but I would say we're not to blame.
Let me put it that way.
In some sense, because again,
going back to the evolutionary selection pressures,
the notion that attention will get yanked,
will reprioritize everything that's going on
in favor of things that are threatening,
fear inducing, novel related to sex, drugs, rock and roll,
whatever you wanna call it,
that is baked into our brain.
And what's happening now, I think,
is that same capacity of the mind.
And by the way, the metaphor I like to use,
and you probably remember hearing it on the TED Talk,
like this notion of a flashlight.
So we can direct that flashlight willfully,
we can hold it and we can point it.
Just like right now, hearing your voice
and listening to what you're saying
is where my flashlight is pointed.
But if I heard an alarm go off,
if my fire alarm went off,
I'm definitely gonna shift my flashlight
and get the heck out of here, right?
So the notion that the flashlight exists is our capacity,
but it will be yanked because it's the same system
that was designed to pay attention
to things that really matter for our survival.
Now we're in a state of technology
as advanced to the point where algorithms can be developed
that not only know that these are the features
of attention in general, of the human being in general,
but these algorithms allow various software,
social media companies to know what my particular form
of novelty, fear induction, you know,
sex, drugs, rock and roll is.
So now, and by the way,
self-related information will always yank it.
If you're walking down the street
and someone says, Duncan, you know,
that's gonna cause a whole cascade of the way you behave.
That's different than if somebody shouted out Derek, right?
So it's so calibrated to us
that in some sense we cannot win the fight of saying,
I'm just gonna take my attention back right now.
We cannot because everything about us
is actually designed to be pulled in this way.
So on the one hand,
I think if we're gonna fight this collective doom scrolling,
as you called it, we need a different way.
We need to in some sense train our mind
to not simply throw our phone in the nearest river,
but allow ourselves to do the thing
that is not the shortcut or the brain hack,
but the ability to actually pay attention
moment to moment to what we're doing
so that we can make the choices that say,
oh, maybe don't pick up the phone.
Maybe instead of scrolling,
moving my hand in this motion one more time,
I'm not going to do that.
But that requires awareness
of what is happening in the moment.
This, then these are the techniques you talk about
in peak mind.
These are the methods.
I'm curious.
I have yet to read the book,
but I'm excited to as I have diagnosed ADHD
and it's horrible and I'm always losing my keys
and it's like not the fun kind.
It's like the kind where you're like,
because my wife has it,
it means that us leaving the house
is not like normal people leaving the house.
There's gonna be multiple returns to get.
Oh, I feel you.
And just to tell you that I appreciate what you're saying.
In fact, when my husband,
my husband stayed home for the first year
where my son was, before he turned one,
my husband was the sole person staying at home
while I was at the lab working.
And I had put it on the door, a list that was like,
wallet keys, phone, baby,
so that he could check the list.
We really left the house.
And these are very real things that we experience.
So yeah, you'll read about that when you read the book,
but it's essentially to advantage us
to help ourselves a little bit better.
And again, like, yeah, okay,
so I forget my what, whatever, it's annoying,
but this is something my wife has told me about.
This is a phenomena that happens
where parents will go to work
and they've been in this pattern
and they go to work and it's a hot day
and they go to work and three hours into being at work,
they realize they've left their child in the hot car
and the child passes, you know, dies.
And the reason is because of what you're talking about,
because their attention was somewhere different
in the present moment.
This is, you know, I love that you're kind of showing,
yeah, it's going to improve your life
just because you don't have to like,
you're not losing an extra 10 or 20 minutes,
you know, going back for stuff,
but also it could save your life.
Save your life, yeah, it is absolutely consequential.
I mean, really, when I say pay attention
like your life depends on it, I mean, I mean it.
Yeah.
And also that what you pay attention to
ends up becoming your life is also the case.
Wow, yeah, that is, you know,
I know as a scientist,
probably some of the woo wooy new age manifestation stuff,
I don't know what your take is on that,
but this is a theme that appears
in a lot of these teachings,
which is, you know, what do they say?
Where attention goes, energy flows, you know that?
