Lex Fridman Podcast - #139 – Andrew Huberman: Neuroscience of Optimal Performance
Episode Date: November 16, 2020Andrew Huberman is a neuroscientist at Stanford. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Eight Sleep: https://www.eightsleep.com/lex and use code LEX to get $200 off - SEMrush: htt...ps://www.semrush.com/partner/lex/ to get a free month of Guru - Cash App: https://cash.app/ and use code LexPodcast to get $10 EPISODE LINKS: Andrew's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hubermanlab Andrew's Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_D._Huberman Andrew's Website: http://www.hubermanlab.com/ PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LexFridmanPage - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (06:24) - Fear (14:36) - Virtual reality (18:20) - Claustrophobia (20:08) - Skydiving (21:43) - Overcoming fears (26:43) - Optimal performance (29:57) - Deep work (45:22) - Psychedelics (49:08) - Deep work (1:02:48) - Everything in the brain is an abstraction (1:10:06) - Human vision system (1:21:42) - Neuralink (1:49:12) - Science of consciousness (2:04:00) - David Goggins (2:21:04) - Science communication (2:28:36) - Man's Search for Meaning
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The following is a conversation with Andrew Huberman, a neuroscientist at Stanford,
working to understand how the brain works, how it can change through experience,
and how to repair brain circuits damaged by injury or disease.
He has a great Instagram account at Huberman Lab, where he teaches the world about the brain and the
human mind. Also, he's a friend and an inspiration in that he shows that he can be humble, giving,
and still succeed in the science world.
Quick mention of each sponsor, followed by some thoughts related to the episode.
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As a side note, let me say that I heard from a lot of people about the previous conversation
I had with Iran Brook about
objectivism. Some people loved it, some people hated it. I miss spoken some parts,
was more critical on occasion than I meant to be, didn't push on certain points
that I should have, was undereducated or completely unaware about some major
things that happened in the past or major ideas out there. I bring all that up to say
that if we are to have difficult conversations, we have to give each other space to make mistakes,
to learn, to grow. Taking one or two statements from a three-hour podcast and suggesting that they
encapsulate who I am, I was, or ever will be, is a standard that we can't hold each other
too.
I don't think anyone can live up to that kind of standard, at least I know I can't.
The conversation with Iran is mild relative to some conversations that I will likely have
in the coming year.
Please continue to challenge me, but please try to do so with love and with patience.
I promise to work my ass off to improve, whether I'm successful at that or not, we shall
see.
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And now, here's my conversation with Andrew Kuberman. You've mentioned that in your lab at Stanford, you induce stress by putting people into virtual
reality and having them go through one of a set of experiences.
I think you mentioned this on Rogan or with Whitney, that scare them.
So just on a practical, psychological level and maybe on a philosophical level, what are
people afraid of?
What are the fears?
What are these fear experiences that you find to be effective?
Yeah, so it depends on the person, obviously.
And we should probably define fear, right?
Because you can, without going too far down the rabbit hole of defining these things. You know, you can't really have fear without stress, but you could have stress without fear.
And you can't really have trauma without fear and stress, but you could have fear and stress without trauma.
So, you know, we can start playing the word game, and that it actually is one of the motivations
for even having a laboratory that studies these things, is that we really need better
physiological, neuroscientific, and operational definitions of what these things is that we really need better physiological, neuroscientific,
and operational definitions of what these things are. I mean, if the field of understanding
emotions and states, which is mainly what I'm interested in, is very complicated. But we can
do away with a lot of complicated debate and say, in our laboratory laboratory what we're looking for to assign it a value of fear is
a big inflection in autonomic arousal, so increases in heart rate increases in breathing,
perspiration, pupil dilation, all the hallmark signature features of the stress response.
And in some cases we have the benefit of getting neurosurgery patients where we've got electrodes
in their amygdala and their insula and the orbital frontal cortex down beneath the skull.
So these are chronically implanted electrodes, we're getting multi-unit signals.
And we can start seeing some central features of, meaning within the brain.
And what's interesting is that as trivial as it might seem in listening
to it, almost everybody responds to heights and falling from a high virtual place with a
very strong stress, if not fear, response.
And that's because the visual of a Stibular Apparat, I write the optic flow and how it
links to the, you know, balance semi-circular canals, the inner ear, all this technical stuff. But
really all of that pulls all your physiology, the feeling that your stomach is dropping, the feeling
that you're suddenly you're sweating even though you're not afraid of falling off this virtual
platform, but you feel as if you're following, the falling, excuse me, because of the optic flow, that one is universal.
So we've got a dive with great white sharks experience where you actually exit the cage.
We went out and this and the real world and brought back 360 video that's built out pretty.
Oh, so this is actually 360 video.
360 video.
And this was important to us, right?
So when we decided to set up this platform a lot of the
motivation was that a lot of the studies of these things in laboratories I don't want to call them
lame because I want to be respectful of the people that did this stuff before but they'd study
fear by showing subjects a picture of a bloody arm or a snake or something like that and it just
unless you have a snake phobia it just wasn't creating a real enough experience.
So we need to do something where people aren't gonna get injured,
but where we can tap into the physiology
and that thing of presence of people momentarily,
not the whole time, but momentarily,
forgetting they're in a laboratory.
And so heights will always do it.
And if people wanna challenge me on this,
I like to point to that movie, Free Solo,
which was wild because it's an incredible movie,
but I think a lot of its popularity can be explained
by a puzzle, which is, you knew he was gonna live
when you walked in the theater,
or you watched it at home.
You knew before that he survived,
and yet it was still scary that people somehow were able
to put themselves into that experience or into Alex's experience enough that
They they were concerned or worried or afraid at some level. So Heights always does it
If we get people who have generalized anxiety, these are people who
Walk wake up and move through life at a generally higher state of autonomic arousal and anxiety
Then we can tip them a little
bit more easily with things that don't necessarily get everyone afraid. Things like claustrophobia,
public speaking, that's going to vary from person to person. And then if you're afraid of sharks,
like my sister, friends is afraid of sharks, she won't even come to my laboratory. Because there's
there's a thing about sharks in it. That's how terrified some people are of these specific stimuli, but heights get some
every time.
Yeah.
And I'm terrified of heights.
It's, you know, when we have you step off a platform, virtual platform, and it's a
flat floor in my lab, but we, you're up there.
Well, you actually allow them the possibility in the virtual world to actually take the leap of faith.
Yeah, maybe I should describe a little bit of the experiment.
So without giving away too much,
in case someone wants to be a subject
in one of these experiments,
we have them playing a cognitive game.
It's a simple lights out kind of game
where you're pointing a cursor
and turning out lights on a grid,
but it gets increasingly complex and it speeds up on them.
And, you know, there's a failure point for everybody where they just can't make the motor commands
fast enough. And then we surprise people essentially by placing them virtually all of a sudden,
they're on a narrow platform between two buildings. And then we encourage them or we
cue them with a, by talking them through a microphone to continue
across that platform to continue the game.
And you know, some people, they just won't, they actually will get down on the ground and
hold on to a virtual beam that doesn't even exist on a flat floor.
And so what this really tells us is the power of the brain to enter these virtual states
as if they were
real.
We really think that anchoring the visual and the vestibular, the balance components of
the nervous system are what bring people into that presence so quickly.
There's also the potential, and we haven't done this yet, to bring in 360 sound.
The reason we did 360 video is when we started all this back in 2016, a lot of the VR was pretty
lame, frankly, it was CGI.
It just wasn't real enough.
But with 360 video, we knew that we could get people into this presence where they think
they're in a real experience more quickly.
And our friend Michael Muller, who I was introduced to because of the project, I reached out to
some friends.
Michael Muller is a very famous portrait photographer in Hollywood, but he dives with great white sharks and he leaves the cage.
And so we worked with him to build a 360 video apparatus that we could swim under water
with, went out to Guadalupe Island, Mexico, and actually got the experience.
It was a lot of fun.
There were some interesting moments out there of danger, but it came back with that video
and built that for the sharks.
And then we realized we need to do this for everything. We need to do it for heights. We need to do it for public speaking, for claustrophobia.
And what's missing still is 360 sound where 360 sound would be, for instance, if I were to turn around and there was a
like a giant attack dog there, the moment I would turn around and see it, the dog would
growl, but if I turned back toward you, then it would be silent. And that brings a very real
element to one's own behavior, where you don't know what's going to happen if you turn a corner. Whereas
if there's a dog growling behind me, and I turn around and then I turn back to you and it's still
growling, that might seem like more of an impending threat
but, and sustain threat,
but actually it's when you start linking
your own body movements to the experience.
So when it's closed loop,
where my movements and choices are starting
to influence things and they're getting scarier
and scarier, that's when you can really drive people's
nervous system down these paths of high states
of stress and fear. Now we don't wanna traumat people, obviously, but we also study a number of tools that allow
them to calm themselves in these environments. So the short answer is heights.
Yeah. Well, from a psychology and from a neuroscience perspective, this whole construction that
you've developed is fascinating. We did this a little bit with Atomas vehicles, so to try to understand the decision-making process
of a pedestrian when they cross the road and try to create an experience of a car that
can run you over.
So there's the danger there.
I was so surprised how real that whole world was.
And the graphics that we built wasn't ultra realistic or anything, but I was still afraid
of being hit by a car.
Everybody we tested were really afraid of being hit by that car.
Even though it was all a simulation.
It was all a simulation.
It was kind of a boxy, actually.
I mean, it wasn't like ultra realistic simulation.
I mean, it's't like ultra realistic simulation.
I mean, fascinating.
Looms and heights.
So any kind of depth, we're just programmed to,
not necessarily recoil, but to be cautious about that edge
and that depth.
And then looms, things coming at us that are getting larger.
There are looming sensing neurons even in the retina,
at a very, very early stage of visual processing. And incidentally, the way mallard and folks learn
how to knock at eaten by great white sharks when you're swimming outside the cage is as they
start lumbering in, you swim toward them. And they get very confused when you loom on them
because clearly you're smaller, clearly they could eat you
if they wanted to.
But there's something about forward movement toward any creature that that creates your
questions whether or not it would be a good idea to generate forward movement toward
you.
And so that's actually the survival tool of these KJX-it white shark divers.
Are you playing around with like one of the critical things for the autonomous vehicle
research is you couldn't do 360 video because the there's a game theoretic. There's
an interactive element that's really necessary. So maybe people realize this, maybe they don't,
but 360 video, you obviously, what's actually not that obvious to people, but you can't change
the reality that you're watching. That's right. So you find that there's something fundamental about fear and stress that the
interactive element is essential for. Or do you find you can arouse people with just the video?
Great question. It works best to use mixed reality. So we have a snake stimulus. I personally
don't like snakes at all. I don't mind spiders. We also have a spider stimulus, but snakes
I just don't like them. There's something about the slithering and it just creates a visceral
response for me. Some people not so much and they have lower levels of stress and fear in there.
But one way that we can get them to feel more of that
is to use mixed reality where we have an actual physical bat
and they have to stomp out the snake as opposed to just walk to a little safe corner
which then makes the snake disappear.
That tends to be not as stressful as if they have a physical weapon.
And so you've got people in, banging on the floor against this thing. And there's something about engaging that
makes it more of a threat. Now, I should also mention we always get the subjective report
from the subject of what they experience, because we never want to project our own ideas about
what they were feeling. But that's a beauty of working with humans as you can ask them how they feel. And humans aren't graded explaining how they feel. But it's a lot easier
to understand what they're saying than a mouse or a macaque monkey is saying. So it's the best we can do
is language plus these physiological and neurophysiological signals. Is there something you've learned
about yourself, about your deepest fears? Like you said snakes.
Is there something that, like if I were to torture you, I'm Russian, so, you know, I always kind of think,
how could I murder this people then, this person that entered the room, but also how,
how could I torture you to get some information out of you?
What would I go with?
It's interesting you should say that I never considered myself
claustrophobic, but because I don't mind small environments provided they're well ventilated.
But before COVID, I started going to this Russian Bonya. You know, and then we jumped here. And I
had never been to Abonya. So, you know, the whole experience of really, really hot sauna. And what
do they call it the plot? So they're hitting you with the leaves experience of really, really hot sauna. Yeah. And what are they called the plots?
So they're hitting you with the leaves.
Yeah.
And it gets really hot and humid in there.
And there were a couple times where I thought,
okay, this thing is below ground.
It's in a city where there are a lot of earthquakes.
Like, if this place crumbled and we were stuck in here,
and I'd start getting a little panicky, and I realized,
I don't like small confined spaces
with poor ventilation.
So I realized I think I have some claustrophobia.
And I wasn't aware of that before.
So I put myself into our own claustrophobia stimulus,
which involves getting into an elevator,
and with a bunch of people, virtual people,
and the elevator gets stalled.
And at first, you're fine, you feel fine.
But then as we start modulating the environment, and we actually can control levels of oxygen
in the environment if we want to, it is really uncomfortable for me.
And I never would have thought, you know, I fly, I'm comfortable in planes, but it is
really uncomfortable.
And so I think I've unhatched a bit of a claustrophobia.
Yeah.
Yeah, for me as well probably.
That one, that one's pretty bad.
The heights I tried to overcome,
so I went to skydiving to try to overcome the fear of heights.
Well, that didn't help.
Did you jump out?
Yeah, yeah, I jumped out, but it was a,
it was fundamentally different experience than, I guess there could be a lot of different flavors of your heights maybe but the
One I have didn't seem to be connected just jumping out of a plane is a very different because like once you accept that you're going to jump
Then it's it's a different thing. I think what I'm afraid of is
The moments before it
is the scariest part.
Absolutely.
And I don't think that's emphasized
in the skydiving experience as much.
And also just the acceptance of the fact
that it's going to happen.
So once you accept it, it's going to happen.
It's not as scary.
It's the fact that it's not supposed to happen,
and it might, that's the scary part.
I guess I'm not being eloquent in this description,
but there's something about skydiving
that was actually philosophically liberating.
I was like, wow, it was the possibility
that you can walk on a surface,
and then at a certain point,
there's no surface anymore to walk on and it's
All said in the world becomes three-dimensional and there's this freedom of floating that the concept of like
of Earth disappears for a brief few seconds. I don't know those those
While that was wild, but I'm still terrified of heights
So I mean one one thing I want to ask just unfair
because it's so fascinating is have you learned anything
about what it takes to overcome fears?
Yes.
And that comes from two from a research studies
standpoint, two parallel tracks of research.
One was done actually in mice because we have a mouse lab also where we can
Probe around in different brain areas and try and figure out what interesting brain areas we might want to probe around in the humans and
Graduates do in my lab. She's now at Caltech
Lindsay Salay
Published a paper back in 2018 showing that what at first might seem a little bit obvious
showing that at first might seem a little bit obvious, but the mechanisms are not, which is that there are really three responses to fear.
