Brain Awareness Week: How to Keep your Brain Healthy
Posted on 17/03/2009 | 0 Comments
This week is Brain Awareness Week (BAW). BAW is an international campaign dedicated to advancing public awareness about the progress and benefits of brain research.
According to the Dana Foundation:
Brain Awareness Week began in 1996 as a modest effort involving 160 organizations in the United States. BAW was created to bring together diverse groups from academia, government, professional, and advocacy groups and unite them with a common theme that brain research is the hope for treatments and preventions, and possibly cures, for brain diseases and disorders, and to ensure a better quality of life at all ages. In 1998, the campaign became international, first as a day and then as a week. Since that time, BAW has evolved into a powerful global initiative with more than 2,200 partners in 76 countries (as of the 2008 campaign).
What is the brain made of and how does it work?
The brain is made of millions and millions of special cells called neurons and other special cells called glial cells. Each of these cells is connected to many many many other cells by long “arms”. These long arms let different cells talk to each other. The places that the arms touch other cells are made specially to help cells talk to each other. Cells talk to each other by sending electrical and chemical messages to each other.
There are more connections in the brain then there are stars in the sky. The human brain is the most complex thing that we know about – and we are learning more about it every day. All things that we do and are as human beings comes from the human brain. It writes our greatest stories, builds our most complicated machines and buildings, creates music and art, plays games, builds social networks, lets us fall in love and directs us to do all the good and not so good things in life.
The brain remembers everything that happens to a person and stores little bits and pieces of those happenings in different parts – we call that memory. The brain takes information from the environment and checks that information against its memory. Then the brain decides what it will do. Every thought we have, every feeling we have, and everything that we do is decided by our brains. It is really important for us to keep our brains healthy.
Here are some ways to help your brain to be healthy.
- Eat proper food. A healthy diet is important for a healthy brain.
- Gets lots of sleep. Your brain needs sleep to grow properly and to remember things better.
- Don’t use drugs. Drugs damage the brain.
- Get lots of fresh air and physical exercise. Your brain needs oxygen to work properly and physical exercise is good for your brain because it reminds the brain to send “feel-good” messages to itself and to the body.
- Spend time enjoying music, dance or art. Your brain uses these things to help it work better at all sorts of activities.
- Take time to learn things. The more you practice skills or lessons the better your brain will be at doing what you want to do.
- Learn how to decrease stress. Your brain can be hurt by too much stress. Learn what makes you relax – such as exercise, hanging out with your friends, playing music, etc. and when you are feeling stressed out try to do those things that decrease your stress.
- Make good friends. Your brain develops best in a social network. Good friends are important.
More information about the brain:
Teenmentalhealth.org – The Teen Brain Brain Blogger PBS Documentary – “Inside the Teenage Brain” The Dana Foundation Brain Explorer
Previous Brain Posts:
Your Brain and the Internet: Use it or Lose it Studying the Brain from the Inside Out Enhancing Successful School Learning by Understanding How the Brain Works
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This is a great set of comments and rings very true.
I totally agree that scientists (just like everyone else) have their biases and foibles. After all, scientists are human beings too! But science is different than scientists.
The scientific method is the most objective frame that we have by which to evaluate and predict. Science is not about finding truth. It is only about being less wrong most of the time. The scientific method (experimental design and mathematics) gives us the ability to test what we believe. The scientific method is not used to prove something is correct, on the contrary, the scientific method is designed to prove that something is not correct! It is designed to test what is called the “null hypothesis”. It takes ideas that come out of left field (or wherever else they come from) and puts those ideas to an independent test.
t does not drive our beliefs. It does however challenge our beliefs. In that way it is self-correcting. Of course scientific inquiry and understanding lives within a wider social context. That is one of the great features of science.
But gravity is gravity, social context notwithstanding. And thus it is nasty, brutish and long. As Brecht said, (something like this) - the purpose of science is to save us from everlasting error.
By Christina Carew on May 11th
We would like to say thanks...
Without their help this initiative would not be possible. Thanks for you help.






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