Like, and, but they, a lot of people,
I do believe that it seems like
the more I think about something,
the more I tend to see it around me,
the more I'm worried about something,
the more that worry seems to confirm itself
and my external reality.
Do you, as a scientist, what are your thoughts
on those philosophies that don't just say
our attention makes us who we are,
but say our attention is literally changing reality
around us and by controlling our attention,
we can bring things into our lives
just via some, the function or the power
of our attention span.
What do you think of that stuff?
I mean, I think it, on the one hand,
it perfectly describes what the brain science is saying,
because as we already talked about,
I mean, if I, if you remember to some of the images
that I showed in the talk and I have them in the book too,
like a face and a house overlaid on top of each other, right?
Like it's this weird image that it's like,
it's an ambiguous image in some sense,
like what am I supposed to be looking at?
When we just change, the visual input is the same,
but when we just change what we direct people
to pay attention to,
we see a totally different neural pattern.
Right.
And it's not even, by the way, it could be,
there's other studies that have looked at things
like just a circle and you tell the person,
this is just a circle or you say it's the tire of a car
or you say it's actually somebody's eyeball.
Now all of a sudden, just based on these concepts,
you can get different brain functions occurring.
So attention and as it interfaces with perception,
with comprehension, with action,
is going to change the way that we operate,
which is going to change our moment to moment experience,
which ends up being laced together what our life is.
So I do think that that it's absolutely the case.
Now, I'm not talking about now manifesting anything,
like, oh, if I just think of it, then it'll appear.
I'm not talking about that.
That I have nothing to say about
is from the scientific point of view,
but I am talking about truly it shifts the way
that we perceive and that will cascade
into the way that we behave.
And that's why we want to take it seriously.
So, you know, you're going back to just,
to tap into what you were saying about,
you know, when I'm ruminating,
I'm not having like the most productive, insightful talks,
ideas all the time.
Sometimes I am in my own personal hell.
I mean, you didn't say that,
but I can tell you from my life experience.
I was about to say it.
I just forgot to.
And so, you know, what are the costs of that?
Let's just like to break it down.
What are the costs of that?
Well, the first obvious one is it doesn't feel good.
It does not feel good to be in hell.
Nobody wants that.
But the other costs are, you know,
because attention is a fuel and because it is limited,
when I'm spending out that capacity,
that brain resource on this looping function,
it's not available to notice what's around me,
to interact with the people in my life,
to do those tasks, whether it's service or creativity
or even just a leisurely walk
or watching a beautiful sunset.
I will not have the capacity to do any of that
because the bandwidth of my mind
is now being devoted to looping and getting nowhere.
So just to make that very clear,
that there are costs to it beyond just the direct,
negative mood that it can put us in.
And that, by the way, I want to be very,
I want to actually connect this to, you know,
I know that from your podcast you recently had COVID
and your smell is coming back.
Fascinating, by the way.
Thank you for sharing a lot of that.
As a neuroscientist, I think that it's just really neat
to see neuroplasticity in action, right?
Where you're seeing the reemergence of this.
But the period of the pandemic itself, in some sense,
is a global high stress interval.
Yes.
And that will have consequences for our attention
in the same way that high stress circumstances
for service members during pre-deployment
or deployment itself,
degrades and compromises their attention and mood
and increases their stress levels,
we on a global scale are experiencing this right now.
And it's what I would have predicted, you know,
unfortunately, I never knew the whole world
would be the sort of test bed for these ideas,
but we're seeing it play out.
Unbelievable.
So globally we can expect a kind of reduction
in whatever output is related to being in a more,
how would you put it, a life-friendly,
less stressful circumstance?
We're gonna see, that means, I guess you could predict,
like, and some of the predictions will be obvious,
but you could predict all kinds of changes
in productivity and in artistic output
and in innovation even, are you saying?
Like a pandemic isn't just slowing down innovation
because of the gumming up of the way humans communicate
with each other and interact and gather together,
but also because our minds have been hijacked
by all the fear and stress related to the pandemic.
