Hidden Brain - Radio Replay: Fresh Starts
Episode Date: December 30, 2017Unpredictable things happen to us all the time. In the process of getting back on your feet, you may realize that something's different. On this Radio Replay, we mark the new year with two of our favo...rite stories of loss and the change it brings.
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vidantantham.
Unpredictable things happen to us all the time.
Your car breaks down.
The babysitter cancels.
You get sick.
Those little moments shift the direction of your day or your week.
And then there are the bigger things in life.
The earthquake kind of change that shakes everything around you,
that breaks down your sense of who you are and what your life is.
And in the process of getting back on your feet, you might realize that something's different.
Maybe you come out of it with a new perspective, a sense of direction you never imagine.
Today on the show, we have two stories of that kind of change and the transformation it brings.
Oh, and we have some pretty beautiful music that comes with those stories.
Derek Amato is sitting at the piano in NPR Studio 1.
As you're listening to him play,
you might think he's had years of musical training.
But Derek is unusual.
He's said to have something called
a quiet Savan syndrome that left him
with the incredible ability to play the piano.
We'll talk about what that means,
but let's back up a minute.
I grew up a typical kid.
I was an extremely aggressive athlete.
So that was kind of my thing.
I was a baseball football basketball player.
You were a jock.
I was a jock, yeah.
I had musical interest from very early on.
My grandmother was a organ player for the church. So I mean, I was around it. I remember
Sunday mornings going, sitting next to her on the bench, and even though I didn't understand
what she was doing or how to play the instrument, I loved to sit with her and sing. It was just
my comfort zone as a child when I go to church. I get to sit and watch her play the organ and sing.
It was just my comfort zone as a child when I go to church. I get to sit and watch her play the organ and sing.
At his mother's insistence, Derek dabbled in music.
He joined the school band, played drums,
tinkered around with a guitar, formed a rock band with friends,
but he did not take formal lessons
or get any musical training.
OK, so that's the setup.
What happens to Derek in 2006 is both terrifying and fascinating.
What happens to Derek in 2006 is both terrifying and fascinating.
He was in South Dakota visiting friends and family. I got together with some friends and we were going to have a little barbecue party at the pool and indoor pool.
And we were horsing around and this young man walked in. He must have been about 14, 12, 14.
And he had this little
miniature football with him.
So of course, we started throwing the football at each other, and I thought I could just
run on the side of the pool and then dive over the water and catch the football in the
air.
And the idea was you would catch it and then fall into the pool.
Yeah, just catch it in the air and then fall into the water.
So I went running on the side of the pool.
And I remember, I remember running alongside the pool.
I remember even diving in to catch the ball.
And I knew I was diving towards a shallow end.
I was very aware and I miscalculated the depth obviously
and I hit the upper left side of my face.
And that's all I remember.
It was like an explosion.
And you know, most of us had a head trauma
when we were a kid or hit our head.
And it's that sickening feeling you get when it's like,
oh no, I know something.
I just did something extremely wrong.
And this isn't right.
And I knew I had hurt myself.
Diagnosis was a massive
concussion. And what was the treatment? Relax, stay quiet, lay in bed for a few
days. I spent the night at the hospital the next morning they sent me home. I
went home and I slept for five days basically. And then you get up and do what?
We sit at the table and I said, well,
I feel pretty darn good. I know I had an accident and I'm not sure what happened. And I said,
well, I'm in a pack and I think I can go back to Denver in a couple days. So I called Rick and I
said, why don't you come over and get me, we'll say goodbyes and I'll be on my way in a couple of days. And so we went over to the apartment and we were just hanging out.
And he had this tiny keyboard,
just this little piece of junk in the corner.
And it was just on the stand, dusty and not sure
if it had ever been played.
And I kept staring at it as we were talking.
And we were just sitting talking like just like this.
And I kept looking at it and looking at it curious.
It was like not sure why I was drawn to it and I finally just walked over to it and I thought
I'll just hit a few of these keys. I turn it on and see what happens. I had no clue and I sat down
and my fingers just went crazy. My fingers were like somebody just...
I don't know, Rick said the ghost of Beethoven jumped into my body. I don't know how else to explain it.
I went crazy and just played and played.
And it wasn't like I was just picking away.
What did you play?
I played...
