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How your brain's executive function works -- and how to improve it

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    So I have a confession to make.
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    I only recently learned how to drive.
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    And it was really hard.
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    Now, this wasn't an older brain thing.
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    Do you remember what it was like
    when you first learned how to drive?
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    When every decision you made
    was so conscious and deliberate?
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    I'd come home from my lessons
    completely wiped out mentally.
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    Now, as a cognitive scientist
    I know that this is because I was using
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    a lot of something
    called executive function.
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    Executive function is our amazing ability
    to consciously control our thoughts,
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    emotions and actions
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    in order to achieve goals ...
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    like learning how to drive.
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    It's what we use when we need
    to break away from habit,
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    inhibit our impulses and plan ahead.
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    But we can see it most clearly
    when things go wrong.
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    Like, have you ever accidentally
    poured orange juice on your cereal?
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    (Laughter)
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    Or, ever start scrolling on Facebook
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    and suddenly realize
    you've missed a meeting?
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    (Laughter)
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    Or maybe this one's more familiar:
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    Ever plan to stop at the store
    on the way home from work
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    and then drive all the way home
    instead on autopilot?
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    (Laughter)
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    These things happen to everyone.
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    And we usually call it absentmindedness,
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    but what's really happening
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    is we're experiencing a lapse
    in executive function.
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    So we use executive function
    every day in all aspects of our lives.
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    And over the past 30 years,
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    researchers have found
    that it predicts all kinds of good things
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    in childhood and beyond,
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    like social skills, academic achievement,
    mental and physical health,
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    making money, saving money
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    and even staying out of jail.
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    Sounds great, doesn't it?
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    So it's no surprise
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    that researchers like me
    are so interested in understanding it
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    and figuring out ways to improve it.
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    But lately, executive function has become
    a huge self-improvement buzzword.
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    People think you can improve it
    through brain-training iPhone apps
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    and computer games,
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    or by practicing it in a specific way,
    like playing chess.
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    And researchers are trying
    to train it in the lab
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    in the hopes of improving it
    and other things related to it,
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    like intelligence.
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    Well, I'm here to tell you
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    that this way of thinking
    about executive function is all wrong.
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    Brain training won't improve
    executive function in a broad sense
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    because it involves
    exercising it in a narrow way,
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    outside of the real-world contexts
    in which we actually use it.
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    So you can master that executive
    function app on your phone,
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    but that's not going to help you stop
    pouring OJ on your Cheeerios twice a week.
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    (Laughter)
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    If you really want to improve
    your executive function
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    in a way that matters for your life,
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    you have to understand
    how it's influenced by context.
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    Let me show you what I mean.
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    There's a great test
    that we use in the lab
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    to measure executive function
    in young children
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    called the "dimensional change card sort."
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    In this task, kids have to sort
    cards in one way --
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    like by shape --
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    over and over until they build up a habit.
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    And then they're asked to switch
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    and sort the same cards in another way,
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    like by color.
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    Now, really young kids struggle with this.
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    Three- and four-year-olds will usually
    keep sorting the cards in the old way
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    no matter how many times you remind
    them of what they should be doing.
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    (Video) Woman: If it's blue, put it here.
    If it's red, put it here.
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    Here's a blue one.
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    OK, so now we're going to play
    a different game.
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    We're not going to play
    the color game anymore.
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    Now we're going to play the shape game,
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    and in the shape game,
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    all the stars go here
    and all the trucks go here, OK?
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    Stars go here, trucks go here.
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    Where do the stars go?
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    And where do the trucks go?
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    Excellent.
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    OK, stars go here, trucks go here.
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    Here's a truck.
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    (Laughter)
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    Stars go here, trucks go here.
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    Here's a star.
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    (Laughter)
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    SB: So it's really compelling,
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    and it's really obvious when she fails
    to use her executive function.
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    But here's the thing:
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    we could train her on this task
    and others like it
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    and eventually she'd improve,
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    but does that mean
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    that she would've improved
    her executive function outside of the lab?
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    No, because in the real world,
    she'll need to use executive function
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    to do a lot more than switching