Yeah, I mean, I think that it'll be interesting to see
because obviously different people
are in different circumstances
and some people may actually have benefits
that are not sort of, we can't describe
with broad brush strokes, but let's put it this way.
So when most of the work that I do
with these consequential high-demand,
high-stress professionals, we can characterize
the circumstances that are likely to drive down attention.
And the shorthand, the acronym for this is VUCA,
volatile V, uncertain U, complex C, ambiguous A.
Wow.
So when you experience VUCA, what we know
is that if we have people come into the lab
and they're about to experience VUCA,
they're gonna go do pre-deployment training,
readiness training, live fire training,
whatever it is in the military context,
track their attention at the beginning of an interval
and then a few weeks later as they've experienced
this VUCA circumstance, track them again,
reliably over and over again,
significant reduction in attention.
Mind wandering goes up, attentional performance goes down,
mood, negative mood goes up, stress levels go up.
So that's the profile that we know VUCA will produce.
And so what I'm saying with regard to the pandemic is
it's a global scale VUCA circumstance.
And so now when people say,
you know, I'm just not feeling as sharp as I normally do,
I feel like I'm walking around in a cognitive fog.
It's like, yeah, that's what happens
when we experience VUCA circumstances.
This is exactly what my lab predicts.
But the other, that's the sort of bad news
is that now on the global scale,
there are gonna be consequences,
second order consequences,
third order consequences of this.
But the very hopeful news is that those same service members
that we saw will decline in their attentional functioning
and their wellbeing over high stress VUCA circumstances
can protect against this
by engaging in mindfulness training
daily over about a four week interval.
What do you, we have to bring it up here.
It's something, I was actually just having the conversation
with someone today about the controversy surrounding
taking these practices which originate from,
you know, people who endorsed peace,
compassion, non-violence
and teaching these practices to people in the military.
Before you say anything, I just wanna say,
I think whatever your reason is for learning mindfulness,
it's a great reason because I think over time,
the practice of mindfulness does more
than just focus the attention.
As you know, I think it broadens the capacity
to be compassionate and could, interestingly enough,
paradoxically, training soldiers in mindfulness,
it might make them more in the present moment
doing whatever it is that they need to be doing.
But over time, I wonder how long they'll stay soldiers
with the sort of what it does for empathy and compassion.
But how do you answer those critics who say,
like, don't teach mindfulness to the military?
Why are we giving this practice to people
who are gonna use it for destruction of violence?
You know, let me just start out by saying very personally
that I was born in the town of Amdabad in India.
That's where Gandhi's ashram is.
My sort of spiritual family life is around pacifism
and non-violence.
And this notion of ahimsa is something I heard about
since I was a child, right?
So you take this sort of non-violent approach,
but it does not mean inaction.
And so I wish that I could say I live in a world
where there is no violence, where there is no war,
where there's no need for armies,
but we don't live in that world.
We live in a world where an 18-year-old
can get a weapon that can destroy a village.
And what I know is that that is the front line of peace
because if that is fired in a way that is uncalculated,
that is not aligned with anything
that is appropriate and useful to do,
the chances of more violence are going to proliferate.
That's what I know.
Interesting.
And so if you want to go to where you want to limit
hell occurring in the world,
go to the sources that are likely to proliferate it.
That's sort of one way to think about it.
Wow, wow, wow, that's cool.
You're saying it's like, okay, sure.
So how about we don't show the mindfulness
and let's enjoy collateral damage,
let's enjoy all the things that will inevitably go along
with someone with a powerful weapon,
panicking, freaking out, losing their attention
in the middle of some kind of battlefield.
It's only going to be worse.
That is the best response I have ever heard
for that critique.
Thank you so much.
That is so cool.
Wow, did you hear that you hippies?
There you go.
That's so good.
But the other thing I'll just say
is that they're human beings and they suffer
like the rest of us, they suffer.
And I don't think these practices were intended
to be exclusive to certain categories of people.
Right.
That's sort of my broader kind of view on this.
So there's multiple reasons,
but to say that it's complicated is true.