I think it was more of a classical structure to it.
And I sat there and did this for, I don't know, five, six hours without stopping.
And we just, I remember looking at him and there was tears rolling out his face.
I mean, he's a Christian coward, he's a pretty emotional guy.
He's a sweet, sweet man.
And he just, you know, he didn't know what to think as,
because I mean, I'm known him since we were kids.
And he'd never seen me play a piano, so he's like,
what's going on? I'm not sure what's going on.
I didn't want to stop playing because I was like, well, what if I stop and then and then this doesn't happen tomorrow morning
I mean this is kind of cool. I don't I mean, it doesn't happen every day
You just sit out and start playing a piano. So I think this is kind of different. Let's let's just stay here for a while
It must have been two o'clock in the morning and I was exhausted. My brain was flying still is racing and
So he took me back to my mother's house,
we had a call the day, I was beat up.
And I went to bed and the next morning I woke up
and I was paranoid, I was nervous, I was scared,
I was like, how am I going to tell my mother?
The person that knows me best on this planet.
I just hit my head and I'm a little
whacked out. How am I going to tell her that I just discovered that I know how to play
the piano fairly well to a person that's known me my entire life, 40 years? So I said, well,
I don't know any other way than to take her to a music store.
So I said, we had a cup of coffee and I said,
it's front of the music store real quick.
And she said, what do you want to buy?
And I said, nothing.
I said, I just want to show you something real fast.
I went teller.
We get to the music store.
We walk in, the salesman says, I don't know, like, you know,
he can help you, he wants to sell me something.
And I said, if you show me how to get this piano,
this digital piano on, that's all I need.
And then give me just 10 minutes.
So he turns it on, shows me how to turn the darn thing on.
I tell my mother to sit down next to me.
What did you play?
I don't quite remember what I played that time, but I was doing more of a...
I wanted to sing to her for some reason because it was such an emotional thing.
And I was going into like...
And I just started to kind of chord this and she was looking at me like, whoa, when did
this transpire?
I mean, she had all kinds of questions right away.
And then I just kind of went nuts and started going crazy just to show her, look at this,
look at this.
And she started crying, she really did say much.
It was a very quiet drive home.
As you're telling me this, Derek, I almost have the feeling that you are pulling my leg right now
because it seems this is not possible.
This is just simply not, it could not have happened.
You know, well, if I would have had my way,
I'm not sure if I would have ended up a piano player.
I kind of wanted to be a baseball player
and I were working the fighting business.
So I don't know.
And you know what, I invite skepticism because I think when something so
beautiful and profound happens, we have to, we have to question.
At what stage did you stop questioning that you had a scale?
I'm assuming that you were skeptical as well.
I mean, you told me that when you went home the first night, you were afraid that
it was going to be a one day scale and and was going to be gone by the next morning.
At what point did you stop questioning it and say, this is actually a new skill that I
have?
You know, I think you kind of grow into that, getting comfortable with accepting what's
transpired in your life.
I definitely didn't want it to go away.
In the first year or two, it was a little, you know, like I would wake up thinking,
I need to get to a piano.
I need to make sure it's still here.
And as time went on, I started to understand that,
well, the doctors tell me it can go away as fast as it came.
And acquired musical savants syndrome,
that means you've acquired a gift.
And I got to that point where I just accepted the fact
that I'm going to enjoy every second of this.
Because if I wake up tomorrow and it's gone,
I want to be able to say that I did the best I could
to display it to a society looking in at my life
and say,
I've been inspired by this,
or the human potential is amazing,
or the brain is just a magnificent organ
that we don't know anything about.
And I think it became that comfort knowing that,
I'm gonna enjoy it every single second.
And if it stays beautiful, if it goes away then
I guess I'll go get a job.
Have you spoken to neurologist who is skeptical about what's happening to you?
I think they're all skeptical the moment they walk in the door.
I mean, I feel skeptical.
I'm sorry, I know that you're a nice guy.
You seem like a trustworthy person.
Right, right, I expect you to be.
But I have the feeling that you're just,
this is just one big giant prank.
Well, that's because I'm still, I'm articulate
and I still have most of my marbles.
So I can display the story in a different way
than let's say the guy that hit his head
and woke up a piano player, but he's not all here.