You can pause, you can freeze essentially,
you can retreat, you can back up, or you can go forward.
And there's a single hub of neurons in the midbrain,
it's actually not the midbrain, but it's in the middle of the thalamus,
which is a four-brain structure.
And depending on which neurons are active there, there's a much higher probability that a
mouse or it turns out or a human will advance in the face of fear or will pause or will
retreat.
Now, that just assigns a neural structure to a behavioral phenomenon.
But what's interesting is that it turns out that the lowest level of stress or autonomic arousal
is actually associated with the pausing
and freezing response.
Then as the threat becomes more impending
and we use visual looms, in this case,
the retreat response has a slightly higher level
of autonomic arousal and stress.
So think about playing high and go seeking
or trying to stay quiet in a closet that you're hiding.
If you're very calm, it's easy to stay quiet and still.
As your level of stress goes up,
it's harder to maintain that level of quiet and stillness.
You see this also in animals that are stalking
a cat will chatter its teeth.
That's actually sort of top down in a vision
of trying to restrain behavior.
So the freeze response is actually an active response,
but it's fairly low stress.
And what was interesting to us is that
the highest level of autonomic arousal
was associated with the forward movement toward the threat.
So in your case, jumping out of the plane.
However, the forward movement in the face of threat
was linked to the activation of what we call collateral, which means just a side connection,
literally a wire in the brain that connects to the dopamine circuits for reward. And so
when one safely and adaptably, meaning you survive, moves through a threat or toward a threat, it's rewarded as a positive experience.
And so the key, it actually maps very well the cognitive behavioral therapy and a lot of the
existing treatments for trauma is that you have to confront the thing that makes you afraid.
So otherwise you exist in this very low level of reverberatory circuit activity where
the circuits raw to
anomic arousal are humming and they're humming more and more and more.
And we have to remember that stress and fear and threat were designed to agitate us so
that we actually move.
So the reason I mention this is I think a lot of times people think that the maximum stress
response or fear response is to freeze and to lock up. But that's actually not the maximum stress response or fear response is to freeze and to lock up.
But that's actually not the maximum stress response.
The maximum stress response is to advance,
but it's associated with reward.
It has positive valence.
So everyone always thinks about the bell shape curve
for at low levels of ralasal performance is low
and as the increases performance goes higher and then it drops off as you get really stressed but there's another bump
Further out that's distribution where you perform very well under very high levels of stress
And so we've been spending a lot of time in humans and in animals exploring what it takes to get people comfortable to go to that place and
Also to let them experience how there are heightened states of cognition there,
there's changes in time perception that allow you to evaluate your environment at a faster
frame rate essentially. This is the matrix, as a lot of people think of it. But we tend
to think about fear as all the low level stuff where things aren't worked out. But there are many, there are a lot
of different features to the fear response. And so we think about it quantitatively and
we think about it from a circuit perspective in terms of outcomes and we try and weigh
that against the threat. So we never want people to put themselves in unnecessary risk,
but that's where the VR is fun because you can push people hard without risk of physically injuring them.
And that's, like you said, the little bump.
That seems to be a very small fraction of the human experience, right?
So it's kind of fascinating to study it because most of us move through life without ever
experiencing that kind of focus.
Everything's in a peak state there.
I really think that's where optimal performance lies.
There's so many interesting words here,
but what's performance and what's optimal performance?
We're talking about mental ability to what
to perceive the environment quickly,
to make actions quickly, what's optimal performance?
Yeah, well, it's very subjective and it varies depending on task and environment. So one
way we can make it a little bit more operational and concrete is to say, there is a sweet spot,
if you will, where the level of internal autonomic arousal, AK stress or alertness, whatever you want to call it, is ideally matched
to the speed of whatever challenge you have to be facing in the outside world. So we all have
perception of the outside world, this extra reception and the perception of our internal
real estate, interoception. And when those two think, when interoception and exteroception are matched along a couple dimensions, performance tends to increase.
It tends to be in an optimal range.
So for instance, if you're, I don't play guitar, but I know you play guitar.
So let's say you're trying to learn something new on the guitar.
I'm not saying that being in these super high states of activation are the best place
for you to be in order to learn, it may be that your internal arousal needs to be at a level where
your analysis of space and time has to be well matched to the information coming in and
what you're trying to do in terms of performance, in terms of playing chords and notes and so
forth. Now, in these cases of high threat where things are coming in quickly and animals and humans
need to react very quickly, the higher your state of autonomic arousal, the better.
Because you're slicing time more finely, just because of the way the autonomic system
works.
The pupil dilation, for instance, and movement of the lens essentially changes your optics,
and that's obvious.
But with the change in optics is a change in how you've been time and slice time, which
allows you to get more frames per second read out.
With the guitar learning, for instance, it might actually be that you want to be almost
sleepy, almost in a kind of drowsy state to be able to, and I don't play music, so I'm guessing here,
but since some of the nuance in the chords
or the ways that you're, to be relaxed enough
that your fingers can follow an external cue,
so matching the movement of your fingers
to something that's pure extra reception.
And so there is no perfect autonomic state for performance.
This is why I don't favor terms like flow perfect autonomic state for performance.
This is why I don't favor terms like flow because they're not well operationally defined enough,
but I do believe that optimal or peak performance
is going to rise when internal state
is ideally matched to the space time features
of the external demands.
So there's some slicing of time that happens
and then you're able to adjust a slice time
more finely or more, less finely in order to adjust
to the stimulus, the dynamics of the stimulus.
What about the realm of ideas?
So like, you know, I'm a big believer, There's a guy named Cal Newport who wrote a book
about deep work. Yeah, I love that book. Yeah, he's great. I mean, one of the nice things, I'm always
practice deep work, but he, it's always nice to have words put to the concepts that you've practiced,
it somehow makes them more concrete
and allows you to get better.
It turns it into a skill, thinking you're better at.
But I also value deep thinking,
where you think it's almost meditative.
You think about a particular concept
for long periods of time.
The programming you have to do that kind of thing for.
You just have to hold this concept like you hold it and you take steps with it, you take further steps and you're holding relatively complicated things in your mind as you're thinking about them.
And there's a lot of, I mean the hardest part is there's frustrating things like you take a step, but it turns out to be the wrong direction.
So you have to calmly turn around and take a step back.
And then it's you kind of like exploring through this space of ideas.
Is there something about your study of optimal performance that could be applied to the act of thinking as opposed to action?
Well, we haven't done too much work there, but what,
but I think I can comment on it from a neuroscience perspective,
which is really all I do is, well,
I mean, we do experiments in the lab,
but looking at things through the lens of neuroscience.
So what you're describing can be mapped fairly well
to working memory, just keeping things online
and updating them as they change and information
is coming back into your brain.
Jack Feldman, who I'm a huge fan of and fortunate to be friends with, is a professor at UCLA
works on respiration and breathing, but he has a physics background.
So he thinks about respiration and breathing in terms of ground states and how they modulate
other states.
Very interesting and I think important work.
Jack has an answer to your question.
So I'm not going to get this exactly right because this is lifted from a coffee conversation
that we had about a month ago.
But so apologies in advance for that, but I think I can get mostly right.
So we were talking about this about how the brain updates cognitive states depending
on demands and thinking in particular.
And he used an interesting example, I'd be curious to know if you agree or disagree.
He said, you know, most great mathematics has done by people in their late teens and
20s, and even you could say early 20s,
sometimes into the late 20s, but not much further on.
Maybe I just insulted some mathematicians,
but that's true.
And I think that it demands, his argument was,
there's a tremendous demand on working memory
to work out theorems in math,
and to keep a number of plate spinning,
so to speak, mentally, and run back and forth between them updating them.
In physics, Jack said, and I think this makes sense to me too, that there's a reliance on working memory,
but an increased reliance on some sort of deep memory and deep memory stores, probably stuff that's moved out of the hippocampus and forbraining into the cortex and is more some episodic and declarative stuff, but really
so you're pulling from your library basically.
It's not all RAM, it's not all working memory.
And then in biology, physicists tend to have very active careers into their 30s and 40s
and 50s and so forth. Sometimes later, and that in biology, you see careers that have a much longer arc, these
protracted careers often.
People still in their 60s and 70s doing really terrific work, not always doing it with their
own hands because people in the labs are doing them of course.
And that work does tend to rely on insights gained from having a very deep knowledge base where you can remember a paper and
or maybe a figure in a paper you could go look it up if you wanted to, but it's very different than the working memory of the mathematician.
And so when you're talking about coding or being in that tunnel of thought and trying to iterate and keeping a lot of plate
spinning, it speaks directly to working memory.
My lab hasn't done too much of that.
With working memory.
But we are pushing working memory when we have people do things like these simple lights
out tasks while they're under...
We can increase the cognitive load by increasing the level of autonomic arousal to the point
where they start doing less well.
And everyone has a cliff.
This is what's kind of fun.
We've had, you know, seal team operators come to the lab, we have people from other units
in the military, you know, we've had a range of intellects and backgrounds and all sorts
of things.
And everyone has a cliff.
And those cliffs sometimes show up as a function of the demands
of speed of processing or how many things you need to keep online. I mean, we're all limited at
some point in the number of things we can keep online. So what you're describing is very interesting
because I think it has to do with how narrow or broad the information set is. And I don't program,
I'm not an active programmer, so this is a regime I don't
really fully know, so I don't want to comment about it in that in any way.
That, you know, doesn't suggest that, but I think that what you're talking about is top
down control.
So this is prefrontal cortex, keeping every bit of reflexive circuitry at bay.
The one that makes you want to get up
and use the restroom, the one that makes you want to check your phone, all of that, but
also running these anterior thalamus to prefrontal cortex loops, which we know are very important
for working memory.
Yeah, let me try to think through this a little bit.
So reducing the process of thinking to working memory access is tricky.
It's probably ultimately correct. But if I were to say some of the most challenging things
that an engineer has to do and a scientific thinker, I would say, it's kind of depressing to
think that we do that best in our 20s. But is this kind of first principles thinking step of saying you're accessing
the things that you know. And then saying, well, let me, how do I do this differently than I've done it before? This weird like stepping back,
like, is this right?
Let's try it this other way.
That's the most mentally taxing step.
It's like, you've gotten quite good
at this particular pattern of how you solve
this particular problem.
So there's a pattern recognition first, you're like, okay, I know how to, I build a thing that solve this particular problem. So there's a pattern recognition first, you're like,
okay, I know how to build a thing
that solves this particular problem in programming, say.
And then the question is, but can I do it much better?
And I don't know what the hell that is.
I don't know if that's accessing working memory.
That's almost, maybe it is accessing memory
in a sense that's trying to find similar patterns
and it's a totally different place
that could be projected onto this.
But you're not querying facts,
you're querying like functional things like patterns.
I mean, you're testing algorithms. Yeah, it's patterns. I mean, you're running out, you're testing algorithms.
Yeah, right.
You're testing algorithms.
Yes.
So I want to just, because I know some of the people listening to this and you have basis
in scientific training and have scientific training.
So I want to be clear, I think we can be correct about some things like the role of working
memory in these kinds of processes without being exhaustive.
We're not saying they're the only thing.
We can be correct, but not assume that that's the only thing involved.
Right.
And I mean neuroscience, let's face it, is still in its infancy.
I mean, we probably know 1% of what there is to know about the brain.
We've learned so much, and yet there may be global states that underlie this that make prefrontal
Circusary work differently than it would in a in a different regime
Or even time of day. I mean, there's a lot of mysteries about this
but so I just want to make sure that we sort of are
We're aiming for precision in accuracy, but we're not gonna be exhausted
Yeah, so there's a difference there and I think I think sometimes in the vastness of the internet,
that gets forgotten.
So the other is that we think about these operations
at really focused, keeping a lot of things online.
But what you were describing is actually,
it speaks to the very real possibility,
probably that with certainty,
there's another element to all this,
which is when you're trying out lots of things
in particular lots of different algorithms,
you don't want to be in a state of very high autonomic arousal.
That's not what you want, because the higher level of autonomic arousal and stress in the system,
the more rigidly you're going to analyze space and time.
And what you're talking about is playing with space-time dimensionality.
And I want to be very clear, I'm the son of a physicist, I am not a physicist.
When I talk about space and time, I'm literally talking about visual space and
how long it takes for my finger to move from this point to this point.
You are facing a tiger and trying to figure out how to avoid being eaten by the tiger.
And that's primarily a space and time and by the visual system in humans.
We don't walk through space, for instance, like a sentown wood and look at three-dimensional
sent plumes.
You know, when a sentling goes out in the environment,
they have depth to the odor trails,
the odor trails they're following.
And they don't think about them,
we don't think about odor trails,
you might say, oh, the smell's getting more intense.
Aha, but they actually have three-dimensional odor trails.
So they see a cone of odors.
See, of course, with their nose,
with their ol' factory cortex.
We do that with our visual system, and we parse time, often subconsciously, mainly with
our visual system, also with our auditory system.
This shows up for the musicians out there, metronomes are a great way to play with this,
base drumming, when the frequency of base drumming changes, your perception of time changes
quite a lot.
In any event, space and time are linked in that through the sensory apparatus, through the eyes and ears and nose and probably through
taste too and through touch for us, but mainly through vision. So when you drop into some
coding or iterating through a creative process or trying to solve something hard, you can't really do that well
if you're in a rigid, high level of autonomic arousal
because you're plugging in algorithms
that are in this space regime, this time regime matches.
It's space time matched, whereas creativity,
I always think the lava lamp is actually a pretty good example
even though it has these counter-culture, new AG connotations
because you actually don't know which direction things are going to change.
And so in drowsy states, sleeping and drowsy states, space and time become dislodged from
one another somewhat, and they're very fluid.
And I think that's why a lot of solutions come to people after sleep and naps, and this
could even take us into a discussion if you like about psychedelics. And what we now know, for instance, that people thought that psychedelics work by just creating
spontaneous bursting of neurons and hallucinations. But the five-h, two C-A and two C and two A receptors,
which are the main sites for things like LSD and psilocybin and some of the other
halluc- the ones that create hallucinations, the drugs that create hallucinations.
Most of those receptors are actually in the collection of neurons that encase the phalamus, which is where all the sensory information goes into.
A structure called the thalamic reticular nucleus. nucleus and it's an inhibitory structure that makes sure that when we're sitting here
talking that I'm mainly focused on whatever I'm seeing visually that I'm essentially eliminating
a lot of sensory information.
Under conditions where people take psychedelics and these particular serotonin receptors are
activated, that inhibitory shell, it's literally shaped like a shell, starts losing its ability to inhibit the passage
or sensory information, but mostly the effects of psychedelics
are because lateral connectivity in layer five of cortex,
across cortical areas, is increased.