I would just push back on some of the notions
that military service members are intending to ensue
violence or destruction.
I mean, it ends up being what happens
with a lot of what occurs in that line of work,
but it's certainly not the intention.
Some of the most peace promoting people
are military service members
because they know that what it takes,
peace is not a default, peace is a lot of work.
And some of the people that I've had the privilege
of getting to know are actually military leaders
who want peace and actually think that the army
should be teaching more regarding peace building.
So I just don't agree that we can ignore the fact
that we are in a circumstance where we do live in a,
at least in the US, a country that has a military.
And by the way, it's not just that they'll go once with
and make mistakes, it's that they're gonna go repeatedly
over the course of their life.
And this is going to be a proliferation
of the challenge of this profession on their lives.
So that's my take on it right now.
A wonderful take.
And you know, thank you for answering that.
I really appreciate that.
Another, your research really makes me think a lot
about the future of technology
and its ability to interface with the human brain.
I'm so interested in those caps.
And not just because what you're discovering,
including what is like,
almost like a description of processing speed
within the human mind, which is incredible
and gives a quantifiable, a way to quantify our brains
and compare them to computers, neural networks.
And I'm just interested in your thoughts
about the future of the sort of technology Elon Musk
is promoting or the possibility of it
not just being a one way street necessarily.
In other words, we gather the data with the caps
or the MRIs or whatever machine we're using.
But then based on that data, give some kind of feedback
that isn't like self-imposed feedback,
but it's technological feedback
so that we can enhance cognition with machines.
What are your thoughts on that?
I mean, clearly that is one of the paths forward.
And I'm sure people must be interested in it
because assigning a human being
to be in charge of their own attention span
is not always gonna be effective.
But if there was some way to, I don't know,
some biofeedback mechanism,
then it seems like people could become increasingly
more efficient.
Hey, do you have any thoughts on that?
Oh, gosh.
Yes, I would say that we are so primitive right now
and understanding of the brain.
And we were talking earlier about that number 50%.
50% is sort of the default of the way
that our mind is not operating well.
If you add in technological solutions,
I mean, just think about where we are right now.
We do not have self-driving cars
and that's a relatively straightforward human activity.
I mean, it's very complex,
but it's still a known, concrete, discreet thing.
We're nowhere near being able to solve that,
let alone allow technology to guide knowing
whether a human being is on task or off task
in some way that the human, his or herself,
their selves could evaluate.
So my bet right now, because I'm 51 years old,
the chances of me seeing a point
in our technological advancement
where we will understand enough about the brain
and the brain's ability to interface with technology,
I don't think we're gonna get there anytime soon.
I think that it's all part of what's happening,
but I actually think it's sort of the wrong-headed approach,
meaning technology is not going to solve the thing
that we have the capacity to do and we're not solving,
which is an awareness of what is happening in our minds
and in our environment moment by moment,
something we call meta-awareness, right?
So knowing the processes and contents of our mind
in an ongoing manner is the thing
that will allow us to know should I get back on task or not,
or should I continue having this very brilliant idea
I'm having or this creative insight I'm having.
That is such a, that's the rich space of creativity
or really the proliferation of things
that will make us more depressed
or solving problems in a creative collaborative manner.
That is one of the most sophisticated things
that humans can do and truly we can only do that ourselves.
We barely understand how to do it ourselves,
let alone now offload that on some piece of technology.
So I would say we're pretty far from being able to do that
and the more we think that that's the answer,
the more we're trying to get ourselves off the hook
from cultivating these capacities ourselves.
Right, you know, because for whatever reason,
cultivating these capacities sometimes is unpleasant
and it's something about the practices
that spiritual people call it.
It's not always like a bed of roses, you know,
when you're coming to learn about these processes.
I'm really curious though to get a little deeper into this,
you mentioned the flashlight, who's holding the flashlight?
When I direct my attention, who's doing the directing?
Right, great question.
I wanna answer that question regarding sort of the emergent
nature of what cognitive control is.
And it's actually another area that my lab
is very, very interested in.