If I asked you to play Twinkle, Twinkleinkle Little Star for me, could you try that?
I don't think I can play it.
I tried to do happy birthday for a person the other day and I couldn't figure it out.
No.
Answers no.
It's taught with C. Is that this one right here?
Oh.
Wait. Oh wait.
Where was that first note then?
Wait.
Where it, oh.
So it's all up and down.
Gosh, darn it. I can see it now.
I mean, that's kind of the there.
Thanks for the first note, though.
But it's sort of an interesting thing, isn't, which is like you don't go up, you don't
see someone who says, you know, I can throw a fastball at, I don't know, 140 miles an
hour, but I don't know how to reach out and shake your hand.
And to me, your displaying musical ability at one end of the spectrum,
whereas playing Twinkle Twinkle Little Star,
I can do that.
And you find it hard,
and I find it just really difficult to understand
how you can be so good at the extreme end
without knowing the basics.
I'm right there with you.
I'm on your side.
I'm fascinated with that too.
Does it disturb you? Does it worry you that you have this ability?
No, I mean
I'm a Christian kid, so I think I think this is what God wants me.
I think this has already been penned out my story. I
How else I mean I have to live with this every day, so if I sit and beat my own mind up about,
is this nature versus nurture and nature and all this nonsense?
But I mean, I've talked to the best doctors, the smart doctors, and the planet.
And they all got a different little input.
And they all got something different to say about it.
Most all of them are skeptic when I walk in.
And most all of them when I walk out
are right here with me.
Have any of them suggested treatments?
Yes, yes.
The Dr. Reeves at the Mayo Clinic
when I was filming with the Discovery Channel,
he was fascinated with this as well.
And he said, the best way to fair him to explain
is like a roller coaster.
If you get on a roller coaster that doesn't stop,
sooner or later it's going to get tiring.
So maybe we suggest slowing down the stimulant,
the overstimulated brain, you're firing these neurons
at a pace that's unheard of.
So let's try some.
Seize your medication to shut those down, right? I don't
know understand how it works, but I do know it slows down the firing of the
neurons. Why would I want to take synthetic drugs and mask something
possibly that I'm enjoying to the point where I don't want it to slow down
and go away. I'll take the hyperness and the ADHD and OCD and all that garbage that comes
with this maybe.
What if it has a consequence where you are burning your brain at a level that is not healthy
for you.
I mean, so for example, let's...
Then I guess I go down on fire, baby.
And that's how the story ends, and I'm good with that.
You're still the guy who would die for the swoop football of the swimming pool.
Yeah.
Of course, Derek Amato isn't the only person with a quads of Ancindro. Others have experienced
the profound changes that come with this condition.
They are so motivated, they are in love with what they're doing. It's almost like an extension
of who they are. Also, I'm going to challenge Derek to play the studio wall. I see on this wall, I see these squares.
Some of them have different depths, so the full squares almost feel like a whole note to me.
Keep listening, it'll make more sense soon.
I'm Shankar Vedantam and you're listening to Hidden Brain from NPR. This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
This week on the show, we're looking at the specific moments people lose something big
and how that change can point them in new directions.
Before the break, Derrick Amato told us a story of how he became a musician after a head
injury.
Before the accident, he couldn't play the piano.
But after, his musical talent was just undeniable.
If this is the first time you're hearing our show, I have a confession to make.
I'm a card-carrying rationalist.
When surprising things happen, I don't call them miracles.
I look for explanations.
Derrick's very charming, his story's amazing, but I found myself asking over and over
how something like this could happen.
That's when I came by a couple of researchers who've spent years studying people who've
suddenly acquired savant-like gifts.
Darrell Treffert is a psychiatrist in Wisconsin.
He studied Derek.
And I must say that in his case, I am, you know, was a sturdle as you
about the fact that he went to the piano and knew where to place his fingers and so forth.
The reason that I'm inclined to accept that is because I've seen that in some of these
other cases although probably not quite as abrupt as he but and to me at least that having
seen a lot of sub-hands when I see some of these acquired sub-hands cases it is really quite
jarring.
I don't know if you remember what Derek said about his injury.
He leaped across the swimming pool for the football, and when he came down hard, he heard
what sounded like an explosion.
And I miscalculated the depth, obviously, and I hit the upper left side of my face.
