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David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
Do People Only Use 10 Percent Of Their Brains?
By Robynne Boyd
February 7, 2008
Scientific American - Fact or Fiction

What's the matter with only exploiting a portion of our gray matter?

The human brain is complex. Along with performing millions of mundane acts, it composes concertos, issues manifestos and comes up with elegant solutions to equations. It's the wellspring of all human feelings, behaviors, experiences as well as the repository of memory and self-awareness. So it's no surprise that the brain remains a mystery unto itself.

Adding to that mystery is the contention that humans "only" employ 10 percent of their brain. If only regular folk could tap that other 90 percent, they too could become savants who remember π to the twenty-thousandth decimal place or perhaps even have telekinetic powers.

Though an alluring idea, the "10 percent myth" is so wrong it is almost laughable, says neurologist Barry Gordon at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore. Although there's no definitive culprit to pin the blame on for starting this legend, the notion has been linked to the American psychologist and author William James, who argued in The Energies of Men that "We are making use of only a small part of our possible mental and physical resources." It's also been associated with to Albert Einstein, who supposedly used it to explain his cosmic towering intellect.

The myth's durability, Gordon says, stems from people's conceptions about their own brains: they see their own shortcomings as evidence of the existence of untapped gray matter. This is a false assumption. What is correct, however, is that at certain moments in anyone's life, such as when we are simply at rest and thinking, we may be using only 10 percent of our brains.

"It turns out though, that we use virtually every part of the brain, and that [most of] the brain is active almost all the time," Gordon adds. "Let's put it this way: the brain represents three percent of the body's weight and uses 20 percent of the body's energy."

The average human brain weighs about three pounds and comprises the hefty cerebrum, which is the largest portion and performs all higher cognitive functions; the cerebellum, responsible for motor functions, such as the coordination of movement and balance; and the brain stem, dedicated to involuntary functions like breathing. The majority of the energy consumed by the brain powers the rapid firing of millions of neurons communicating with each other. Scientists think it is such neuronal firing and connecting that gives rise to all of the brain's higher functions. The rest of its energy is used for controlling other activities?both unconscious activities, such as heart rate, and conscious ones, such as driving a car.

Although it's true that at any given moment all of the brain's regions are not concurrently firing, brain researchers using imaging technology have shown that, like the body's muscles, most are continually active over a 24-hour period. "Evidence would show over a day you use 100 percent of the brain," says John Henley, a neurologist at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. Even in sleep, areas such as the frontal cortex, which controls things like higher level thinking and self-awareness, or the somatosensory areas, which help people sense their surroundings, are active, Henley explains.

Take the simple act of pouring coffee in the morning: In walking toward the coffeepot, reaching for it, pouring the brew into the mug, even leaving extra room for cream, the occipital and parietal lobes, motor sensory and sensory motor cortices, basal ganglia, cerebellum and frontal lobes all activate. A lightning storm of neuronal activity occurs almost across the entire brain in the time span of a few seconds.

"This isn't to say that if the brain were damaged that you wouldn't be able to perform daily duties," Henley continues. "There are people who have injured their brains or had parts of it removed who still live fairly normal lives, but that is because the brain has a way of compensating and making sure that what's left takes over the activity."

Being able to map the brain's various regions and functions is part and parcel of understanding the possible side effects should a given region begin to fail. Experts know that neurons that perform similar functions tend to cluster together. For example, neurons that control the thumb's movement are arranged next to those that control the forefinger. Thus, when undertaking brain surgery, neurosurgeons carefully avoid neural clusters related to vision, hearing and movement, enabling the brain to retain as many of its functions as possible.

What's not understood is how clusters of neurons from the diverse regions of the brain collaborate to form consciousness. So far, there's no evidence that there is one site for consciousness, which leads experts to believe that it is truly a collective neural effort. Another mystery hidden within our crinkled cortices is that out of all the brain's cells, only 10 percent are neurons; the other 90 percent are glial cells, which encapsulate and support neurons, but whose function remains largely unknown. Ultimately, it's not that we use 10 percent of our brains, merely that we only understand about 10 percent of how it functions.
 

Lana

Member
During my reading in neuropsychology course the textbook covered the old "we only use 10% of our brain" notion. It is believed that it came from studies where scientists observed animals that sustained brain injury up to 90% of their brain. Today, however, it is recognized that while someone may appear like he or she is behaving normally after sustaining severe brain damage, it doesn't mean they function normally with that 10% of the brain.
 

NicNak

Resident Canuck
Administrator
but that is because the brain has a way of compensating and making sure that what's left takes over the activity."

I really have noticed this over the course of the last 12 years, with having mental illness.

I have become about 60% ambidextrous. My coping skills are horrible for day to day life, but I am highly intelligent with an IQ of apparently 130.

I don't agree that we only use 10% of our brains. When we would be having brain scanns, like the artical says, we would be in a rest mode. Unless there was some way to hook someone up to a "helmet" portable brain scanner to see how their brain functions are through out their regular life, then it can't truly be verified.

The brain is highly complex. I am reluctant to say it, but I really believe that we as humans do not have the compasity to figure it all out. The idea that even the highest of functioning person can figure out a brain function with their own brain baffels me.

I am not saying though, we shouldn't try :D
 

Meggylou

Member
Being a psych student and knowing that we use our full brain potential is fascinating, because we have very little understand of what actually goes on and why these things happen. One of my pet project fields of interest is sleeping behaviours. No one knows why we do it, how it truly works and how to propertly record it. We can't - not yet at least - see what is going on in our heads all the time. With EEG we're really only getting cortical recordings, and can't measure such things as PGO waves and how they manifest themselves and work within the human brain. The brain can be considered one of the "final" frontiers of medical science since so little is still known. I can't wait to see what will be discovered in my life time!
 

Sparrow

Member
I've alway been right-handed but trying hard for a while to write with my left hand just for an "exercise" (I broke the flippin' crayola!). What about adults that need, (and succeed) to compensate after losing their sight, or hearing? What takes over? What about mouth painters. 10% reminds me of brain plasticity and how some of us can adapt to adversity.
 

Mari

MVP
(I broke the flippin' crayola!)
:rolleyes:

The first time I read an article on this I thought of the writer 'you might only use ten percent of your brain but please do not speak for the rest of us'. A very interesting topic and a mystery that will (n)ever be solved? :think: Mari
 
Great post!

there's a lot of scientific research that shows we indeed only do use 10% of our braing. Just look at the neurological activity in the brain, and you'll see there's so much that is left un-tapped..
 
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