But one of the things I wanna just pick up on one point
regarding the last thing we just discussed,
which is this notion of meta-awareness,
to say that if we devise technological solutions
that are gonna give us an answer,
are you on task or not?
Get back on task.
Let's say it was a little beep that you got that said,
Matt, Duncan, get back to the thing you're trying to do.
You know, Duncan, don't forget your,
Duncan, you're about to forget your keys, don't do that.
Right, the chances of technology picking it up
are always going to be after the fact
of something occurring in your own mind.
So it's already too late.
So we need a system that is going to actually,
in a preparatory manner,
and it actually gets to the question you just asked me,
in a preparatory manner,
be watching what's occurring to prevent or protect against
the thing that is likely to be the error.
Right.
And I just don't think that we,
I think we need to start with the technology
that's already built in before we can do that
as an objective outside of us solution.
So I just wanted to kind of say that.
Okay, well, I mean, okay, let's hang out there
just for a little, a second longer there,
just because it seems like the technology is already there.
It's called every slot machine in Las Vegas.
It's just being used in the wrong way
to grab our attention.
It's being used to manipulate us, hypnotize us,
and like get us into a kind of pattern
of giving our money to the machine.
Or I think these, the things that you're picking up
about the human attention of our,
are being hijacked by AI and by technologies online.
But, you know, my God, someone told me
the horrifying amount of time
that people on average spend on TikTok, for example,
it's an incredible amount of time
because it's so good at grabbing our mind.
So it just seems like we could reverse engineer that
somehow to, I don't know, facilitate the ability
to guide our attention.
Well, that's what I thought that's what you meant.
What I was saying that we don't have
the technological prowess to do,
is to build AI that's going to make meta awareness,
something we can offload.
I think that is not likely to happen.
Technology that can make our attention, very simple,
because our attention is so reliable.
It's like, oh, something threatening,
boom, I'm gonna be over there.
So it's the meta awareness piece
that in some sense is sort of the pinnacle
of our humanity in some ways.
And I think that there's such a long way to go
that we individually as human beings
have to be able to cultivate that better.
And until we can even be better at understanding
what it is, how it worked within the individual ourselves,
there's not even a chance that we can start developing
an understanding of what that is to do it outside of us,
nor do I think it's gonna be a good idea to do that
because it will always be later
than what it would be within us.
And we don't have the room to prevent that,
to prevent, I mean, sorry, we don't wanna wait.
So essentially, let me just put it this way.
If I gave you a piece of software that said,
when you're about to make a mistake, I will let you know.
Probably it's gonna be,
you have already made the mistake
by the time it's gonna let you know.
Right.
So if you could instead be watching
to prevent the occurrence of that mistake,
that would be even better.
So anyway, and I think these are all things
that are a great fodder for conversation and for development.
My interest is in looking at the way the brain is now
and what's in our hands right now.
And in some sense, I'm much more oriented
toward applied low-tech solutions that are very powerful
and using the cutting edge science
that we have to understand the nature of their power.
Love it.
Yeah, it's important.
I mean, Lloyd, what are you gonna do?
Sit around and wait for RoboCop or whatever?
It's just not there, it's fun to ponder.
But to get back to what we were about to jump into,
who's holding the flashlight?
So, okay, so the first thing to say,
and I'm gonna answer at the relative level,
and then we're gonna go into, I think the abstracts,
at the kind of next level,
somebody is holding the flashlight,
but that's a different brain system.
It's something we call executive control.
Executive control is essentially the system
that allows for the emergence of goals
and the holding of goals,
the maintaining and manipulating of goals.
So in some sense, we'd say,
oh, the executive control system is guiding the flashlight.
It's the one that's telling the flashlight
point here or there or shift or whatever.
Then you might say, as a smart person like you would,
well, who's telling executive control to do what it will?
And I have that exact same question.
I've had it for many, many years.
Like, where the heck is this thing coming from?
As an experimenter, most of our studies are we,
as the experimenter, are leading the person
to tell them what to do.
And we'd say, look at this part of the screen
or that part of the screen.
Look at the face, not the house.