And what that does is that means that the space-time relationship
for vision, like moving my finger from here to here, very rigid space-time relationship, right?
If I slow it down, it's slower, obviously, but there's a prediction that can be made based
on the neurons and the retina and the cortex.
On psychedelics, this could be very strange experience.
But the auditory system has one that's slightly different space-time, and they're matched to
one another in deeper circuits in the brain.
The olfactory system has a different space-time relationship to it. So under conditions of these increased activation of
these Sartonan receptors, space and time across sensory areas starts being fluid. So I'm no longer
running the algorithm from moving my finger from here to here and making a prediction based on vision alone, I'm now, this is where people talk about hearing sites, right? You start linking, this might actually
make a sound in a psychedelic state. Now, I'm not suggesting people run out and do psychedelics
because it's very disorganized. But essentially what you're doing is you're mixing the algorithms.
And so when you talk about being able to access new solutions, you don't need to rely on psychedelics.
If people choose to do that, that's their business.
But in drowsy states, this lateral connectivity is increased as well.
The shell of the thalamus shuts down.
And what's, these are through these so-called ponds chiniculate occipital waves.
And what's happening is you're getting whole brain activation at a level
that you start mixing algorithms.
And so sometimes I think solutions come not from being in that narrow tunnel of space
time and strong activation of working memory and trying to iterate if this then that's
very strong, deductive, and inductive thinking and working from first principles, but also
from states where something that was an algorithm that never, you never had in existence before.
Suddenly gets lumped with another algorithm and all of a sudden a new possibility comes to mind.
And so space and time need to be fluid and space and time need to be rigid in order to come up with something meaningful.
And I realize I'm riffing long on this, but this is why I think,
there was so much interest a few years ago
with Michael Pollan's book
and other things happening about psychedelics
as a pathway to exploration and all this kind of thing.
But the real question is what you export back
from those experiences.
Because dreams are amazing,
but if you can't bring anything back from them,
they're just amazing.
I wonder how to experiment with a mind
back from them, they're just amazing. I wonder how to experiment with a mind
without any medical assistance first.
Like, you know, I pushed my mind
in all kinds of directions.
I definitely want to, I did the shrooms a couple of times.
I definitely want to figure out how I can experiment
with psychedelics,
talking to Rick Domen, I think.
I think Domen.
Soon, I went back and forth,
so he does all these studies in psychedelics
and he keeps ignoring the parts of my email
that asks, like, how do I participate in these studies?
Well, there are some legality issues.
I mean, conversation, I won't be very clear.
I'm not saying that anyone should run out and do psychedelics. I think that drowsy states and sleep states are super interesting for accessing some of
these more creative states of mine.
Hypnosis is something that my colleague David Spiegel, associate chair of psychiatry,
at Stanford works on, where also again, it's a unique state because you have narrow context.
So this is very kind of tunnel vision and yet deeply relaxed where new algorithms
if you will can start to surface. Strong state for inducing neural plasticity. And I think
that, you know, so if I had a, I'm part of a group that it's called the liminal collective
as a group of people that get together and talk about just wild ideas, but they try and implement.
And it's a really interesting group, some people from military, from
Logitech and some other backgrounds, academic backgrounds.
And I was asked, you know, what would be, if you could create a tool,
if you just had a tool like your Magic Wand wish for the day, what would it be?
I thought it would be really interesting if someone could develop psychedelics that have on-off switches. So you could go into a psychedelic
state very deeply for 10 minutes, but you could launch yourself out of that state and place
yourself into a linear real-world state very quickly so that you could extract whatever it was
that happened in that experience and then go back in if you wanted. Because the
problem with psychedelic states and dream states is that first of all a lot of
the reason people do them is they're lying. They say they want plasticity and
they want all this stuff. They want a peak experience. Inside of an amplified
experience. So they're kind of seeking something unusual.
I think we should just be honest about that
because a lot of times they're not trying to make
their brain better, they're just trying to experience
something really amazing.
But the problem is space and time are so unlocked
in these states, just like they are in dreams,
that you can really end up with a whole lot of nothing.
You can have an amazing amplified experience housed in an amplified experience and come
out of that thinking you had a meaningful experience when you didn't bring anything back.
You didn't bring anything back.
All you have is a fuzzy memory of having a transformational experience, but you don't
actually have tools to bring back.
All right. Sorry. Actually yeah, tools to bring back. All right. Sorry. Actually, actually concrete ideas to bring back.
Yeah, it's interesting.
You should, yeah, I wonder if it's possible to do that with the,
with the mind to be able to hop back and forth.
I think that's where the real power of, you know,
adjusting states is going to be.
It probably will be with devices.
I mean, maybe it'll be done through pharmacology.
It's just that it's hard to do on offoff switches in human pharmacology that we have them for
animals. I mean, we have, you know, CreeFlip recombinases and we have, you know, channel
options and halo-rid options and all these kinds of things. But to do that work in humans
is tricky, but I think you could do it with virtual reality, augmented reality,
and other devices that bring more of the somatic experience into it.
You're, of course, a scientist who's studying humans as a collective.
I tend to be just one person's scientist, just looking at myself.
And, you know, I play, when these deep thinking, deep work sessions, I'm very cognizant like in the morning that
there's times when my mind is so like eloquent at being able to jump around from ideas and
hold them all together.
And I'm almost like I step back from a third person perspective and enjoy that whatever
that mind is doing.
I do not waste those moments.
And I'm very conscious of this little creature that's
only awake for being honest, maybe a couple hours a day.
Early part of the day for you.
Early part of the day.
Not always, early part of the day for me
is a very fluid concept.
So you're one of those.
Yeah, you're one of those.
Being single, one of the problems, single and no meetings,
I don't schedule any meetings.
I've been living like a 28 hour day.
So I like, it drifts.
So it's all over the place.
But after a traditionally defined full night sleep,
whatever the heck that means,
I find that like in those moments,
there's a clarity of mind that's just,
that's everything is effortless.
And it's the deepest dives intellectually that I make.
And I'm cognizant of it.
And I try to bring that to the other parts of the day
that don't have it and treasure them even more
in those moments, because they only last like five or 10 minutes.
Because of course, in those moments
you want to do all kinds of stupid stuff
that are complete is worthless, like checks, social media,
or something like that.
But those are the most precious things
in intellectual life is those mental moments of clarity. And I wonder, I'm learning how
to control them. I think caffeine is somehow involved. I'm not sure.
Sure.
Well, because if you learn how to titrate caffeine, everyone's slightly different with
this, I want they need. But if you learn to tight trade caffeine with time of day
and the kind of work that you're trying to do,
you can bring that autonomic arousal state
into close to perfect place.
And then you can tune it in with, you know,
sometimes people want a little bit of background music,
sometimes they want less, these kinds of things.
The early part of the day is interesting
because one thing that's not often discussed
is the transition out of sleep.
So there's a book, I think it's called Winston Churchill's nap, and it's about
naps and the transition between wake and sleep as a valuable period. I've a long time ago
someone who I respect a lot was mentoring me said be very careful about bringing in someone else's sensory experience early in the
day.
So, when I wake up, I'm very drowsy.
I sleep well, but I don't emerge from that very quickly.
I need a lot of caffeine to wake up and whatnot.
But there's this concept of getting the download from sleep, which is, you know, in sleep,
you were essentially expunging the things that you don't need,
the stuff that was meaningless from the previous day.
But you were also running variations on these algorithms of whatever it is you're trying to work out in life on short timescales,
like the previous day and long timescales, like your whole life.
And those lateral connections in layer five of the neocortex are very robustly active and across sensory areas.
And you're running an algorithm or a brain, it's a brain state that will be useless and
waking. You wouldn't get anything done. You'd be the person talking to yourself in the
hallway or something about something that no one else can see. But in those states, you
do the, the theory is that you arrive at certain solutions and those solutions will reveal
themselves in the early part of the day unless you interfere with them by bringing in social
media as a good example of you immediately enter somebody else's space time sensory relationship.
Someone is the conductor of your thoughts in that case. And so many people have written about
this. What I'm saying isn't entirely new, but allowing the download to occur
in the early part of the day,
and asking the question,
am I more in my head,
or am I in more of an interoceptive or exteroceptive mode?
And depending on the kind of work you need to do,
if it sounds like for you,
it's very interoceptive and very,
you've got a lot of thinking going on,
a lot of computing going on,
allowing yourself to transition out of that sleep state
and arrive with those solutions from sleep
and plug into the work really deeply.
And then, and only then allowing things like music,
news, social media, doesn't mean you shouldn't talk
to loved ones and see faces and things like that,
but some people have taken this to the extreme.
When I was a graduate student at Berkeley, there was a guy, there was a professor,
brilliant, odd, but brilliant, who was so fixated on this concept that he wouldn't look at faces in
the early part of the day, because he just didn't want to anything else to impact him. Now, he didn't
have the most rounded life, I suppose, but if you're talking about
cognitive performance, this could be, I should be very beneficial. You said so many brilliant things. So one
if you read books
that described the habits of
brilliant people like writers, they do control that sensory experience in the wood, in the hours after wake.
Like many writers, you know, they have a particular habit of several hours early in the morning
of actual writing, they do, I'm doing anything else for the rest of the day, but they control
they're very sensitive to noises and so on. I think they make it very difficult to live with them.
noises and so on. I think they make it very difficult to live with them. I tried to, I'm definitely like that. I love to control the sensory homage information that is coming
in. There's something about the peaceful, just everything being peaceful. At the same
time, and we were talking to a mutual friend of Whitney Cummings who has a mansion, a castle on top of a cliff in the middle of nowhere.
She actually purchased home in Ireland. She wants silence. She wants to control how much
us sound is coming in. She's very sensitive to sound and environment. Yeah.
Beautiful home and environment, but like clearly puts a lot of attention into details.
Yeah. And very creative. Yeah. And that allows for creativity to flourish.
I'm also, I don't like, that feels like a slippery slope. So I enjoy introducing noises and signals
and training my mind to be able to tune them out. Because I feel like you can't always control
the environment so perfectly.
Because your mind gets comfortable with that.
I think it's a skill that you want to learn
to be able to shut it off.
Like I often go to like back before COVID to a coffee shop.
It really annoys me when there are sounds and voices
and so on.
But I feel like I can train my mind to block them out.
So it's a balance, I think.
Yeah, and I think two things come to mind
as you're saying this.
First of all, yeah, I mean, we're talking about
what's best for work is not always what's best for
completeness of life.
I mean, autism is probably many things.
Like when you hit autism, just like feet,
they're probably 50 ways to get a fever. They're probably 50 ways to get a fever
They're probably 50 ways to that the brain can create what looks like autism or what people call autism
There's an interesting set of studies. They've come out of David Gintie's lab at Harvard Med
Looking at these are mouse mutants where these are models for autism where nothing is disrupted in the brain, proper and in the central nervous system.
But the sensory neurons, the ones that innovate the skin and the ears and everything are hypersensitive.
And this maps to a mutation in certain forms of human autism.
So this means that the overload of sensory information and sensory experience,
there are a lot of autistic feel, they're like,
they can't tolerate things and then they get the stereotype
behaviors, the rocking and the kind of the shouting.
It, you know, we always thought of that as a brain problem.
In some cases, it might be, but in many cases,
it's because they just can't, they, they seem to have a,
it's like turning the volume up on every sense.
And so they're overwhelmed.
And none of us want to become like that.
I think it's very hard for them and it's hard for their parents and so forth.
So I like the coffee shop example because the way I think about trying to build
up resilience, you know, physically or mentally, otherwise is one of,
I guess we could call it limb, I like to call it limbic friction.
That's not a real scientific term and I acknowledge that.
I'm making it up now because I think it captures the concept, which is that we always hear about
resilience.
It makes it sound like, oh, you know, under stress where everything's coming at you,
you're going to stay calm.
But there's another, you know, so limbic, the limbic system wants to pull you in some direction,
typically in the direction of reflexive behavior.
And the prefrontal cortex through top-down, has to suppress that and say, no,
we're not going to respond to the banging of the coffee cups behind me or I'm going to
keep focusing.
That's pure top-down control.
So limbic friction is high in that environment.
You put yourself into a high limbic friction environment.
It means that the prefrontal cortex has to work really hard.
But there's another side to limbic friction too,
which is when you're very sleepy,
there's nothing incoming.
It can be completely silent.
And it's hard to engage and focus
because you're drifting off and you're getting sleepy.
So their limbic friction is high,
but for the opposite reason, autonomic rousal is too low.
So they're turning on Netflix in the background
or looping a song might boost your level of alertness
that will allow top down control to be in the play, exactly the sweet spot you want it. So this is why
earlier I was saying it's all about how we feel inside relative to what's going on on the outside.
We're constantly in this, I guess one way you could envision it spatially, especially if people are listening to this
just an audio, is I like to think about it kind of like a glass barbell where one sphere
of perception and attention can be on what's going on with me and one sphere of attention
can be on what's going on with you or something else in the room or in my environment.
But this barbell isn't rigid, it's not really glass.
Would plasma work here? I don't know anything about plasma. Sorry barbell isn't rigid. It's not really glass. Would plasma work
here? I don't know anything about plasma. Sorry, I don't know. Okay. So imagine that this
thing can contort the size of the, the, the, the globes at the end of this barbell can get
bigger or smaller. So let's say I close my eyes and I bring all my experience into what's
going on in through, through interoception internally. Now it says, if I've got two orbs of perception
just on my internal state,
but I can also do the opposite
and bring both orbs of perception outside me.
I'm not thinking about my heart rate or my breathing.
I'm just thinking about something I see.
And what you'll start to realize
as you kind of use this spatial model
is that two things, one is that it's very dynamic
and that the more relaxed we are,
the more these two orbs of attention,
the two ends of the barbell can move around freely.
The more alert we are, the more rigid
they're gonna be tethered in place.
And that was designed so that if I have a threat
in my environment, it's tethered to that threat.
I'm not gonna, if something's coming to attack me,
I'm not gonna be like, oh, my breathing cadence
is a little bit quick.
That's not how it works.
Why?
Because both orbs are linked to that threat.
And so my behavior is now actually being driven
by something external, even though I think it's internal.
And so I don't wanna get too abstract here
because I'm a neuroscientist, I'm not a theorist,
but when you start thinking about models of how the brain works, I mean, brain works, excuse
me, there are only really three things that neurons do.
They're either sensory neurons, they're motor neurons, or they're modulating things.
And the models of attention and perception that we have now, 2020, tell us that we've got
interreception and exterreception.