The left side of his face.
That's an important clue. In general, in Savonsen Room itself, whether congenital or acquired, there tends to be a more
left brain injury with right brain compensation and the right brain areas or
ability that seem to emerge have to do with art music and mathematics, actually.
Art, music, and math. All skills that involve pattern recognition.
At the University of Pennsylvania, cognitive psychologist Scott Barry Kaufman said,
think about it. These are the skills you might imagine are built into the architecture of the brain.
In other words, we might come
hardwired for certain kinds of activities. This is the insight that helped me see that
Derek might not be pulling a prank. Most of us, in fact, effortlessly learn things.
Just like Derek says, he never took classes to learn piano, you probably didn't take
formal lessons to learn your first language.
The truth is that a lot of things we learn in life were not done deliberately.
When we were very young and the teachers of 2 and 4 we learned a huge amount of new words
and learned the grammatical structure of our language automatically without we didn't
sit down when we were 2 years old and say, right, I'm'm gonna learn all the grammatical syntax and what it all means and so we have these structures that help us
learn if you look at it this way most people have skills that might seem
Savant like to a visitor from another planet we learn these skills effortlessly in fact
It doesn't even feel like learning it feels like fun
What makes Savants unique in other words is not that their brains
do amazing things. All brains do amazing things. What's different is that they're demonstrating
effortless learning in domains that usually call for sustained effort.
Now I'm not going to tell you you should go out and bang your head against the floor
of a swimming pool to learn to play the piano. The vast majority of concussions don't produce
an inner genius, they have terrible outcomes. But Derek's story does suggest, even to
this card carrying rationalist, that we have worlds within us, gifts, that we do
not realize that we possess. When I look at these savants, what I see at the core
that I think is, offers a lot of inspiration to humanity, is that they are so motivated,
they are in love with what they're doing.
It's almost like an extension of who they are.
To me, that offers a lot of hope,
or inspires me that perhaps all of us
can find that vehicle that really allows us to sing.
As Derek was playing the piano in NPR studio one,
I noticed there was a wall behind him.
It had soundproofing, hollow wooden cubes,
each of a different depth.
Derek had told me that when he plays,
he sees squares floating by him.
So I asked him to turn around, look at the wall,
and tell me what he saw.
I see on this wall, I see these squares.
Some of them have different depths.
So the full squares almost feel like a whole note to me.
I ask Derek to play the wall for me.
I see low notes because of all the depth.
You see the dark ones that are filled in all the way?
They stand out, so I see low notes like... Now I'm in the middle boxes.
See where I'm at now in those middle boxes, so those are...
And that's a whole different...
Now we're getting into a whole different thing.
Now I'm getting excited.
Got any more walls with the look at that.
So you were just playing the wall?
That's what you were playing with.
I was playing what I was.
I was playing what I was.
So I started here.
Okay, so imagine that's the music bar. So I played the top one. I'll do it again. I'll do it precisely exactly like I started here. Okay, so imagine that's the music bar. Yeah.
So I played the top one, I'll do it again.
I'll do it precisely exactly like I saw it.
And then it changes to this bar, we've moved down now now and now we're going to move down to
the next bar of music and I see.
And then we'll go back up to the top and then we can make a jazz.
And that's, and I mean it just goes on and on and on and on and on and these walls could
be dangerous because I wouldn't want to sleep at all.
If I had walls like this in my house.
Are you telling me that you have never played
the piece of music you just played for me in your life before?
No.
And this third row might even be a whole different composition.
That's what I'm saying.
The depths of those blocks, those middle rows
and those circles in the middle,
that's what these are to me.
That's what those are rolling patterns to me.
And then those chunky ones on the top, that's where I see that.
And it just changes like that, suddenly.
And then I moved out of the next one and it's a whole different flow.
That was musician Derek Amado, who acquired his piano skills after accidentally hitting his head.
For Derek, everything changed when he gained an incredible talent. His life now points in an exciting new musical direction.
But sometimes, the most valuable moments are when some things take away from you.
In those times, you can see a different kind of growth, growth from subtraction, renewal from loss.
I was really devastated to lose something that I was completely in love with and so passionate
about and that had really constituted such a large part of my life and my identity.
You know, I was first and foremost a violinist.