And when we set the way that flashlight
should be held in some sense,
we see what the neural consequences of that are.
And we've learned a lot there.
But then the question becomes,
what about the emergent nature of control itself?
How does it emerge?
And so a very simple way that I started thinking about it is,
well, and again, a lot of my own practice
and wisdom traditions have led me to these ideas.
So it's kind of interesting when you can play around
in the brain science space,
but the thought and the considerations
have been around for millennia.
But this notion of a contingent,
the contingent nature of reality becomes very, very interesting.
So what I mean by that is how does our mind in one moment
affect our mind in the next moment?
So when we think about cognitive control,
the ability to put our attention somewhere,
one of the things that we know
is that if our attention system
was required to do something very demanding in one moment
versus something that was not very demanding in one moment,
there will be consequences for the next moment.
So if I give you, let's just say,
I'm gonna give you two types of trials, easy and hard.
It's a working memory task.
Remember one face or remember three faces.
And then a few seconds later,
I'm gonna test out if you remember the correct face, faces.
Right.
So it's easy and hard.
What we know is if in this trial,
I gave you the three face condition,
you're really amping up.
You're like there, you're trying to control your mind.
And then now I look to see what happens the next trial.
Regardless of what happened in the next trial,
you're gonna be better.
Your performance is gonna be higher
when the previous trial was highly demanding versus not.
Wow.
And it's this notion of up-regulation of control.
So the brain sort of readies itself.
It's ready to go.
And sometimes I'll kind of joke with my grad students.
I'm like, it's like the electric stove model of the brain.
You know, I'm an old electric stoves.
I have an induction cooktop now,
but you turn on the stove,
it takes a while for the coils to heat up.
And then even if you turn it off, they're still hot.
So it's like that.
We ramp up control.
We don't need it anymore, but it's still hot.
And that allows for there to be benefits
in the next condition.
That is incredible.
So the idea would be if you have some demanding task
ahead of you, a test, a performance or something like that,
you will benefit from prior to that task,
putting your brain through some kind of
strenuous cognitive exercise.
Potentially.
Now remember, what I'm talking about
is literally seconds between trials.
Okay.
And now, so this is where this notion of demand
and performance is a very interesting relationship.
And we might even say it's like a inverted U.
So when demand is very, very low.
So think of like a graph.
On the X axis, I've got the level of demand
or even say the level of stress that I experienced.
And on the Y axis, I've got performance.
When the demand is low, performance is low.
As the demand ramps up, there is a sweet spot.
That U is gonna, the inverted U is gonna have a little point.
And at that point, you're gonna be very, very high
on your performance.
If you push past that,
you're now gonna start declining.
Diminishing returns.
So there'll be diminishing returns.
So the notion of what controls the controller,
the answer is it's emergent, I think.
It's an emergent evolving process.
And we are constantly our own executive control
and we're our own flashlight
and we're doing all of these things
and there's a feedback loop.
So the complexity gets intense fast,
but it's the right question to ask
because in some sense, if you start realizing,
the notion of my ability to pay attention
is within my own hands.
And what I do in the next moment
is tied to my awareness of how I'm engaging my attention.
All of a sudden, there's a freedom there.
It's like, I have a choice point.
I don't have to just keep going on what I just did.
I can actually intervene multiple times,
which actually relates back to your point regarding AI.
If we can do that with our online attention
and make multiple choice points,
the chances of us being able to recalibrate,
not stay on TikTok for 11 hours on end
is probably gonna improve.
Wow, it's so cool.
It's been almost, it has been an hour.
Do you have time for one more question?
Thank you.
I'm sorry, I know you're a scientist.
I have scientists on the show.
I feel like I frustrate them
because my mind, I'm just very interested
in the paranormal and very interested
in my own personal experiences
with things that seem incredibly anomalous
as far as how I understand the default,
or how default reality understands
the working of the human mind.
Well, I don't want you to apologize for that
because that is sort of our role as scientists
is to try to discover what truth is.
And it can be messy because some things
that people experience don't fit into the current paradigm,
but that means probably the paradigm's wrong.