They're strongly modulated by levels of
autonomic arousal. And that if we want to form the optimal
relationship to some task or some pressure or some
thing, whether or not it's sleep and impending threat or
coding, we need to adjust our internal space time
relationship with the external space time relationship. And
I realize I'm repeating what I said earlier,
but we can actually assign circuitry to this stuff.
It mostly has to do with how much limbic friction there is,
how much you're being pulled to some source.
That source could be internal.
If I have pain, physical pain in my body,
I'm gonna be much more interoceptive than I am extraoceptive.
You could be talking to me
and I'm just gonna be thinking about that pain.
It's very hard. And the other thing that we can link it to is
top down control, meaning anything in our environment that has a lot of salience will tend to bring
us into more extraoception than interoception. And again, I don't want to litter the conversation
with just a bunch of terms, but what I think it can be useful for people is to do what essentially you've done,
like, is to start developing an awareness when I wake up,
am I mostly in a mode of interoception or extraoception?
When I work well, is that what is working well look like
from the perspective of autonomic arousal,
how alert or call my, am I, what kind of balance
between internal focus and external focus is there.
And to sort of watch this process throughout the day.
Can you look at just briefly and because you use this terminal a lot and be nice to try
to get a little more color to it, which is interception and exterception.
What are we exactly talking about?
So like what's included in each category? How much overlap is there?
Interoception would be an awareness of anything that's within the confines
or on the surface of my skin that I'm sensing.
Absolutely, physiologically.
Physiology, within the boundaries of my skin
and probably touch to the skin as well.
Exteroception would be perception of anything that's beyond the
reach of my skin. So that bottle of water, a scent, a sound, although it and this can change
dramatically actually if you have headphones in you tend to hear things in your head if
as opposed to a speaker in the room. There's actually the basis of intro-equism. So there are beautiful experiments done by Greg Reckon's own
up at UC Davis looking at how auditory and visual cues
are matched and we have an array of speakers.
And you can, this will become obvious as I say it,
but obviously the ventriloquist doesn't throw their voice.
What they do is they direct your vision
to a particular location and you think the sound
is coming from that location.
And there are beautiful experiments that Greg and his colleagues have done where they suddenly introduce an auditory visual mismatch.
And it freaks people out because you can actually make it seem from a perception standpoint as if the sound arrived from the corner of the room and hit you.
Like physically and people will recoil.
And so, sounds aren't getting thrown across the room.
They're still coming from this defined location
on array of speakers, but this is the way the brain
creates these internal representations.
And again, I don't want to go down a rabbit hole,
but I think as much as you're,
I'm sure the listeners appreciate this,
but everything in the brain is an abstraction.
I mean, the sensory apparatus, the eyes and ears and nose and skin and taste and all
that are taking information and with interoception, taking information from sensors inside the
body, the interrac nervous system for the gut.
I've got sensory neurons that interrate my liver, et cetera, taking all that.
And the brain is abstracting that.
And the same way that if I took a picture of your face,
and I hand it to you, and I'd say, that's you,
you'd say, yeah, that's me.
But if I were an abstract artist,
I'd be doing a little bit more of what the brain does,
where if I took a pen and pat and paper,
maybe I could do this because I'm a terrible artist,
and I could just mix it up,
and let's say I would make your eyes like water bottles,
but I flipped them upside down, and I'd start assigning
fruits and objects to the different features
that you're facing.
I showed you, I say, Lex, that's you,
say, well, that's not me, and I'd say, no,
but that's my abstraction of you.
But that's what the brain does.
The space-time relationship of the neurons
that fire that encode your face
has no resemblance to your face.
Right. And I think people don't really, I don't know if people have fully internalized that. But the day that I,
and I'm not sure I fully internalized that because it's weird to think about, but
all neurons can do is fire in space and in time. Different neurons and different sequences, perhaps with different intensities.
It's not clear the action potential is all or none, although neuroscientists don't like to talk
about that, even though it's been published in nature a couple times, the action potential
for a given neuron doesn't always have the exact same waveform.
People, it's in all the textbooks, but you can modify that waveform.
Well, there, I mean, there's a lot of fascinating stuff with, with neuroscience about the fuzziness
of all
the transform of information from Jont and Jont.
We certainly touch upon it every time we at all try to think about the different artificial
neural networks and biological neural networks.
But can we maybe linger a little bit on this circuitry that you're getting at?
So the brain is just a much of stuff firing
and it forms abstractions that are fascinating
and beautiful, like layers upon layers upon layers
of abstraction.
And I think it, just like when you're programming,
you know, I'm programming in Python,
it's awe inspiring to think that underneath it all,
it ends up being zeroes and ones.
And the computer doesn't know about, you know, stupid Python or Windows or Linux. It's awe-inspiring to think that underneath it all it ends up being zeroes and ones and
The computer doesn't know about no stupid Python our windows or the Linux It it only knows about the zeroes and ones in the same way with the brain
Is there something
Interesting to you or fundamental to you about the circuitry of the brain that allows for the magic that's
in our mind to emerge.
How much do we understand, I mean maybe even focusing on the vision system, is there
something specific about the structure of the vision system, the circuitry of it that
allows for the complexity of the vision system to emerge.
Or is it all just a complete chaotic mess that we don't understand?
It's definitely not all a chaotic mess that we don't understand if we're talking about vision.
And that's not just because I'm a vision scientist.
Let's stick to vision.
Well, because in the beauty of the visual system, the reason David Hewyl and
Tornstone Weasel on the Nobel Prize was because they were brilliant and forward thinking and adventurous and all that good stuff. But the reason that
the visual system is such a great model for addressing these kinds of questions and other
systems are hard is we can control the stimuli. We can adjust spatial frequency, how fine
the gradings are, thick gradings, thin gradings. We can adjust temporal frequency, how fast
things are moving. We can use cone-isolating stimuli.
There's so many things that you can do in a controlled way, whereas if we're talking
about cognitive encoding, like encoding the space of concepts or something, I like you,
if I may, are drawn to the big questions in neuroscience. But I confess, in part, because of some good advice
I got early in my career, and in part,
because I'm not, perhaps smart enough
to go after the really high-level stuff,
I also like to address things that are tractable,
and I want, you know, we need to address
what we can stand to make some ground
on at a given time.
They can construct brilliant controlled experiments
to study to really, literally answer questions about it.
Yeah, I mean, I'm happy to have a talk about consciousness,
but it's a scary talk and I think most people don't want
to hear what I have to say, which is,
we can save that for later perhaps,
or a day.
It's an interesting question of,
we talk about psychedelics,
we can talk about consciousness,
we can talk about cognition,
can experiments in neuroscience be constructed
to shed any kind of light on these questions?
So I mean, it's cool that vision,
I mean to me vision is probably one of
the most beautiful things about human beings. Also, from the AI side, computer vision has
them, is some of the most exciting applications of neural networks is in computer vision. But
it feels like that's a, that's a neighbor of cognition and consciousness. It's just that
we may be having come up the experiments to study those yet
Yeah, the visual system is amazing. We're mostly visual animals to navigate
Survive humans mainly rely on vision not smell or something else, but
It's a filter for cognition and it's a it's a strong driver of cognition
Maybe just because it came up and then we're moving to higher level concepts, just the way the visual system works can be summarized in a few relatively succinct statements, unlike most of what I said, which has not been succinct at all.
Let's go there.
The retina. three layers of neuron structure at the back of your eyes, but it's because of the credit card. It is a piece of your brain,
and sometimes people think I'm kind of wriggling
out of a reality by saying that.
It's absolutely a piece of the brain.
It's a four brain structure that in the first trimester,
there's a genetic program that made sure
that that neural retina, which is part of your central nervous
system, was squeezed out into what's called the embryonic eye cups, and that the bone formed with a little hole where the optic nerve
is going to connect it to the rest of the brain.
And those, that window into the world is the only window into the world for a mammal,
which has a thick skull.
Birds have a thin skull, so their pineal gland sits and lizards too, and snakes actually
have a hole, so that light can make it down into the pineal directly and in trained melatonin rhythms for time of day and time of year,
humans have to do all that through the eyes.
So three layers of neurons that are a piece of your brain, they're a central nervous system,
and the optic nerve connects to the rest of the brain.
The neurons in the eye just care about luminance, just how bright or dim it is, and they
inform the brain about time of day,
and then the central circadian clock informs
every cell in your body about time of day,
and make sure that all sorts of good stuff happens
if you're getting light in your eyes at the right times,
and all sorts of bad things happen
if you are getting light randomly throughout the 24 hour cycle.
We could talk about all that,
but this is a good incentive
for keeping a relatively normal schedule,
consistent schedule, light exposure. It'll look, consistent schedule. Try and, a consistent schedule, you lost light exposure.
Consistent schedule.
Try and keep a consistent schedule.
When you're young, it's easy to go off schedule and recover.
As you get older, it gets harder.
But you see everything from outcomes and cancer patients to diabetes improves when people
are getting light at a particular time of day and getting darkness at a particular phase of the 24 hour cycle.
We were designed to get light and dark at different times of the circadian cycle.
That's all being, all that information is coming in through specialized type of neuron in the retina,
called the melanopsin intrinsically photosensitive ganglinsel discovered by David Berson at Brown University.
That's not spatial information. It's subconscious. You don't think, oh, it's daytime. Even if you're looking at the sun, it doesn't matter. It's a photon counter. It's literally counting photons.
And it's saying, oh, even though it's a cloudy day, lots of photons coming in and adds, winter and
Boston, it must be winter, and your system is a little depressed. It's spring, you feel alert.
That's not a coincidence. That's these melanops and cells signaling the circadian clock. There are a bunch of other neurons in the
eye that signal to the brain, and they mainly signal the presence of things that are lighter than
background or darker than background. So a black object would be darker than background, a light
object, lighter than background. And that all come, it's mainly a, it's looking at pixels. Mainly it's, they look at circles. And those neurons have receptive fields, which
not everyone will understand, but those neurons respond best to little circles of dark light,
or little circles of bright light, little circles of red light versus little circles of green light
or blue light. And so it, it sounds very basic. It's like red, green, blue, and circles, brighter or dimmer
than what's next to it.
But that's basically the only information
that's sent down the optic nerve.
And when we say information, we can be very precise.
I don't mean little bits of red
traveling down the optic nerve.
I mean spikes, neural action potentials in space and time,
which for you is like makes total sense
but I think for a lot of people,
it's actually beautiful to think about.
All that information in the outside world is converted
into a language that's very simple.
It's just like a few syllables, if you will.
And those syllables are being shouted down the optic nerve,
converted into a totally different language, like Morse code.
B, B, B, B, B, B, B, B, B,
goes into the brain and then the thalamus essentially responds
in the same way that the retina does.
Except the thalamus is also waiting things.
It's saying, you know what?
That thing was moving faster than everything else
or it's brighter than everything else.
So that signal I'm gonna get up,
I'm gonna allow up to cortex.
Or that signal is much better than it is green. So I'm gonna to allow up to cortex. Or that signal is much
redder than it is green. So I'm going to let that signal go through that signal is much,
eh, it's kind of more like the red next to it, throw that out. The information just doesn't
get up into your cortex. And then in cortex, of course, is where perceptions happen. And
in V1, if you will, visual area one, but also some neighboring areas, you start getting
representations of things
like oriented lines.
So there's a neuron that responds to this angle of my hand versus vertical.
Right?
This is the defining work of Hubel and Bezos Nobel.
And it's a very systematic map of orientation, line orientation, direction of movement, and
so forth.
And that's pretty much end-color, And that's how the visual system is organized
all the way up to the cortex.
So it's hierarchical.
You don't build, I want to be clear,
it's hierarchical because you don't build up that line
by suddenly having a neuron that responds to lines
in a some random way.
It responds to lines by taking all the dots
that are aligned in a vertical stack.
And they all converge on one neuron,
and then that neuron responds
to vertical lines. So it's not random. There's no abstraction at that point, in fact. In fact,
if I showed you a black line, I could be sure that if I were imaging V1, that I would see a
representation of that black line as a vertical line somewhere in your cortex. So at that point,
it's absolutely concrete.
It's not abstract.
But then things get really mysterious.
Some of that information travels further up into the cortex
so that, and goes from one visual area to the next,
to the next, to the next.
So that by time you get into an area that Nancy Kanwisher at MIT
has studied her much of her career,
the fusiform face area, you start finding single neurons that respond only to your father's
face or to Joe Rogan's face, regardless of the orientation of his face.
I'm sure if you saw Joe, because you know him well, from across the room and you just
saw his profile, you'd be like, oh, that's Joe.
Walk over and say, hello.
The orientation of his face isn't there.
You wouldn't even see his eyes necessarily,
but he's represented in some abstract way by a neuron
that actually would be called the Joe Rogan neuron.
Or the Joe neurons.
It might have limits, like I might not recognize him,
if he was upside down or something like that.
It'd be fascinating to see what the limits of that
Joe Rogan concept is.
So Nancy's lab has done that because early on,
she was challenged by people that said,
there aren't face neurons.
There are neurons that they only respond to space and time,
shapes and things like that, moving in particular,
directions and orientations.
And it turns out Nancy was right.
They used these stimuli called grebel stimuli,
which any computer programmer would appreciate,
which kind of morphs a face into something gradually,
that eventually just looks like this alien thing they call the Grebel.
And the neurons don't respond to Grebel's, in most cases, they only respond to faces, or familiar faces.
Anyway, I'm summarizing a lot of literature and forgive me Nancy and for those of the Grebel people.
If there are, they're like, you don't come after me with pitch words.
Actually, you know what, come after me with pitchforks.
I think you know what I'm trying to do here.
So, the point is that in the visual system, it's very concrete up until about visual
area four, which has color pinwheels and seems to respond to pinwheels of colors.
And so, the stimuli become more and more elaborate.
But at some point, you depart that concrete representation and you start
getting abstract representations that can't be explained by simple point to point wiring.
And to take a leap out of the visual system to the higher level concepts, what we talked
about in the visual system maps to the auditory system where you're encoding what frequency
of tone sweeps. So this gets sound weird to do, but you know, like a
Doppler, like hearing something car passing by, for instance. But at some point, you get
into motifs of music that can't be mapped to just a, what they call a tonotopic map of
frequency. You start abstracting. And if you start thinking about concepts of creativity
and love and memory.
Like, what is the map of memory space?
Well, your memories are very different than mine,
but presumably there's enough structure
at the early stages of memory processing,
or at the early stages of emotional processing,
or at the earlier stages of creative processing,
that you have the building blocks,
yours, zeros, and ones, if you will,
but you depart from that eventually.
Now, the exception to this, and I wanna be really clear,
cause I was just mainly talking about neocortex,
the six layered structure on the outside of the brain
that explains a lot of human abilities
other animals have them too,
is that sub-cortical structures are a lot more like machines.