This is Maya Shankar, in one important moment her whole life changed. My grandmother was an Indian classical violinist and so my mom had her old violin and
our attic for many years.
Maya's story begins in an attic in Connecticut and eventually brought her to the Obama White
House.
But more on that later.
Each of my three older siblings had rejected the violin saying that it wasn't cool enough.
And my mom finally gave me the instrument
and I was immediately taken kind of by the tactile sensation of the instrument.
I mean the wood and the bow.
I just loved the feeling of playing the violin.
Maya's mother didn't know much about western classical music, but she signed up her daughter
for lessons using the Suzuki method.
The focus was on playing by ear and making beautiful sound.
Maya practiced constantly.
I had a special scheduled school to lump all my classes together so that I come a little
bit early and get a little bit more practice in, and especially with all the traveling,
most days were devoted exclusively to music.
She got good, very good. Now the part of her musical education that was missing was the formal part.
She didn't know how to read music very well, but she had a fine ear, and she had ambition.
In the pursuit to find a teacher who would take her to the next level, Maya's mother did something quite daring.
Yeah, so my mom, she was really a go-getter when it came to my violin life because, like I said,
she didn't really have a lot of experience or exposure to the music community and kind of had to innovate in order to find opportunities.
There were a New York one day close to the Julia Art School, one of the world's most famous and exclusive music institutions, when her mother came up with an idea, she said,
Why don't we just go to Juilliard?
I mean, why not?
Right, what can we lose?
Just walk in the door.
We just walked in.
So we walked into the building and just by happenstance, we happened to run into a student
in the elevator who studied with a music teacher and my mom talked to that
family and the elevator and said, would you mind if we just had about five or ten minutes
at the end of your lesson where Maya could play for your teacher?
And they were really gracious and they said, sure, no problem.
Of course, you know what happened next.
Maya played for the other students' music teacher, wowed the teacher, and got accepted into a summer program.
Soon she was taking classes at Juilliard.
She was playing with other talented musicians.
She was even being featured on NPR.
Joining us now is the Juilliard Pre-College Violin Quartet.
They are 17-year-old Emily Gendron from Glastonbury, Connecticut.
15-year-old Maya Shankar from Cheshire, Connecticut.
Maya, by the way, is a from-the-top veteran.
She's been with us since the early 50s.
LAUGHTER
That was Maya on NPR's From-the-Top.
She had found her classical music home.
She was talented, hard-working,
and the path before her seemed clear.
I really wanted to be a violinist.
I was so passionate about it.
I never felt more comfortable than when I was performing.
For some reason, that's where I experienced flow.
And the ability to spend a lot of time practicing and trying to perfect the art, and then you
go on stage and you kind of just surrender.
You play to the best of your abilities. There's just something beautiful and elegant about that process, and I enthusiastic that opportunities kept presenting themselves.
One day her teacher at Juliet arranged for her to play for a famous violinist, a very
famous violinist.
I nearly fell over in my seat because no reasonable musician thinks they're going to get
the opportunity to meet its octoprole and let alone play for its octoprole.
Do you remember what you played?
I played the Barber violin concert, I played the first movement. It's so apparelment decided to take her on as a student.
In addition to Saturdays, I was also going to New York multiple times during the week,
either for studio classes at his home in Manhattan or for private lessons or chamber music lessons
And at that point it was very clear to me that I wanted to become a concert violinist
Well, I remember that she sounded...
She had a very lovely way of making music and that's for me, it was the most important thing
To concert violinist Itzag Pearlman, it was okay that Maya had learned to play music by
ear rather than by reading music.
The technical stuff was important, but it could be learned.
You know, it's more important for me to have somebody musical.
And let's say that the technique wise has, you know, you have to work on the technique,
but the important thing is the music.
And I felt that she had a very lovely way of phrasing and so on and so forth.
And so we worked on that, but then we also worked on how do you accomplish technically
certain things.
For example, in the Barber Concert, a little lost movement is a little bit tricky.
So how do you practice that.
But its'ak pyramid didn't just teach Maya how to play the violin, he taught her something much more important.
How to teach herself to play the violin.
I remember lots of lessons were instead of telling me, Maya my okay, clearly you're unsatisfied with that phrase.
Here's what you should do to make it better.