    between shape and color.
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    She'll need to switch
    from adding to multiplying
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    or from playing to tidying up
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    or from thinking about her own feelings
    to thinking about her friend.
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    And success in real-world situations
    depends on things
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    like how motivated you are
    and what your peers are doing.
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    And it also depends
    on the strategies that you execute
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    when you're using executive function
    in a particular situation.
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    So what I'm saying is
    that context really matters.
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    Now let me give you an example
    from my research.
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    I recently brought in a bunch of kids
    to do the classic marshmallow test,
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    which is a measure
    of delay of gratification
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    that also likely requires
    a lot of executive function.
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    So you may have heard about this test,
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    but basically, kids are given a choice.
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    They can have one marshmallow right away,
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    or if they can wait for me
    to go to the other room
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    and get more marshmallows,
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    they can have two instead.
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    Now, most kids really want
    that second marshmallow,
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    but the key question is:
    How long can they wait?
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    (Laughter)
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    Now, I added a twist
    to look at the effects of context.
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    I told each kid that they were in a group,
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    like the green group,
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    and I even gave them
    a green T-shirt to wear.
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    And I said, "Your group
    waited for two marshmallows,
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    and this other group, the orange group,
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    did not."
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    Or I said the opposite:
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    "Your group didn't wait
    for two marshmallows
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    and this other group did."
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    And then I left the kid alone in the room
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    and I watched on a webcam
    to see how long they waited.
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    (Laughter)
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    So what I found was that kids who believed
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    that their group waited
    for two marshmallows
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    were themselves more likely to wait.
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    So they were influenced by a peer group
    that they'd never even met.
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    (Laughter)
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    Pretty cool, isn't it?
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    Well, so with this result
    I still didn't know
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    if they were just copying their group
    or if it was something deeper than that.
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    So I brought in some more kids,
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    and after the marshmallow test,
    I showed them pictures of pairs of kids,
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    and I told them, "One of these kids
    likes to have things right away,
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    like cookies and stickers.
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    And the other kid likes to wait
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    so that they can have
    more of these things."
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    And then I asked them,
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    "Which one of these two kids
    do you like more
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    and who would you want to play with?"
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    And what I found was that kids
    who believed that their group waited
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    tended to prefer other kids
    who liked to wait for things.
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    So learning what their group did
    made them value waiting more.
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    And not only that,
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    these kids likely used executive function
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    to generate strategies
    to help themselves wait,
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    like sitting on their hands
    or turning away from the marshmallow
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    or singing a song to distract themselves.
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    (Laughter)
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    So what this all shows
    is just how much context matters.
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    It's not that these kids
    had good executive function or bad,
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    it's that the context
    helped them use it better.
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    So what does this mean
    for you and for your kids?
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    Well, let's say that you want
    to learn Spanish.
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    You could try changing your context
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    and surrounding yourself
    with other people who also want to learn,
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    and even better if these are people
    that you really like.
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    That way you'll be more motivated
    to use executive function.
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    Or let's say that you want to help
    your child do better on her math homework.
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    You could teach her strategies
    to use executive function
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    in that particular context,
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    like putting her phone away
    before she starts studying
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    or planning to reward herself
    after studying for an hour.
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    Now, I don't want to make it sound
    like context is everything.
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    Executive function is really complex,
    and it's shaped by numerous factors.
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    But what I want you to remember
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    is if you want to improve
    your executive function
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    in some aspect of your life,
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    don't look for quick fixes.
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    Think about the context
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    and how you can make
    your goals matter more to you,
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    and how you can use strategies
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    to help yourself
    in that particular situation.
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    I think the ancient Greeks said it best
    when they said, "Know thyself."
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    And a key part of this is knowing
    how context shapes your behavior
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    and how you can use that knowledge
    to change for the better.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
How your brain's executive function works -- and how to improve it
Speaker:
Sabine Doebel
Description:

You use your brain's executive function every day -- it's what let you do things like pay attention, plan ahead and control impulses. So … can you improve it to change for the better? With highlights from her research on child development, cognitive scientist Sabine Doebel explores the factors that affect executive function -- and shows how you can use it to break away from bad habits and achieve your goals.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
09:15

English subtitles

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