It's more plung and chug.
And what I'm talking about is the machinery that controls heart rate and breathing and
receptive fields, neurons that respond to things like temperature on the top of my left
hand.
And one of the, you know, I came into neuroscience from the more of a perspective initially of psychology,
but one of the reasons I forced upon myself
to learn some electrophysiology, not a ton, but enough.
And some molecular biology and about circuitry
is that one of the most beautiful experiences
you can have in life, I'm convinced,
is to lower an electrode into the cortex
and to show a person or an animal,
we do this effectively, of course, stimulus,
like an oriented line or a face.
And you can convert the recording
is coming off of that electrode
into an audio signal or an audio monitor.
And you can hear what they call hash.
It's not the hash you smoke, it's the hash you hear.
And it sounds like, it just sounds
like noise.
And in the cortex, eventually you find a stimulus that gets the neuron to spike in
fire action potentials that are converted into an auditory stimulus that are very concrete
crack, crack, crack, sounds like a bat cracking, you know, like home runs, you know, or outfield
balls. like home runs or outfield walls. When you drop electrodes deeper into the phalamus,
or into the hypothalamus,
or into the brainstem areas that control breathing,
it's like a machine.
You never hear hash.
You drop the electrode down.
This could be like a grungy old tug misted electrode,
not high fidelity electrode.
As long as it's got a little bit of insulation on it,
plug it into an audio monitor. It's picking up electricity, and if it's a visual neuron,
and it's in the phalamous, so the retina, and you walk in front of that animal or person,
that neuron goes, and then you walk away and it stops.
And you put your hand in front of the eye again, and it goes, and you could do that for two days.
And that neuron will just, every time there's a stimulus,
it fires.
So whereas before it's a question of how much information
is getting up to cortex,
and then these abstractions happening
where you're creating these ideas,
when you go sub-cortical, everything is...
There's no abstractions.
It's two plus two equals four.
There's no abstractions.
And this is why I, I know we have some common friends at neural link
And I love the demonstration they did recently. I'm a huge fan of what they're doing and where they're headed and no I don't
Get paid to say that and I have no you know business relationship to them
I just a huge fan of the people in the mission
but my question was to some of them
You know when you're gonna go sub-cical, because if you want to control an animal, you don't do it in the cortex.
The cortex is like the abstract painting I made of your face.
Removing one piece or changing something may or may not matter for the abstraction, but
when you are in the sub-cortical areas of the brain, a stimulating electrode can evoke
an entire behavior or an entire state.
And so the brain, if we're going to have a discussion about the brain and how the brain
works, we need to really be clear which brain, because everyone loves neocortex.
It's like, oh, canonical circuits in cortex, we can get the cortical connectome, and sure,
necessary, but not sufficient, not to be able to plug in patterns of electrical stimulation
and get behavior.
Eventually, we'll get there.
But if you're talking sub-cortical circuits, that's where the action is.
That's where you could potentially cure Parkinson's by stimulating the sub-tolamic nucleus, because
we know that it gates motor activation patterns in very predictable ways.
So I think for those that are interested in neuroscience, it pays to pay attention to,
like, is this a circuit that abstracts the sensory information?
Or is it just one that builds up
hierarchical models in a very predictable way?
And there's a huge chasm in neuroscience right now,
because there's no conceptual leadership.
No one knows which way to go.
And this is why I think
Neuralink has captured an amazing opportunity,
which was, okay, well, while all you academic research labs are figuring all this stuff out,
we're going to pick a very specific goal and make the goal the endpoint. And some academic
laboratories do that. But I think that's a beautiful way to attack this whole thing about the brain,
because it's very concrete. Let's restore motion to the Parkinsonian patient.
Academic labs do that. Want to do that, too, of course. Let's restore motion to the Parkinsonian patient. Academic labs do that, want to do that too, of course.
Let's restore speech to the stroke patient.
But there's nothing abstract about that.
That's about figuring out the solution to a particular problem.
So anyway, those are my, and I admit I've mixed in
a lot of opinion there.
But having spent some time, like 25 years
digging around in the brain and listening to neurons firing
and looking at them anatomically, I think given its 2020, we need to ask the right, you know, the way to get better answers, ask better questions.
And the really high level stuff is fun. It makes for good conversation. And it has brought enormous interest. But I think the question is about consciousness and dreaming and stuff they're fascinating, but I don't know that we're there yet.
So you're saying there might be a chasm in the two views of the power of the brain arising from the from the circuitry that forms abstractions or the power of the brain arising from the majority of the circuitry that forms abstractions, or the power of the brain arising from the majority
of the circuitry that's just doing very brute force dumb things
that don't have any fancy kind of stuff going on.
That's really interesting to think about.
And which one to go after first?
Yeah.
And here I'm coaching badly from someone I've never met,
but whose work I follow, which is,
and it was actually on your podcast,
I think Elon Musk said, you know, basically,
the brain is a, oh, I say, a monkey brain
with a super computer on top.
And I thought, that's actually probably
the best description of the brain I've ever heard
because it captures a lot of important features,
like limbic friction, right?
But we think of like, oh, you know,
when we're making plans, we're using the prefrontal cortex
and we're executive function and all this kind of stuff.
But think about the drug addict who's driven
to go pursue heroin or cocaine.
They make plans.
So clearly they use their frontal cortex
is just that it's been hijacked by the limbic system
and all the monkey brain as you refer to.
It's really not fair to monkeys, though, Elon,
because actually monkeys can make plans.
They just don't make plans as sophisticated as us.
I spend a lot of time with monkeys,
but I've also been a lot of time with humans.
Anyway, I'm,
you're putting, you're saying like,
there's a lot of value to focusing on the monkey brain
or whatever the heck you call it.
I do, because let's say I had an ability
to place a chip anywhere I wanted in the brain today
and activate it or inhibit that area. I'm not sure I would put that chip in Neo
Cortex, except maybe to just kind of have some fun and see what happens.
The reason is it's an abstraction machine, and especially if I wanted to make a
mass production tool, a tool in mass production that I could give to a lot of people
because it's quite possible that your abstractions are different enough than mine that I wouldn't know what patterns
of firing to induce.
But if I want, let's say I want to increase my level of focus and creativity, well, then
I would love to be able to, for instance, control my level of limbic friction.
I would love to be able to wake up and go, oh, you know, I have an eight o'clock appointment.
I wake up slowly.
So between seven eight, but I want to do a lot of linear thinking.
So, you know what, I'm going to just, I'm going to turn down the limbic friction and, or
ramp up prefrontal cortex's activation.
So there's a lot of stuff that can happen in the phallamous with sensory gating.
For instance, you could shut down that shell around the phallamous and allow more creative
thinking by allowing more lateral connections. These would be some of lateral connections. Some of the experiments I'd want to do. So they're in the subcortical,
quote, unquote, monkey brain, but you could then look at what sorts of abstract thoughts and
behaviors would arise from that, rather than, and here I'm not pointing my finger at neural
link at all, but there's this obsession with neocortex.
But I'm gonna, well, I might lose a few friends,
but I'll hopefully gain a few.
And also, one of the reasons people spend so much time
in neocortex, I have a fact in an opinion.
One fact is that you can image there
and you can record there.
Right now, the two photon and one photon microscopy
methods that allow you to image deep into the brain
Still don't allow you to image down really deep unless you're jamming prisms in there and endoscopes and then the endoscopes are very narrow
So you're getting very you know, it's like looking at the bottom of the ocean through a it through a spotlight
Yeah, and so you much easier look at the waves up on top. Yep, right?
So let's face it folks a lot of the reasons why there's so many recordings
in layer two, three of cortex with all this advanced microscopy is because it's very hard to image
deeper. Now, the microscopes are getting better. And thanks to the amazing work mainly of engineers
and chemists and physicists, let's face it, they're the ones who brought this revolution
to neuroscience in the last 10 years or so. You can image deeper. But we don't really, that's why you see so many reports
on layer two, three.
The other thing, which is purely opinion,
and I'm not going after anybody here,
but is that as long as there's no clear right answer,
it becomes a little easier to do creative work
in a structure where no one really knows how it works.
So it's fun to probe around because anything you see is novel.
If you're gonna just work in the thalamus or the pulvinar or the hypothalamus,
or these structures that have been known about since the 60s and 70s,
and really since the centuries ago, you are dealing with exist,
you have to combat existing models.
And when it's raising cortex, no one knows how the thing works.
The neocortex, six layer cortex.
And so-
So everything is valid.
A lot of room for discovery.
There's a lot more room for discovery.
And I'm not calling anyone out.
I love cortex.
We've published some papers on cortex.
It's super interesting.
But I think with the tools that are available now days
and where people are trying ahead of not just reading
from the brain, monitoring it to be
about writing to the brain, I think we really have to be careful
and we need to be thoughtful about what are we trying
to write, what script are we trying to write?
Because there are many brain structures
for which we already know what scripts they write
and I think there's tremendous value there.
I don't think it's boring.
The fact that they act like machines makes them predictable.
Those are your zeros and ones.
Let's start there.
But what's sort of happening in this field
of writing to the brain is there's this idea.
And again, I want to be clear,
I'm not pointing at neural link,
I'm mainly pointing at the neocortical jockeys out there
that you go and you observe patterns,
and then you think replaying those patterns
is gonna give rise to something interesting.
I should call out one experiment or two experiments which were done
by Sasumutonagawa, Nobel Prize winner from MIT's, done important work in memory and immunology, of course,
as well as Mark Mayford's lab at UC San Diego. They did an experiment where they monitored a bunch
of neurons while an animal learned something. Then they captured those neurons through some molecular tricks, so they could
replay the neurons. So now there's like perfect case scenario. It's like, okay, you monitor
the neurons in your brain. Then I say, okay, neurons, one through one hundred were played in
the particular sequence. So you know the space time, you know the keys on the piano that
were played that gave rise to the song, which was the behavior. And then you go back and
you reactivate those neurons, except you reactivate them all at once, like slamming on all the keys once on the piano.
And you get the exact same behavior. So the space time code may be meaningless for some structures.
Now that's freaky. That's a scary thing. Because what that means is that all the space time firing
in cortex, the space part may matter more than the time part.
So, you know, rate codes and space time codes,
we don't know.
And, you know, I'd rather have,
I'd rather deliver more answers in this discussion
in the questions, but I think it's an important consideration.
You're saying some of the magic is in the
early stages of what the closer to the raw information,
I brain is just saying. I believe so. You know the stimulus,
you know the neuron then codes that stimulus, so you know
the transformation. When I say this for those that think
about sensory transformations, it's like, I can show you a
red circle. And then I look at how many times the neuron fires in response to that red circle
And then I could show the red circle a bunch of times green circle see if it changes and then essentially the number of time
That is the the transformation you've converted red circle into like three action potentials
Mm-hmm, you know
BPP or whatever you want to call it, you know for those that think in sound space
So that's what you've created. You know the transformation,
and you march up the,
it's called the Neuraxis,
as you go from the periphery up into the cortex.
And we know that,
and I know Lisa,
Velvman Barrett or is it Barrett Feldman?
It's Barrett Feldman.
Barrett Feldman, excuse me Lisa,
that talked a lot about this,
that you know,
birds can do sophisticated things and whatnot as well, but
humans, there's a strong what we call
cephalization. A lot of the processing is moved up into the cortex and out of these subcortical areas,
but it happens nonetheless. And so as long as you know the transformations, you are in a perfect place to build machines
or add machines to the brain that exactly mimic what the brain wants to do, which is take
events in the environment and turn them into internal firing of neurons.
So the master here, the brain can happen a little.
You know, another perspective of it is you saying this means that humans aren't that special.
If you look at the evolution of your time scale, the leap to intelligence is not that special.
So, like, the extra layers of abstraction isn't where most of the magic happens of intelligence,
which gives me hope that maybe if that's true, that means the evolution of intelligence
is not that rare of an event.
I certainly hope not.
I'll see you.
You hope there's...
I hope there are other forms of intelligence.
I mean, I think what humans are really good at, and here, I want to be clear that this
is not a formal model, but what humans are really good at is taking that plasma barbell
that we were talking about earlier, and not just using it for analysis of space, like the
your immediate environment, but also using historical information.
Like I can read a book today about the history of medicine,
I happen to be doing that lately for some stuff I'm researching.
And I can take that information,
and if I want, I can inject it into my plans for the future.
Other animals don't seem to do that over
the same time scales that we do.
Now, it may be that the chipmunks are all hiding little,
like notebooks everywhere in the form of, like,
little dirt castles or something that we don't understand.
I mean, the waggle dance of the bee is
in the most famous example.
Bees come back to the hive.
They orient relative to the honeycomb and they waggle.
There's a guy down on a strong named Serena Veson
who studied this in, it's really interesting.
No one really understands it.
It's a P.E. understands it best.
The B.Waggles, in a couple of ways,
relative to the orientation of the honeycomb,
and then all the other Bs, see that, it's visual,
and they go out and they know the exact coordinate system
to get to the source of whatever it was,
the food, and bring it back.
And he's done it where they isolate the Bs,
he's changed the visual flight environment, all this stuff. They are communicating. And they're communicating something
about something they saw recently, but it doesn't extend over very long periods of time.
The same way that you and I can both read a book or you can recommend something to me and then we
could converge on a set of ideas later. And in fairness, because she was the one that said it and I didn't and I hadn't
even thought of it, when you talked to Lisa on your podcast, she brought up something beautiful,
which is that I never really occurred to me and I was sort of embarrassed that it hadn't,
but it's really beautiful and brilliant, which is that, you know, we don't just encode
senses in the form of like color and light and sound waves and
taste, but ideas become a form of sensory mapping.
And that's where the really, really cool and exciting stuff is, but we just don't understand
what the receptive fields are for ideas.
What's an idea of receptive field?
And how they're communicated between humans because we seem to be able to encode those ideas in some kind of way.
Yes, it's taken all the raw information and the internal physical states, that sensory
information put into this concept blob, the story, and then we're able to communicate that.
Your abstractions are different than mine.
I actually think the comment section on social media is a beautiful example of where the abstractions are different for different people.
So much of the misunderstanding of the world is because of these abstract, these idea receptive fields, they're not the same.
Whereas I can look at a photo receptor neuron or a factory neuron or a V1 neuron.
And I am certain I would bet my life that yours look and respond exactly the
same way that Lisa's do and mine do. But once you get beyond there, it gets tricky. And so when
you say something or I say something and somebody gets upset about it or even happy about it,
their concept of that might be quite a bit different. They don't really know what you mean.
They only know what it means to them.