He would instead say, my clearly you're unsatisfied with that phrase, what do you think you
should do in order to make that phrase better?
Let's talk about it.
Let me hear what your aspirations are for the arc of this musical phrase.
What tools do you have at your disposal, either with your bow arm or your vibrato or your
tone in order to make it beautiful and it's really frustrating.
I mean in the moment you're thinking, okay man, you're the expert here.
You know?
Just tell me what to do.
Please just tell me what to do and make this easier for both of us.
So the more you learn to think for yourself and to try and solve problems on your own,
the better it is for you for the future.
It was all going so well.
When Maya was 15, she was practicing at a program run by its sock prolement.
And I was playing a passage from a very challenging Paganini Caprice.
And I simply overstretched my finger on one note and I felt a kind of a popping.
And so I overstretched the tendon and it didn't really heal as expected.
And so how did you spend the next months?
What did you do?
Well, Mr. Prolman was such a gem
because I had injured my left hand.
He continued to teach me violin
just with my bow arm.
So for over a year,
I went to him and we just worked on perfecting my bow arm
and I would just play open strings
in every lesson and he would teach me about how to produce a beautiful sound.
You know, you always feel that it will know, it will resolve itself, so usually what happens
if one hand doesn't particularly, you know, respond or anything like this, you work on
the other hand just, you know, not to waste time just to do so if you've got your left
hand that's a problem, then you work on the right hand and vice versa.
Do you remember anything from Maya's attitude as she was dealing with this?
As a student. You know, her attitude was obviously she wasn't, I mean, I'm sure that she was feeling
good about it, but it was never like what's the use.
Maya's hand didn't heal.
Doctors finally told her she had to stop playing completely.
I was really devastated to lose something that I was completely in love with and so passionate about
and that had really constituted such a large part of my life and my identity.
You know, I was first and foremost a violinist.
And so I was anxious because I was worried that I would never find something
that I felt as passionately about as I did with music.
Just like that, Maya's dream to become a concert violinist was over.
Back home for the summer in Connecticut, she started to ask herself how she could pick up the pieces,
would she ever find anything that could make her as happy as the violin?
What we found was a 9% increase in college enrollment rates.
As a result of 8 text messages.
I mean, that is really profound.
8 text messages is what I send my best friend on any given day.
To find out what Maya did, stay with us.
I'm Shankar Vedantam and you're listening to Hidden Brain from NPR.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam. This week we're looking at loss and renewal,
with zeroing in on the unexpected moments in life that shift our trajectories.
Before the break, a young violinist named Maya Shankar learned that she could no longer
play her instrument because of an injury in her left hand. Up until this point, her whole
life had revolved around music.
Not knowing what else to do,
Maya retreated to her parents' home in Connecticut.
Her life felt in disarray.
The summer before, doctors basically told me
I had to stop playing completely.
And just by luck, I was helping my parents
clean their basement and chest her Connecticut,
and I stumbled upon an old course book
of my sister's, it was called The Language Instinct by Stephen Pinker.
My I started reading, and the more she read, the more excited she became.
It was remarkable for me to learn about just how complex our minds were and just what was
required in order for us to have our day-to-day experiences.
And so it really wet my appetite for learning more about the mind and for exploring
and more depth, kind of the brilliance of the brain. She started to study cognitive science.
She went on to get her PhD at Oxford on a Rhodes scholarship. She got a postdoctoral fellowship,
a promising career in academia lay ahead of her. But here again, came another unexpected turn. So over Thanksgiving break of the final year of my post-doc, I was at home and I was visiting
my undergraduate advisor from college, named Laurie Santos, and she was telling me about
the U.S. Department of Agriculture's efforts to get free and reduced price lunches, school
lunches, into the hands of more eligible students.
Students were going hungry because the process
of getting certified for the lunch program was cumbersome.
The Department of Agriculture came up with a simple idea.
Instead of having a multi-step sign-up system,
states could use information they already had
about poor families to help enroll children
in the lunch program.
And it's just a matter of data matching
and cross-enrolling these students.
But as a result of this common sense reform,
you know, 12.4 million students,
as of 2015, were automatically enrolled
into the school lunch program
and had access to lunches
and were able to thrive at school.
And I remember being so moved by this example.
Dumbaya, it was magical.
