Huberman Lab - AMA #1: Leveraging Ultradian Cycles, How to Protect Your Brain, Seed Oils Examined and More
Episode Date: November 2, 2022Welcome to a preview of the first Ask Me Anything (AMA) episode, part of Huberman Lab Premium subscription. The Huberman Lab Premium subscription was launched for two main reasons. First, it was launc...hed in order to raise support for the standard Huberman Lab podcast channel — which will continue to come out every Monday at zero-cost. Second, it was launched as a means to raise funds for important scientific research. A significant portion of proceeds from the Huberman Lab Premium subscription will fund human research (not animal models) selected by Dr. Huberman, with a dollar-for-dollar match from the Tiny Foundation. Subscribe to Huberman Lab Premium at https://hubermanlab.com/premium Timestamps (00:00:00) Introduction (00:01:09) How do you use ultradian cycles in your daily work? (00:22:38) Huberman Lab Premium In the full 2 hour+ AMA episode, we discuss: Neuroplasticity and dementias (Alzheimer's, MS, Parkinson's) — Protocols for protecting the brain? Zone 2 training What do you do when you live in a northern climate and the sun doesn't rise until hours after you are up? Morning routine for people who work from 8 am to 5 pm Best productivity method: to-do list or time-blocking everything on a calendar? Seed oils and metabolic disease Do recommendations and protocols you give change with age (beyond 60)? What advice would you give to your younger self? Title Card Photo Credit: Mike Blabac Huberman Lab is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute the practice of medicine, nursing or other professional health care services, including the giving of medical advice, and no doctor/patient relationship is formed. The use of information on this podcast or materials linked from this podcast is at the user’s own risk. The content of this podcast is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should not disregard or delay in obtaining medical advice for any medical condition they may have and should seek the assistance of their health care professionals for any such conditions.
Transcript
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Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast, where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Huberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and
Ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. Today is an Ask Me Anything or AMA episode, which is part of our premium subscriber content.
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Without further ado, let's get to answering your questions.
And as always, I will strive to be as clear as possible, as succinct as possible, and as thorough as possible,
while still answering as many questions per AMA episode,
as I can without these sessions becoming unreasonably long.
I should also point out that if you asked a question
and it was not answered this AMA,
it may very well be answered in the next AMA.
So the first question, which had a lot of upboats, meaning
many people wanted the answer to this question, came from Jackson Lippfort. And the question
was about so-called Altradian rhythms. For those of you that are not familiar with Altradian
rhythms, Altradian rhythms are any rhythms that are shorter than 24 hours. And typically,
when people ask about or talk about Altradian rhythms, they are referring to 90 minute rhythms.
I've talked about these on the podcast before.
And Jackson's question was,
how do you use ultradian rhythms in your daily work?
There's more to the question, but first off,
I do use ultradian rhythms.
That is, I leverage the fact that these do exist
in all of us as a way to engage
and focus bolts of mental work once or twice or sometimes
three times per day. However, I use them in a way that's grounded in the research on
alchraiding rhythms for learning and memory in a way that might not be obvious just from
their name, that they are 90-minute rhythms. So I'll get into the details of how to use
alchraiding rhythms to best capture neuroplasticity, that is the brain's ability to change in response to experience,
and in a way that should allow you to get one or two,
or maybe even three focus spouts of learning per day,
which can greatly accelerate learning of cognitive material,
languages, mathematics, history for sake of school or work,
or maybe just a hobby or personal interests of some sort,
and for skill learning in the physical domain as well.
Jackson then went on to ask, you've mentioned before that you try to include at least one
90-minute focus block per day as part of your work and overall mission.
And indeed, that is true. I tried to get at least one of these focused,
ultradian rhythm blocks per day. That is a period of about 90 minutes
where I'm focused on learning something,
or doing something that's cognitively hard,
although typically I aim for two of these sessions per day.
He then goes on to ask,
what is the maximum number of blocks you can perform
sustainably?