Oh, right, that's what, I mean, that's the sense is like,
anyone who has maybe worked with a teacher
or has had an encounter with someone who has like,
whatever you want to say,
has probably experienced things that it's like,
that's impossible.
Like not like, oh, this is a,
what do they call it, confirmation bias,
but like, there's just no way that,
Ram Dass talks about it
and his encounters with Neem Karoli Baba.
But when you talk about the immeasurable,
quantifiable sort of energy
that is happening in the human brain
to the point where we know,
you were saying in that TED talk,
it's like at the back of your head
where there's like literal parts of the brain
where facial recognition is taking place
and an associated energy there,
isn't it possible that some via some mechanism
we don't understand yet?
And without those like shower,
technological shower caps
that I could somehow read the energy
moving through your brain
and from whatever that intuitive thing was,
give the impression that I'm reading your mind
or that I have extra sensory perception?
I mean, a lot is possible.
Right. A lot is possible.
What I would say is,
and I agree with you,
those Neem Karoli Baba stories are so compelling
and you're like, what the heck?
And the respect for Ram Dass himself,
I mean, he's no chump, he's a scientist, right?
Yeah. So he himself had to grapple with that,
which I found, I just found fun,
because I'm like, you know, you figure that out.
Like, how are you thinking about that kind of thing?
But what I would say is, here's the challenge, right?
So we can make as scientists,
we can make all kinds of claims,
we can make all kinds of models.
Really the test is a reproducibility
so that we can actually have an idea,
test it out and see if that idea is supported or not.
And when I hear of these incredible stories,
I just wish we could figure out a way
to harness their occurrence.
So it wasn't just the random chance thing
that happens every now and then,
or it happens in some distant land
by people that are no longer alive, right?
That's the tricky one.
It's like, well, what about now?
Bring them into our land.
So I really feel that the more we can interface
with people and ideas
that don't fit the current models
of the brain as the factory for consciousness,
well, let's start testing those out.
I mean, I'm not scared of that.
What I'm interested in is what's actually going on.
What is the, are we gonna be able to grasp
the nature of even consciousness?
You know, right now our models are,
and we are making progress in this area,
but it's still within this framework that, yes, of course,
the brain is the generator of conscious experience.
The alternative model from a lot of other wisdom traditions
is that the brain is sort of like an antenna
for consciousness,
and that's what allows people to do these things
that appear like mind reading
or non-local kind of stuff, et cetera.
So if this alternative model has enough,
we have enough experience with it as human beings,
well, then it should be able to be something we can,
as presuming that we have the technology to pick it up,
we should be able to check it out,
and we just need enough participants,
and we need it to happen on demand enough
so that we can test it out.
But the only reason I would say that
that isn't the dominant model right now
is because we have not been able to do that reliably
with reaching a threshold of evidence
that most scientists would say, yeah, yeah,
that's definitely the case.
Building models and breaking them apart
is the nature of science,
so we should always be ready for that,
and holding on to any view is just,
it's not really in the spirit of what science actually is.
Wow.
Dr. Amishi, thank you so much for your time,
and I'm so excited to read Peak Mind.
Folks listening, it's out now, you can get it on Amazon,
go to your, what's your website, doctor?
It's amishi.com.
Amishi.com, you can get it there, I don't know,
which would you prefer, where would you prefer?
Yeah, go to wherever you want,
but if you go to amishi.com,
then you can find all the places
including local bookstores to buy it.
You are a brilliant human,
thank you for the work that you're doing,
and I'm so excited to read your book,
and thanks for coming on the show.
Oh, it's been a lot of fun, thank you so much, Duncan.
Thank you, Adi Krishnan, thank you.
That was Dr. Amishi Jha, everybody.
Check out her book, Peak Mind,
a big thank you to our sponsors,
Babbel, My Sheets Rock, and True Bill,
and thank you for listening.
Please subscribe to the Patreon,
it's patreon.com forward slash DTFH.
I love y'all, and I'll be seeing you next week
and next year.
Until then, Hare Krishna.
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