It was just like a light bulb went off in my head,
and I thought, okay, this is what I need to be doing with my life.
I want to be taking research insights from the behavioral sciences
and allowing them to find their way into public policy
so that they can be in the service of Americans and people around the world.
So how do you break into the world of policy when you're just a lowly postdoc?
Maya knew nothing of politics. She didn't have connections in the world of government.
But she did remember a lesson her mother had taught her standing outside the Julia at school
years earlier. She tracked down an email
address for Thomas Kalea, who was helping the Obama administration with its science policy.
I sent Tom again a cold email. This is the Juilliard method again.
This is my mom's Juilliard. I have to give her full credit for this. She is totally fearless
and kind of inspired this trait. And I went over to his home and he asked me to pitch to him ideas
that I had around interventions where behavioral science could improve public policy outcomes.
What are you telling him?
I talked to him about a number of things like the importance of using social norms to motivate
behavior.
So, we know from research that if you tell people that their neighbors use less energy
than they do, right, they people that their neighbors use less energy than they do,
they're more likely to use less energy.
And there's a lot of domains in which just telling people what the data shows about people's
actions and decisions can actually drive actions that are more in alignment with people's long-term
goals or with policy objectives.
And something that struck me about that conversation is I had been talking
for years with my academic colleagues about the potential applications of using behavioral insights
to improve people's lives. And this was the first time that when I told him an idea that I had,
his response was, oh, we can find a way to do that. When I interviewed Maya in the fall of 2015,
President Obama had just signed an executive order announcing that the White House was going to build behavioral insights into policy.
Maya became senior adviser for the social and behavioral sciences at the White House,
and in her new role, she was able to work on SNAP, the school lunch project that had initially so inspired her.
I asked her to explain what they were working on.
So we have been working with the U.S. Department of Agriculture and also local school districts
to redesign communications that they're sending to families to help promote the verification
process so that their kids can stay on the benefit.
So we've done a few things.
So there's a few behavioral insights that we've used.
One is we've taken a very long list of action steps
required for verification and condense them
into three easy to understand steps that you can take.
Two, we've worked with school districts
to translate the communications into multiple languages
in order to support comprehension
among the diverse population that this program serves. translate the communications into multiple languages in order to support comprehension among
the diverse population that this program serves.
One issue is that at present, families might only think the way to recertify or to verify
their information is to send snail mail back to the school district.
And instead, there's the opportunity for them to take a picture of their information using
their mobile phones and actually email it back.
And we simply notified people of the opportunity
to go through that process.
And then in other instances, we included prepaid envelopes
to help ease the process of verifying eligibility.
So I'm trying to think about why it is
we often have trouble sort of thinking about programs like this
because as someone who has been interested
in human behavior for a while, it seems to me that programs like these really are, you know,
no pun intended, a no-brainer, that this is really something that we should be doing. It seems obvious
that we should be doing it. But I think part of the issue is that I think many people might say,
if you want to stay in a program that's giving you benefits and these are the steps you need to
do in order to get the benefits and you deserve those benefits. Rationally speaking, you should be willing to do those steps in order to get the
benefits and I think it fails to take into account the difference between how
human beings are supposed to behave as rational creatures and how they actually
behave and I feel like that's the central divide that your work is trying to
bridge.
And I think additionally, you know, the onus is on the government to present information
clearly, to present choices clearly, so that people understand what program exists and
what their options are and can make the best decisions for themselves and their families.
But there's one example that I wanted to point to, which is a phenomenon known as summer
melt. This is the phenomenon where talented high school students who are I wanted to point to, which is a phenomenon known as summer melt.
This is the phenomenon where talented high school students who are on track to go to
college at the start of the summer somehow lose their way and don't show up at college
in the fall.
Maya and her team have worked on simple, low-cost interventions that can help these students
get to college.
Their idea, send the students eight text messages over the summer reminding them of impending deadlines.
What we found was a 9% increase in college enrollment rates. As a result of eight text messages,
I mean that is really profound. Eight text messages is what I send my best friend on any given day.
It seems to me that what you did and what happened to you is actually happens to lots of people
all the time where doors close and they feel like it's unbearable that this door is closed
because this is where I thought I lived.
And then another door opens and you realize there are actually many, many houses in which
we can live.
I think that's exactly right.