Yeah, so from a neural link perspective, it makes sense to optimize the control and the augmentation of the more primitive circuitry. So like the stuff that is closer to this raw
sensory information. Go deeper. If they, I think, go deeper into the brain. And I have to end
to be fair. So Matt McDougall,, who's the neurosurgeon and neural link and
all the clinical neurosurgeon, great brilliance, they have amazing people.
I have to give it to them. They have been very cryptic in recent years.
Their website was just like a like neural like nothing there.
They really know how to do things with style and and that they've upset a lot of people,
but that's good too. Matt is there. I know Matt. He actually came up through my lab at Stanford.
Although, you know, he was a neurosurgery resident. We spent time in our lab.
He actually came out on the shark dive and did great white shark diving with my lab to collect the VR that we use in our fear stuff.
I've talked to Matt and I think, you know, he and other folks there are hungry for the deeper brain structures.
The problem is that damn vascular, all that blood all that blood supply, it's not trivial to get through
and down into the brain without damaging the vasculature in the neocortex, which is
on the outer crust.
But once you start getting into the thalamus and closer to some of the main arterial sources,
you really risk getting massive bleeds.
So it's an issue that can be worked out.
It just is hard.
Maybe be nice to educate. I'm showing my ignorance. So the smart stuff is on the surface.
So I didn't realize this. I didn't quite realize because you keep saying deep. Yeah. So like the early stages are deep.
Yeah. So in actually physically in the brain. Yeah, so the way that,
you know, of course, you got your deep brain structures, they're involved in breathing and heart
rate and kind of lizard brain stuff. And then on top of that, this is the model of the brain
that no one really subscribes to anymore, but anatomically it works. And then on top in mammals.
And then on top of that, you have the limbic structures, which gate sensory information and decide whether or not you're going to listen to something more than you're
going to look at it or you're going to split your attention to both kind of sensory allocation
stuff. And then the neocortex is on the outside. And that is where you get a lot of this
abstraction stuff. And now not all cortical areas are doing abstraction, some like visual area one, auditory area
one, they're just doing concrete representations.
But as you get into the higher order stuff, when you start hearing names like Infro, Parietal
Cortex, and you know, when you start hearing multiple names in the same, then you're talking
about higher order areas.
But actually, there's an important experiment that drives a lot of what people want to
do with brain machine interface.
And that's the work of Bill Newsom, who is at Stanford and Tony Moffsion, who runs the
Center for Neural Science at NYU.
This is a wild experiment.
And I think it might freak a few people out if they really think about it too deeply.
But anyway, here it goes.
There's an area called MT in the cortex. If I showed you a bunch of dots
all moving up, and this is what Tony and Bill and some of the other people in that lab
did way back when, is they show a bunch of dots moving up. Somewhere in MT, there's
some neurons that respond. They fire when the neurons move up. Then what they did is they
started varying the coherence of that motion. So they made it. So only 50% of the dots moved up and the rest moved randomly.
And then neuron fires a little less. And eventually it's random and that neuron stops firing
because it's just kind of dots moving everywhere. It's awesome. And there's a systematic
map so that other neurons are responding and things moving down and other things are responding
left and other things are moving right. Okay. So there's a map of direction space.
You okay? Well, that's great.
You could lesion, MT, animals lose the ability
to do these kind of coherence discrimination
or direction discrimination.
But the amazing experiment, the one that just,
it's kind of eerie is that they lower
the stimulating electrode into MT,
found a neuron that responds to when dots go up.
But then they silence that neuron and
sure enough the animal doesn't recognize the neurons are going up and then they move the dots down.
They stimulate the neuron that responds to things moving up and the animal responds because it
can't speak it responds by doing a lever press,
which says the dots are moving up.
So in other words, the sensory,
the dots are moving down in reality on the computer screen.
They're stimulating the neuron that responds to dots
moving up and the perception of the animal
is that dots are moving up,
which tells you that your perception of external reality absolutely has to be a neuronal
abstraction.
It is not tacked to the movement of the dots in any absolute way.
Your perception of the outside world depends entirely on the activation patterns of neurons
in the brain.
And you can hear that and say, well, duh, because if I stimulate, you know, the
stretch reflex and you kick or something or whatever, you know, the knee reflex and you
kick, of course, there's a neuron that triggers that, but it didn't have to be that way.
Because A, the animal had prior experience, B, your way up in this, you know, higher
order cortical areas, what this means is that, and I generally try and avoid conversations about this kind of thing,
but what this means is that we are constructing our reality with this space-time firing the
zeros and ones, and it doesn't have to have anything to do with the actual reality, and
the animal or person can be absolutely convinced that that's what's happening.
Are you familiar with the work of Donald Hoffman?
So he's, so he makes an evolution argument, that's not important, that we, our brains
are completely detached from reality in the sense that he makes a radical case that we have no idea what physical reality is
and in fact is drastically different than what we think it is.
Oh my.
So he goes, that's scary.
So he doesn't say like, there's just because you're kind of applying, there's a gap.
There might be a gap with constructing an illusion and then maybe using
communication to maybe create a consistency that's sufficient for our human collaboration
or whatever or mammal club, you know, just maybe even just life forms are constructing a consistent
reality that's maybe detached. I mean, that's really cool that neurons are constructing that.
Like, that you can prove that this is when you're a science at his best, vision science. But he says that,
our brain is actually just lost its shit on the path of evolution to where we're normal. We're
just playing games with each other in constructing realities that allow our survival, but it's completely
detached from physical reality.
Like, we're missing a lot.
We're missing, like, most of it, if not all of it.
Well, this was, it's fascinating because I just saw the Oliver Sacks documentary.
There's a new documentary out about his life.
And there's this one part where he's like, I spent part of my life trying to imagine what
it would like to be, to be a bat or something, to see the world through the, like, the sensory
apparatus of a bat.
And he did this with his, these patients that were locked into these horrible syndromes
that to pull out some of the beauty of their experience as well, not
just communicate the suffering, although the suffering too.
And as I was listening to him talk about this, I started to realize, it's like, well, you
know, like they're these mantis shrimps that can see 60 shades of pink or something.
And they see this stuff all the time.
And animals that you can see UV light.
Every time I learn about an animal that can sense other things in the environment
that I can't like heat sensing,
well, I don't crave that experience,
the same way SACS talked about craving that experience,
but it does throw another penny in the jar
for what you're saying, which is that it could be
that most, if not all, of what I perceive and believe,
is just a neural fabrication. And that, for better or for
worse, we all agree on enough of the same neural fabrications in the same time and place
that we're able to function. Not only that, but we agree with the things that are trying
to eat us enough to where we don't, they don't eat us, meaning like that it's not just us humans, you know, right?
I see because it's interactive. It's interactive. So like, so like, now, I think it's a really
nice thought experiment. I think because Donald really frames it in a scientific, like he
makes a hard, like as hard as our discussion has been now like he makes a hard like as hard as our discussion has been now he
makes a hard scientific case that we don't know shit about reality. I think that's a little bit
hardcore but I think it's I think it's hardcore. I think it's a good thought experiment that kind of
cleanses the palate of the confidence we might have about,
because we are operating in the subtraction space.
And the sensory space might be something very different.
And it's kind of interesting to think about if you start to go into a round of neural link
or start to talk about just everything that you've
been talking about with Dream States and psychedelics and stuff like that, which part of the
which layer can we control and play around with, maybe look into a different slice of reality.
You just gotta do the experiment. The key is to just do the experiment in the most ethical way
possible. I mean, that's the beauty of experiments.
This is why there's wonderful theoretical neuroscience happening now,
to make predictions.
But that's why experimental science is so wonderful.
You can go into the laboratory and poke around in there and be a brain explorer
and listen to and write to neurons.
And when you do that, you get answers.
You don't always get the answers you want,
but that's the beauty of it.
I think when you were saying this thing about reality
and the Donald Hoffman model,
I was thinking about children, you know,
like when I have an older sister, she's very sane.
But when she was a kid, she had an imaginary friend.
And she would play with this imaginary friend.
And there was this whole, there was a consistency.
This friend was like, it was Larry,
lived in a purple house, Larry was a girl.
It was like all this stuff that a child, a young child,
wouldn't have any issue with.
And then one day she announced that Larry had died, right?
And it wasn't traumatic or traumatic.
And that was it.
And she just stopped.
And I always wonder what that neurodevelopmental event was
that a kept her out of a psychiatric ward
that she got, you know, that imaginary friend.
But it's also, there was something kind of sad to it.
I think the way it was told to me
because I'm the younger brother,
I wasn't around for that, but my dad told me that, you know, there was kind of a sadness because it was this beautiful
reality that had been constructed. And so we kind of wonder, as you're telling me this,
whether or not, you know, as adults, we try and create as much reality for children as
we can so that they can make predictions and feel safe because the ability to make predictions
is a lot of what keeps our autonomic arousal in check. I mean, we go to sleep every night
and we give up total control.
And that should frighten us deeply, but, you know, unfortunately,
autonomic arousal being sussed down under and we don't negotiate too much.
So you sleep sooner or later.
I don't know.
I was a little worried we get into discussions about the nature of reality
because it's interesting in the laboratory.
I'm a very much like, what's the experiment?
What would the analysis gonna look like?
What mutant mouse are we gonna use?
What experience are we gonna put someone through?
But I think it's wonderful that in 2020,
we can finally have discussions about this stuff
and look kind of peek around the corner and say,
well, no link and people,
others who are doing similar things
are going to figure it out.
The answers will show up and we just have to be open to interpretation.
Do you think that could be an experiment centered around consciousness?
I mean, you're plugged into the neuroscience community, I think, for the longest time,
the quote unquote, seaword was totally not, was almost anti-scientific,
but now more and more people are talking about consciousness.
Elon is talking about consciousness.
AI folks is talking about consciousness.
It's still nobody knows anything,
but it feels like a legitimate domain of inquiry
that's hungry for a real experiment.
So I have fortunately three short answers to this.
The first one is a-
Well, I was later.
I'm not particularly succinct.
I agree.
No, the joke I always tell is-
There are two things you never want to say to a scientist.
One is what do you do, and the second one is take as much time as you need and you definitely
don't want to say them in the same sentence.
I have three short answers to it.
There's a cynical answer and it's not what I enjoy giving, which is that if you look into the 70s and back at the 1970s and 1980s, and even into the early
2000s, there were some very dynamic, very impressive speakers who were very smart in the
field of neuroscience and related fields, who thought hard about the consciousness problem
and fell in love with the problem, but overlooked the fact that the technology wasn't there.
So I admire them for falling in love with the problem, but they gleaned tremendous
taxpayer resources, essentially for nothing. And these people know who they are. Some of them are
alive, some are remarked. I'm not referring to Francis Crick who was brilliant by the way, and I thought the
cloudstrom was involved in consciousness, which I think is a great idea. It's this
skeer structure that no one's really studied. People are now starting to study it.
So I think Francis was brilliant and wonderful. But there, you know, there were books written
about it. It makes for great television stuff and thought around the table or after a couple glasses of wine or whatever.
It's an important problem nonetheless.
And so I think I do think the consciousness, the issue is it's not operationally defined.
Right?
The psychologists are much smarter than a lot of hard scientists in that for the following
reason,
they put operational definitions.
They know that psychology, if we're talking about motivation,
for instance, they know they need to put operational definitions
on that so that two laboratories can know
they're studying the same thing.
The problem with consciousness is no one can agree
on what that is.
And this was a problem for attention when I was coming up.
So in the early 2000s, people would argue,
what is attention?
Is it spatial attention, auditory attention?
Is it, and finally people were like, you know what,
we agree, have they agreed on that one?
So I remember, so I remember, so I'm sharing
people's screen a lot of attention.
Right, they couldn't even agree on attention.
So I was coming up as a young graduate student
and I'm thinking like, I'm definitely not
gonna work on attention.
And I'm definitely not gonna work on consciousness. And I'm definitely not gonna work on consciousness.
And I wanted something that I could solve or figure out.
I wanna be able to see the circuit where the neurons,
I wanna be able to hear it on the audio,
I wanna record from it, and then I wanna do gain a function
and loss a function.
Take it away, see something change, put it back,
see something change in a systematic way.
And that takes you down into the depths of some stuff
that's pretty plug and chug, you know, but you know, I'll borrow from something in the military because
I'm fortunate to do some work with units from special operations and they have beautiful
language around things because their world is not abstract. And they talk about three
meter targets, ten meter targets and a hundred meter targets. And it's not an issue of picking
the hundred meter target because it's more beautiful or because it's more interesting. If you don't take down the three meter targets and the
10 meter targets first, you're dead. So that's a, oh, I think scientists could pay to, you
know, adopt a more kind of military thinking in that, in that sense. The other thing that
is really important is that just because somebody conceived of something and can talk about
it beautifully and can glean a lot of resources for it doesn't mean that it's led anywhere.
So, but this isn't just true of the consciousness issue.
And I don't want to sound cynical, but I could pull up some names of molecules that occupied
hundreds of articles in the very premier journals that then were later discovered to be totally moot for that process.
And biotech companies folded and the lab pivots and starts doing something different with
that molecule.
And nobody talks about it.
Because as long as you're in the game, we have this thing called anonymous peer review.
You can't afford to piss off anybody too much unless you have some other funding stream.
And I have avoided battles most of my career,
but I pay attention to all of it.
And I've watched this, and I don't think it's ego driven.
I think it's that people fall in love with an idea.
I don't think there's any, there's not enough money
in science for people to sit back there
rubbing their hands together, you know?
The beauty of what neural link and Elon and team,
because obviously he's very impressive,
but the team as a whole is really what gives
me great confidence in their mission.
Is that he's already got enough money, so it can't be about that.
He doesn't seem to need it at a level of, I don't know him, but he doesn't seem to need
it at a kind of an ego level or something.
I think it's driven by genuine curiosity. And the team that he's assembled
include people that are very kind of abstract neuro, neocortex, space time coding people,
they're people like Matt who is a neurosurgeon. You can't, I mean, you know, you can't
be asked neurosurgery. Failures in neurosurgery are not tolerated. So you have to be very good
to exceptional to even get through the gate and he's exceptional.
And then they've got people like Dan Adams,
who was at UCSF for a long time,
as a good friend and a known name for years,
who is very concrete,
studied the vasculature in the eye
and how it maps to the vasculature in cortex.
When you get a team like that together,
you're gonna have dissenters,
you're gonna have people that are high level thinkers,
people that are coders.
When you get a team like that, it no longer looks like an academic laboratory or even a field
in science.
I think they're going to solve some really hard problems.
Again, I'm not here.
They don't, you know, I have nothing at stake with them, but I think that's the solution.
You need a bunch of people who don't need
first author papers, who don't need to complete their PhD, who aren't relying on outside funding,
who have a clear mission, and you have a bunch of people who are basically will adapt to solve the
problem. I like the analogy of the three meter target and the 100 meter target. So the folks in
New Orleans can basically, many of them are some of the best people in the world at the three meter target.
