16 February 2014 @ 02:32 am
 
The neuroscientist Susan Greenfield illustrates the amazing plasticity of the young brain in a cautionary tale of a six-year-old boy in Italy, who was blind in one eye. The cause of his blindness was a mystery. As far as the ophthalmologists could tell, his eye was perfectly normal. They eventually discovered that when he was a baby, he had been treated for a minor infection. The treatment included having the eye bandaged for two weeks. This would have made little difference to the eye of an adult. But in a young baby, the development of the eye-to-brain neural circuits is a delicate and critical process. Because the neurons serving the bandaged eye were not being used during this crucial period of development, they were treated by the brain as though they weren’t there at all. “Sadly,” said Greenfield, “the bandaging of the eye was misinterpreted by the brain as a clear indication that the boy would not be using the eye for the rest of his life.” The result was that he was permanently blinded in that eye.

//Ken Robinson, 2009, The Element: How Finding Your Passion Changes Everything
 
 
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adele_varbut[info]adele_varbut on February 16th, 2014 - 02:42 am
Ja tas tā ir, tad izklausās biedējoši. Ja padomā par visām spējām, ko iespējams nokaut, tās atstājot novārtā bērnībā.
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cukursēne[info]saccharomyces on February 16th, 2014 - 02:47 am
jā.

un vispār jau notikti ne tikai bērnībā, vēlāk vienkārši tas efekts lēnāks/mazāk krass. atrofējas tas, ko neizmanto.
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adele_varbut[info]adele_varbut on February 16th, 2014 - 03:11 am
Ja to atrofēto vēl varētu uztrenēt, tad nebūtu tik traki. Bet doma, ka dažas spējas varētu būt neatgūstamas, ir ļoti neomulīga.
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