And I think one thing that violin, one of the great blessings of playing the violin is that
it allowed me to see what it really felt like to be in love with something and to be really
passionate about something.
And so, if anything, you see sort of features or traits that are extracted in you from engaging
with that pursuit. And then your hope is that in the new explorations,
those disciplines or those areas
can extract those same qualities from you.
I'm wondering as you think about your own life,
do you feel that your career now has been set?
This is the house you're gonna live in forever.
Do you actually believe, on the other hand,
that there might be many other houses
you will one day come to live in?
Well, certainly never been happier than I am right now working in public service and
using my background to help improve people's lives. So I think that that will continue to be a
common theme of whatever it is that I end up doing and working in. That said, I think there are
so many ways in which that passion can manifest, right? And I think that one thing the past has taught me
is that the world has endless opportunities
to positively impact people's lives.
And, you know, along the way,
I might explore various different paths in order to get there,
but as long as I stick to that core value
of trying to help people and improve people's lives,
I think that there are many ways to do that.
And of course you have the cold-called Julia Admeta to aid you.
Yeah, so I think that, again, thanks to my mom, I think that there is always that full
proof method of the standard cold-called.
That was Maya Shankar.
She served as senior advisor for the Social and Behavioral Sciences
at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy on the President Obama. Since then,
Maya has left the White House and become Google's first head of behavioral insights. Now, not all of us are going to be great pianists or concert violinists or road scholars or
presidential advisors, but I don't think any of those things are the real point of Derek or Maya's
story. I think we all have stories in our lives that reflect the fact that the people we are today are not the same people we were a few years ago. We often underestimate our capacity to reinvent ourselves.
I was talking some years ago with Rick Potts at the Smithsonian Institution's Human Origins
program. He's a paleoanthropologist and something he said stuck in my head. He told me that
the thing that distinguished early humans from other species
was our remarkable capacity to adapt to different conditions.
Uniquely, humans live in very cold places, in very hot places, at altitude and sea level.
Some of us live long periods underwater or even in outer space.
Most of that isn't about our physical abilities, it's really about the mind.
There's a lot of truth in that old saying when one door closes, another opens.
I want to leave you with a lovely poem by Elizabeth Bishop.
Singer Amy Mann happened to be at NPR and we asked her to read the poem for us.
One art by Elizabeth Bishop.
The art of losing isn't hard to master.
So many things seem filled with the intent to be lost, that their loss is no disaster.
Lose something every day, except the fluster of lost door keys, the hour badly spent, the
art of losing isn't hard to master.
Then practice losing farther, losing faster, places and names and where it was you meant to travel.
None of these will bring disaster.
I lost my mother's watch.
And look, my last or next to last of three loved houses went.
The art of losing isn't hard to master.
I lost two cities' lovely ones and Vastor, some realms I owned,
two rivers, a continent.
I missed them, but it wasn't a disaster.
Even losing you, the joking voice, a gesture I love.
I shant have lied.
It's evident the art of losing is not too hard to master,
though it may look like, write it, like disaster.
That was Amy Mann, reading one art by Elizabeth Bishop.
Amy was at NPRR to perform with Ted Leo for the All Songs Considered Podcast.
This episode was produced by Lucy Perkins, Maggie Penman and Kara McGurk-Allison. NPRR to perform with Ted Leo for the All Songs Considered Podcast.
This episode was produced by Lucy Perkins, Maggie Penman and Kara Mugurk Allison.
Our team includes Jennifer Schmidt, Parth Shah, Raina Cohen and Renee Clarre.
Our supervising producer is Tara Boyle.
One last thing before we go, we're working on an episode about the revolution that's
unfolding before our eyes against sexual harassment.
We're thinking about a story that asks, why now?
What has changed in the moment to cause so many women to come forward and so many institutions
to take a hard look at themselves?
If you have a story or a theory you'd like to share with us, record a voice memo and
send it to us at HiddenBrain at NPR.org.
That's HiddenBrain, one word, at NPR.org. You can also call and leave us a message at 661-772-7246.
That's 661-772-Brain.
For more HiddenBrain, follow the show on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram and make sure to subscribe to our podcast. brain.
of help. Please give it to them. I'm Shankar Vedantam. I hope you have a happy New Year. I'll see you
next week.