Like, you mentioned Matt, New York Surgery, like, they're solving real problems. There's no BS plus philosophical smokes and we didn't look back and look at the stars. But.
So both Anilan and because I think like this, I think it's really important to think about the 100 meter and the 100 meter is not even a 100 meter, but like the stuff behind
the hail that's too far away, which is where I put consciousness. Maybe I tend to believe that consciousness could be engineered.
I mean, part of the reason, part of the business I want to build leverages that idea, that
consciousness is a lot simpler than we've been talking about.
If someone can simplify the problem,
that will be wonderful.
I mean, the reason we can talk about something
as abstract as face representations
and fusiform face area is because Nancy Kenwisher
had the brilliance to tie it to the kind of lower level
statistics of visual scenes.
It wasn't because she was like, oh, I bet it's there.
That wouldn't have been interesting.
So people like her understand how to bridge that gap and they put a
tractable definition. So I just I that's what I'm begging for in science. It's
tractable definition. This is what but I want people to sit in the I want people who are
really uncomfortable with woo woo like like consciousness, like high level
stuff to sit in that topic and sit uncomfortably because it forces them to then try to ground
and simplify it into something that's concrete.
Because to many people are just uncomfortable to sit in the consciousness room because there's
no definitions.
It's like attention or intelligence in the artificial intelligence community.
But the reality is, it's easy to avoid that rumor altogether, which is what, I mean,
there's analogies to everything you've said with the artificial intelligence community,
with Minsky and even Alan Turing that talked about intelligence a lot, and then they drew
a lot of funding and then it crashed because they really didn't do anything with it.
And it was a lot of force of personality and so on.
But that doesn't mean the topic of the touring test
and intelligence isn't something we should sit on
and think like what is,
well first of all, I mean,
touring actually attempted this with the touring test.
He's tried to make concrete,
that's very question of intelligence.
It doesn't mean that we shouldn't linger on it.
And we shouldn't forget that ultimately,
that is what our efforts are all about.
And the artificial intelligence community,
and in the people, whether it's neuroscience
or whatever, bigger umbrella you want to use
for understanding the mind, The goal is not just about understanding layer two or three of the vision.
It's to understand consciousness and intelligence and maybe create it or just all the possible
biggest questions of our universe.
That's ultimately the dream.
Absolutely.
And I think what I really appreciate about what you're saying is that
everybody, whether or not they're working on a kind of low level synapse, that's like a reflex
in the musculature or something very high level abstract, can benefit from looking at those who prefer
three, you know, everyone's going after a three meter, 10 meter, and 100 meter targets in some sense.
But to be able to tolerate the discomfort
of being in a conversation where there are real answers,
where the zeros and ones are known, zeros and ones,
are those the equivalent of them in the nervous system.
And also, as you said, for the people that are very much like,
oh, I can only trust what I can see and touch,
those people need to put themselves
into the discomfort of the high level conversation
because what's missing is conversation and conceptualization of things at multiple levels.
I think one of the, this is, I don't gripe about, my lab's been fortunate, we've been funded
from the start and we've been happy in that regard and lucky, and we're grateful for that,
but I think one of the challenges of research being so expensive
is that there isn't a lot of time, especially nowadays,
for people to just convene around a topic
because there's so much emphasis on productivity.
And so there are actually, believe it or not,
there aren't that many concepts,
formal concepts
in neuroscience right now.
The last 10 years has been this huge influx of tools.
And so people have been neural circuits and probing around and connectomes.
And it's been wonderful.
But you know, 10, 20 years ago, when the consciousness stuff was more prominent, the see where, and
as you said, what was good about that time is that people would
go to meetings and actually discuss ideas and models.
Now it's sort of like demonstration day at the school science fair where everyone's got
their thing and some stuff is cooler than others.
But I think we're going to see a shift.
I'm grateful that we have so many computer scientists and theoreticians and theorists, I think they call themselves.
Somebody tell me what the difference is someday.
And psychology and even dare I say philosophy,
these things are starting to converge.
Neuroscience, the name neuroscience,
there wasn't even such a thing
when I started graduate school as a postdoc, it was neurophysiology or you were an anatomist or what.
Now, it's sort of everybody's invited and that's beautiful.
That means that something's useful is going to come up all this.
And there's also tremendous work, of course, happening for the treatment of disease.
And we shouldn't overlook that.
That's where, you know, ending, you know,, eliminating, reducing suffering is also a huge initiative in neuroscience.
So there's a lot of beauty in the field,
but the conscious is this thing continues to be a,
it's like an exotic bird.
It's like no one really quite knows how to handle it
and it dies very easily.
Well, yeah.
So I think also from the AI perspective,
Well, yeah. I think also from the AI perspective, I view the brain as less sacred.
I think from a neuroscience perspective, you're a little bit more sensitive to BS, like
BS narratives about the brain or whatever.
I'm a little bit more comfortable with just poetic BS about the brain as long as it helps engineer intelligent systems.
Well, and I have to confess ignorance when it comes to most things about coding and I have some quantitative ability,
but I don't have strong quantitative leanings.
And so I know my limitations too.
And so I think the next generation coming up,
a lot of the students at Stanford
are really interested in quantitative models and theory
and AI.
And I remember when I was coming up,
a lot of the people who were doing work ahead of me,
I kind of rolled my eyes at some of the stuff they were doing,
including some of their personalities,
although I have great many great senior colleagues everywhere.
Everywhere in the world. So it's the way of the world. So nobody knows what it's like to be a, you know, a young graduate
student in 2020, except the young graduate students. So I, I know what I, I know there are a lot of
things I don't know. And in addition to why I do a lot of public education, increased scientific
literacy and neuroscientific thinking, et cetera, A big goal of mine is to try and at least pave the way
so that these really brilliant and forward thinking
younger scientists can make the biggest possible dent
and make what will eventually
go all as old guys and gals look stupid.
I mean, that's what we were all trying to do.
That's what we were trying to do, so yeah.
So from the highest possible topic of consciousness to the lowest level topic of David Goggins, let's
go.
I don't know if it's low level, he's high performance.
High performance, but like, like, there's no, I don't think David has, has any time for philosophy.
Let's just put it this way.
Well, it's, I mean, I think we can tack it to what we were just saying in a,
in a meaningful way, which is whatever goes on in that abstraction part of the brain,
he's figured, you know, he's figured out how to dig down in whatever the limbic friction.
Yeah.
He's figured out how to grab a hold of that,
scruff it, and send it in the direction that he's decided it needs to go.
And what's wild is that he's what we're talking about is him doing that to himself.
Right?
It's like he's scruffing himself and directing himself in a particular direction,
and sending himself down that trajectory,
and what's beautiful is that he acknowledges
that that process is not pretty,
it doesn't feel good,
it's kind of horrible at every level,
but he's created this rewarding element to it,
and I think that's what's so admirable and it's what so many people crave, which is
regulation of the self at that level.
And he practices it. I mean, there's a ritual to it. There's a
every single day, like no exceptions.
There's a practice aspect to the suffering. They he goes through.
It's principle suffering.
And principle suffering.
And I just, I mean, I admire all aspects of it,
including him and his girlfriend,
that's why I'm not sure.
She probably knows.
She doesn't know.
A wonderful person.
I'm not asking him.
No, no, we've only communicated with her via text
about some stuff that I was asking David, but yeah, they clearly
formed a powerful team.
Yeah.
And it's a beautiful thing to see people working
in that kind of synergy.
It's inspiring to me, same as with Elon,
that a guy like David Goggins can find love,
that you find a thing that works, which gives me hope that whatever flavor of crazy I am,
you can always find another thing that works with that.
I've had maybe a trade, Goggin stories, you're from a neuroscience perspective, me from a self-inflicted pain perspective, I somehow
found myself in communication with David about some challenges that was undergoing, one of
which is we were communicating every single day, email phone, about a particular 30-day
challenge that I did that stretched for a longer of pushups and pullups.
You made a call out on social media.
Yeah, so it's actually, I think that was the point.
I knew of you before, but that's where I started tracking some of what you were doing with these physical challenges.
And I, um, the hell's wrong with that guy?
Well, no, I think I actually, I don't often comment on people stuff, but I think I commented something like Neural Plasticity loves a non-negotiable rule.
I know I said a non-negotiable contract because at the point where, yeah, Neural Plasticity
really loves a non-negotiable contract because, you know, I've said this before.
So forgive me, but, you know, the brain is doing analysis of duration, path, and outcome.
And that's a lot of work for the brain.
And the more that it can pass off duration, path, and outcome to just reflex, the more
energy in it can allocate to other things.
So if you decide, there's no negotiation about how many push ups, how far I'm going to
run, how many days, how many pull ups, etc.
You actually have more energy for pushups running it pullups.
And when you say new pluses, you mean like the brain wants the decision is made, it'll
start rewiring stuff to make sure that this we can actually make this happen.
That's right.
I mean, so much of what we do is reflexive at the level of just core circuitry, breathing,
heart rate, all that, that boring stuff, digestion.
But then there's a lot of reflexive stuff, like how you drink out of a mug of coffee, that's reflexive too, but that you had to learn
at some point in your life earlier when you were very little, analyzing duration path and
outcome. And that involves a lot of top-down processing with the prefrontal cortex. But
through plasticity mechanisms, you now do it. So when you take on a challenge, provided
that you understand the core mechanics of how to, you know, run pushups and pull-ups and whatever else you decided to do,
once you set the number and the duration and all that, then you all you have to do is just go.
But people get caught in that tide pool of just, well, do I really have to do it? How do I not do
that? What if I get injured? What if I, you know, can I sneak a this so that, you know, and that's
do that, what if I get injured, what if I, you know, can I sneak out of this so that, you know, and that's work. And to some extent, I look, I, I'd not David Goggins obviously,
nor, nor do I claim to understand his process partially, you know, but maybe a little bit,
which is that it's clear that by making the decision, there's more resources to devote
to the effort of the actual execution.
Well, that's a really like what you're saying was not a lesson that was obvious to me,
and it's still not obvious to something I don't really work at, which is there is always an option to quit.
And I mean, that's something I really struggle with. I mean, I've quit some things in my life.
That's something I really struggle with. I mean, I've quit some things in my life.
Six stupid stuff.
And one lesson I've learned is,
if you quit once, it opens the door that,
like, it's really valuable to trick your brain
into thinking that you're gonna have to die before you quit.
Like, it's actually really convenient.
So actually what you're saying is very profound,
but you shouldn't intellectualize it.
Like, it took me time to develop,
like psychologically in ways that I think I would be
another conversation, because I'm not sure how to put it into words
But it's really tough on me to do certain parts of that challenge
Well, it's a huge you know, it's a huge output the number that I was I thought it would be the number would be hard
but it's not it's
the entirety of it
especially in the early days, was just spending, I kind of embarrassed
to say how many hours this took. So I didn't say publicly how many hours, because people,
I knew people would be like, don't you, aren't you supposed to do other stuff?
Well, it's how you do it. Again, I want to speculate too much about it, but occasionally, David has said this publicly
where people will be like, don't you sleep or something.
And his process used to just be that he would just block
delete, you know, like gone.
But it's actually, it's a super interesting topic
and because self-control and directing our actions
and the role of emotion and quitting. These are vital to
the human experience and they're vital to performing well at anything and at a high, obviously, at a
super high level, being able to understand this about the self as crucial. So I have a friend who was
also in the team's, his name is Pat Dossett, he did nine years in the SEAL teams.
And in a similar way, there's a lore about him among team guys because of a kind of funny
challenge he gave himself, which was, so he and I swim together, although he swims further
up front than I do, and he's very patient.
But he was assigned when he was in the team to a position that gave him a little more time
behind a desk than he wanted and was not as much time out in deployments, although he did deployments.
So he didn't know what to do at that time, but he thought about it and he asked himself,
what does he hate the most? And it turns out the thing that he hated doing the most was bear crawls,
you know, he walked in to your hands and knees. So he decided to bear crawl for a mile for time.
So he was bear crawling a mile a day, right?
And I thought that was an interesting example they gave because, you know, like,
why pick the thing you hate the most?
And I think it maps right back to limbic friction.
It's the thing that creates the most limbic friction.
And so if you can overcome that, then there's carryover.
And I think the notion of carryover has been talked
about psychologically and kind of in the self-help space,
like, oh, if you run a marathon,
it's gonna help you in other areas of life.
But will it really?
Will it?
Well, I think it depends on whether or not
there's a lot of limbic friction,
because if there is, what you're exercising
is not a circuit for bear crawls,
or a circuit for pull-ups.
What you're doing is you're exercising a circuit for bear crawls or a circuit for pull-ups. What you're doing is you're exercising
a circuit for top-down control. And that circuit was not designed to be for bear crawls or pull-ups
or coding or waking up in the middle of the night to do something hard. That circuit was designed
to override limbic friction. And so, neural circuits were designed to generalize, the stress
response to an incoming threat, that's a physical threat, was designed to feel
the same way and be the same response internally as the threat to an impending exam or divorce
or marriage or whatever it is that's stressing somebody out.
And so neural circuits are not designed to be for one particular action or purpose.
So if you couldn't, as you did, if you can train up top-down control under conditions of the highest limbic friction, that when
the desire to quit is at its utmost, either because of fatigue or hyperarousal, being too
stressed or too tired, you're learning how to engage a circuit, and that circuit is forever
with you. And if you don't engage it, you,
it sits there, but it's atrophied. It's not, it's like a plant that doesn't get any
water. And a lot of this has been discussed in self-help and growth mindset and all these
kinds of ideas that circle the internet and social media. But when you start to think
about how they map to neural circuits, I think there's some utility because what it means
is that the limbic friction that you'll experience in, I don't know,
maybe some future relationship to something or someone,
it's a category of neural processing
that should immediately click into place.
It's just like the limbic friction you experienced,
trying to engage in the, God knows how many push ups,
pull ups and running, you know, runs you were doing.
About 5,000 twist counting.
So folks, if if Lex does this again, more comments, more lives.
No, well, this is a problem with you getting more followers as you're going to get more.
Yeah, actually, I should say that's the benefit.
I don't know.
Maybe it's not politically correct for me to ask, but there is this stereotype about Russians being,
you know, like like like like like like like like like being
really, you know, durable.
And, and you know, I started going to that Russian
Bonya that way back before COVID.
And they could tolerate a lot of heat, you know,
and they would sit very stoic, you know,
and no one was going, oh, it's hot in here.
They're just kind of like easing to it. So maybe there's something that, you know, it one was going all that's hot in here. They're just kind of like ease into it
So maybe there's something that you know might be something there, but it could be also just personal. I just have some
I found myself Everyone's different, but I've found myself to be able to do
something unpleasant for very long periods of time
Like I'm able to shut off the mind and
I don't think that's been fully tested.
And I think you're mind are the super computer.
Well, it's interesting.
I mean, which mind tells you to quit?
Exactly.
Limbic friction tells you.
What's the limbic friction is the source of that,
but who are you talking with exactly?
So there's a, we can put something very concrete to that.
So there's a paper published in cell, super top dear journal, two years ago, looking
at effort.
And this was in a visual environment of trying to swim forward toward a target and a reward.
And it was a really cool experiment because they manipulated virtually the visual environment.
So the same amount of effort was being expended every time,
but sometimes the perception was you're making forward
progress and sometimes the perception was you're making
no progress because stuff wasn't drifting by
and meant no progress.
So you can be swimming and swimming
and not making progress.
And it turns out that with each bout of effort, there's
a epinephrine and nor epinephrine is being released in the brainstem. And glia, what traditionally
were thought of as support cells for the neurons, but they do a lot of things actively too,
are measuring the amount of epinephrine and nor epinephrine in that circuit. And when it exceeds
a certain threshold, the glia send inhibitoryory signals that shut down top down control, they literally, it's the quit. Stop. There's no more,
it's you quit enduring. It can be rescued. Endurance can be rescued with dopamine.
So that's where the subjective part really comes into play.
So you quit because you've learned how to turn that off or you've learned how to wrote.
Some people will reward the pain process so much that friction becomes the reward.
And you know, when you talk about people like Goggins and other people I know from special
operations and people have gone through cancer treatments three times.
You hear about, you know, just when you hear about people, the Victor Frankl stories, I mean,
you hear about Nossam and Deli, you hear about these stories. I'm sure the same process is involved.
Again, this speaks to the generalizability of these processes as opposed to a neural circuit
for a particular action or cognitive function. So I think you have to learn to subjectively self-reward
in a way that replenishes you. Gagan talks about eating souls, it's a very dramatic example.
In his mind apparently, that's a form of reward, but it's not just a form of reward where
you're picking up a trophy or something, it's actually, it gives the energy.
It's a reward that gives more neural energy, and I'm defining that as more dopamine
to suppress the noradrenaline, adrenaline circuits in the brainstem.
So ultimately maps to that.
Yeah, he creates enemies.
He's always fighting enemies.
I never, I think I have enemies, but they're usually just versions of me inside my head.
So I thought about through that 30 day challenge, I tried to come up with like fake enemies. It wasn't working.
The only enemy I came up with is David. Well, now you have a, you certainly have a form,
a formidable adversary in this one. I don't care. I'm David. I'm willing to die on this one.
Come on. Let's go there.
But I'm like, well, let's hope you both
both survive this
one. But my problem is the physical. There's so everything we've been talking about been the mind
There's a physical aspect that's just practically difficult, which is like I
And there's a physical aspect that's just practically difficult, which is like, I can't, like, you know, when you injure yourself at a certain point, like you just can't function,
or you're doing more damage.
Yeah.
Talking about it, taking yourself out of running for, yeah.
For the rest of your life potentially, or like, you know, or data for years.
So, you know, I'd love to avoid that.
Right? There's just like stupid physical
stuff that you just want to avoid. You want to keep it purely in the mental. And if it's purely
in the mental, that's one of the races. Interesting. But yeah, the problem with these physical
challenges as David has experienced, I mean, it has a toll on your body. I tend to think of the
mind as limitless and the body is kind of unfortunately quite limited.
Well, I think the key is to dynamically control your output.
And that can be done by reducing effort, which doesn't work throughout, but also by restoring
through these subjective reward processes.
And we don't want to go down the rabbit hole of why this all works, but these are ancient pathways that were designed to
bring resources to an animal or to a person through foraging for hunting or mates or water or all these things.
And they work so well because they're down in those circuits where we know the zeros and ones. And that's great because it can be
subjective at the level of, oh, I reached this one milestone, this one horizon, this one
three meter target. But if you don't reward it, you, it's just effort. If you do self-reward
it, it's effort minus one in terms of the adrenaline output. I have to ask you about this.
You're one of the great communicators in science.
I'm really big fan of yours
enjoying in terms of the educational stuff
you're putting on neuroscience.
What's the, do you have a philosophy behind it?
Or is it just an instinct, an unstoppable force?
Do you have, like, what's your thinking?
Because it's rare and it's exciting.
I'm excited that, you know, somebody from Stanford.
So I, okay, I mean, multiple places in the sense of like where my interests lie and what and know politically speaking, academic
institutions are under fire.
You know, for many reasons, we don't need to get into.
I get into into a lot of other places, but I believe in places like Stanford and places like MIT, as one of the most magical institutions
for inspiring people to dream, people to build the future.
I believe that it is a really special,
these universities are really special places.
So it's always exciting to me when somebody,
as inspiring as you, represents those places. So it's always exciting to me when somebody,
as inspiring as you, represents those places.
So it makes me proud that somebody from Stanford
is like somebody like you is representing Stanford.
So maybe you could speak to what's,
how did you come to be who you are
in being a communicator?
Well, first of all, thanks for the the kind of words, especially coming from you.
I think Stanford is an amazing place as is MIT and it's such a MIT's better by the
book. I'll let it out. Anything you say.
There are many friends at MIT.
Yeah.
You know, how? Smarter friends.
Ed Boydon is best in class, you know, among the best in class.
Yeah.
There's some people not me that can hold the candle to him,
but not many, maybe one or two.
I think the great benefit of being in a place like MIT
or Stanford is that when you look around,
the average is very high.
Right, you have many best in class among the, you know, one or two or three best in the world at what they do.
And it's a wonderful privilege to be there.
And one thing that I think also makes them, and other universities like them very special,
is that there's an emphasis on what gets exported out of the university,
what, you know, not keeping it ivory tower and really trying to keep an eye on what gets exported out of the university, not keeping it ivory tower,
and really trying to keep an eye on what's needed in the world and trying to do something useful.
And I think the proximity to industry and Silicon Valley and in the Boston area in Cambridge also
lends itself well to that. And there are other institutions too, of course. So the reason I got
involved in educating on social media was actually because of a pat
dosit, the bare mile bare call guy.
I was at the turn of 2018 to 2019.
We had formed a good friendship and we were, we talked to me into doing these early morning
cold water swims.
I was learning a lot about pain and suffering, but also the beauty of cold water swims and
we were talking one morning,
and he said, so what are you gonna do
to serve the world in 2019?
Like that's the way that like a Texan former seal talks.
Like we're just, literally,
what are you gonna do to serve the world in 2019?
Like, well, I run my lab,
I was like, no, no, what are you gonna do that's new?
And he wasn't forceful in it,
but I was like, that's interesting question.
I said, well, if I had my way,
I would just teach people everyone about the brain
because I think it's amazing.
It goes, we'll do it.
All right, you go shagging on it.
So we did it.
And so I started putting out these posts
and it's grown into, to include a variety of things.
But you asked about a governing philosophy.
So I want to increase interest in the brain
and in the nervous system
and in biology generally. That's one major goal. I'd like to increase scientific literacy,
which can't be rammed down people's throats of talking about how to look at a graph and
statistics and z-scores and p-values and genetics. It has to be done gradually in my opinion.
I want to put valuable tools into
the world, mainly tools that map to things that we're doing in our lab. So these will
be tools centered around how to understand and direct one's states of mind and body.
So reduce stress, raise one's stress threshold. So it's not always just about being calm.
Sometimes it's about learning how to tolerate, not being not calm.
Raise awareness for mental health. I mean, there's a ton of micro missions in this,
but it all really maps back to, you know,
like the eight and 10 year old version of me,
which is I used to spend my weekends
when I was a kid reading about weird animals,
and I had this obsession with like medieval weapons
and stuff, like catapults.
And then I used to come into school on Monday
and I would ask if I could talk about it to the class and teach and I just
It's really I
Promise and some people might not believe me, but it's really I don't really like being the point of focus
I just get so excited about these gems of that I find in the world in books and in
experiments and in discussions with colleagues,
and discussions with people like you,
and around the universe,
and I can't, just compulsively,
I gotta tell people about it.
So I try and package it into a form
that people can access.
You know, I think if I've,
I think the reception has been really wonderful.
Stanford has been very supportive.
Thankfully, I've given it some podcasts even with them, and they've reposted some stuff
on social media.
It's a precarious place to put yourself out there as a research academic.
I think some of my colleagues, both locally and elsewhere, probably wonder if I'm still
serious about research, which I absolutely am.
And I also acknowledge that their research and the research coming out of the field
needs to be talked about, and not all scientists
are good at translating that into a language
that people can access.
And I don't like the phrase dumb it down.
What I like to do is take a concept
that I think people will find interesting and useful.
And offer it sort of like a,
you would offer food to somebody visiting your home.
You're not gonna cram frog raw in their face.
You're gonna say,
like, do you want a cracker?
Like, and they say, yeah,
and like, do you want something on that cracker?
Like, do you like cheese?
Like, yeah, like, do you want Swiss cheese?
Or you want that really like stinky, like,
French, I don't like cheese much,
but, or do you want frog raw?
Like, what's that?
Like, so you're trying the best information prompts
more questions of interest, not questions of confusion,
but questions of interest.
And so I feel like one door opens,
then another door opens, then another door opens.
And pretty soon, the image in my mind
is you create a bunch of neuroscientists
who are thinking about themselves neuroscientifically.
And I don't begin to think that I have all the answers at all.
I cast a neuroscience, sometimes a little bit of a psychology
lens onto what I think are interesting topics.
And you know, I, you know, someday I'm going to go into the ground
or the ocean or wherever it is I end up.
And I'm very comfortable with the fact that not everyone's going to be happy
with how I deliver the information, but I would hope that people would feel like some of
it was useful and meaningful and got them to think a little bit harder.
Since you mentioned going into the ground and Victor Franco, Manscer's for meaning, I read that book quite often.
What, let me ask the big ridiculous question about life.
What do you think is the meaning of it all?
Like, maybe, why do you, do you mention that book from a psychologist perspective which Victor Franco was or do you do you ever think about
The the bigger philosophical questions that raises about meaning what's and the meaning of it all
One of the great challenges in assigning a
Good, you know giving a good answer to the question of like, what's the meaning of life?
Is, I think, illustrated best by the Victor Frankl example, although there are other examples too,
which is that our sense of meaning is very elastic in time and space. And I'm, we talked a little
bit about this earlier, but it's amazing to me that somebody locked in a cell or concentration
camp can bring the horizon in close enough that they can then micro slice their environment
so that they can find rewards and meaning and power and beauty even in a little square
box or a horrible situation.
And I think this is really speaks to one of the most important features of the human mind,
which is we could do, let's take two opposite extremes.
One would be, let's say the alarm went off right now in this building,
and the building started shaking.
Our vision, our hearing, everything would be tuned to this space-time bubble for those moments.
And everything that we were processed,
all that would matter, the only meaning would be,
get out of here safe, figure out what's going on,
contact loved ones, et cetera.
If we were to sit back totally relaxed,
we could do the, you know what I think it's called,
pale blue dot thing or whatever,
where we could imagine ourselves in this room
and then they were in the United States
and this continent and the earth and then spearing down us and all of a sudden you get back, it can seem so big that all of a sudden it's
meaningless, right? If you see yourself as just one brief glimmer in all of time and all of space,
you go to, I don't matter. And if you go to, oh, every little thing that happens in this text thread
or this, you know, comment section
on YouTuber Instagram, your space time bubble is tiny, then everything seems inflated.
And the brain will contract and dilate at space time, vision and time, but also sense
of meaning.
And that's beautiful.
And it's what allows us to be so dynamic in different environments
and we can pull from the past and the present and future. It's why examples like Nelson Mandela and
Victor Frankl had to include. It makes sense that it wasn't just about grinding it out. They had
to find those dopamine rewards even in those little boxes they were forced into. So I'm not trying to dodge an answer, but for me personally, and
I think about this a lot, because I have this complicated history in science, where my undergraduate
graduate advisor and postdoctoral advisor all died young. So, you know, and they were wonderful people and had immense importance in my life.
But what I realized is that we can get so fixated on the thing that we're experiencing, how
holding tremendous meaning, but it only holds that meaning for as long as we're in that
space-time regime.
And this is important because what really gives meaning is the understanding that you can
move between these different space time dimensionalities.
And I'm not trying to sound like a theoretical physicist or anyone that thinks about the
cosmos in saying that, it's really the fact that sometimes we'd say and do and think
things and it feels so important.
And then two days later, like, what happened?
Well, you had a different brain processing algorithm
entirely.
You were in a completely different state.
And so what I want to do in this lifetime
is I want to engage in as many different levels
of contraction and dilation of meaning as possible.
I want to go to the micro.
I sometimes think about this.
I'm like, if I just pulled over to the side of the road,
I bet you there's an ant hill there
and their whole world is fascinating.
You can't stay there.
And you also can't stay staring up at the clouds
and just think about how we're just these little beings
and it doesn't matter.
The key is the journey back and forth,
up and down that staircase, back and forth, and back and forth. And my goal is to get back and forth up and down that staircase back and forth and back and forth.
And my goal is to get as many trips up and down that staircase as I can before the reaper comes for me.
Oh, beautiful. So the dance of dilation contraction between the difference between the zoom in, zoom out,
and get as many steps in on that staircase.
That's my goal anyway.
And I've watched people die. I watched my post-doc advisor die with her away, my graduate
but it was tragic.
But they found beauty in these closing moments because their bubble was their kids in one case
or like one of them was a Giants fan and like got to see a Giants game, you know, in her last moments. And like, and you just realize like it's a Giants game, but not in that moment because time is
closing. And so those timetimes feel huge because she's slicing things so differently. So I think,
learning how to do that better and more fluidly, recognizing where one is and not getting too
tacked the idea that there's one correct answer,
like that's what brings meaning. That's Michael anyway.
I don't think there's a better way to end it. Andrew, I really appreciate that you would come down
and contract your space time and focus on this conversation for a few hours.
It is a huge honor. I'm huge fan of yours as I told you.
I hope you keep going and educating the world
about the human mind.
Thanks for talking to me.
Thank you.
I really appreciate the invitation to be here.
And people might think that I'm saying it just
because I'm here, but I'm a huge fan of yours.
I send your podcasts of my colleagues
and other people.
And I think what you're doing isn't just amazing.
It's important.
And so thank you.
Thanks for listening to this conversation
with Andrew Huberman.
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And now, let me leave you with some words from Carl Jung.
I am not what happened to me.
I am what I choose to become.
Thank you for listening, and hope to see you next time.