The answer to that is probably four,
and I say probably because some people have schedules,
lifestyles in which, for 90 minute blocks of focused learning is possible per day.
But that's highly unusual.
For most people, it's going to be one or two, maybe three,
four, I would place in the really extraordinary end of things.
Maybe if you're cramming for exams
or you've managed to go on a writing retreat
or a learning and retreat of some sort,
where you can devote essentially all of your non-sleeping, non-eating time to learning.
But most people simply can't organize their life that way.
So the short answer is, for me, it's one or two per day is the target and three would
be the maximum.
You then went on to ask, do you take vacations or extended breaks from these all trading
rhythm sessions?
And the short answer is no.
Typically, I try and do this every day,
and yes, even on the weekends,
but on the weekend, the all trading rhythm
focused learning about might just be reading a book
for about 90 minutes or so,
which might not be as cognitively difficult
as it is for other sorts of work
that I performed during the week.
I occasionally miss a day entirely
for whatever reason, travel, obligations related to family,
et cetera, but in general, I try and do this every day.
I do think that the circuits for focus
are, I guess, the non-biological way to put it
would be kept warm, but essentially
that accessing the circuits for focus
is made easier by accessing them regularly.
And that's because the circuits for focus are indeed themselves amenable to
neuroplasticity. In other words, the more you force yourself to focus, the easier
focusing gets. I'll now answer the last part of the question. And then I will go
through and emphasize some tools that anyone can use in order to leverage
ultrading rhythms toward learning belts, either cognitive learning or physical skill learning
or a combination of the two.
The last part of the question Jackson asked was,
if you knew you needed to drastically increase the amount
of focus you do daily, how would you schedule that focus
and recover from it?
That's an excellent aspect to this question.
And I will now give you the details of how I would use
and schedule
altrading rhythms. I'll offer you a tool. I've never talked about this tool in the
Hebrewman lab podcast. And I will dispel a common myth about altrading rhythms that
points to a, believe it or not, an easier way to leverage them for maximum benefit.
Okay. So as I mentioned before, altrading rhythms are these 90 minute cycles that we
go through from the time that we are born
until the time we die.
Indeed, even during sleep, we are experiencing and more or less governed by these all-trading
rhythms.
This question and this answer is not so much about sleep, but just know that when you go
to sleep at night until you wake up in the morning, every 90 minutes or so, your patterns
of sleep, that is, the percentage or ratio, rather, of slow
wave sleep, to light sleep, to wrap it.
I've moved and sleep changes in a way such that each 90 minute cycle gates the next cycle.
It sort of flips the on switch for the next 90 minute cycle, then that 90 minute cycle
ends, flips the on switch for the next one, and so on and so forth.
I mention all that because during the daytime daytime the same thing is true, but most
people don't know when the 90 minute ultra-dian cycles begin, because if you think about it,
you could wake up on the basis of an alarm clock or noise in the room or simply because
you naturally wake up in the middle of an ultra-dian 90 minute cycle. So does that mean, for
instance, that if you wake up 60 minutes into an ultradion cycle, that the next 30 minutes of your waking, right?
Because that 60 minutes needs to continue to 90 to complete an
ultradion cycle, that the next 30 minutes after waking are related to the
ultradion cycle that you are still in during sleep, or does it start a new
ultradion cycle? And the answer is the former.
That all-tradian cycle continues even if you wake up in the middle of it.
And so a lot of people who want to leverage all-tradian cycles for learning will say,
well, how do I know when to start when does it start when I hit my stopwatch?
Can I just set a clock and work for 90 minutes?
And the short answer is no.
And that might seem unfortunate, but the good news is that you can figure out when
your first proper ultra-dian cycle of the day begins, simply by asking yourself, when
are you most alert after waking?
That is, if you were, say, to wake up at 7 a.m. and let's say that's the end of an ultra-dian
cycle, or perhaps you're in the middle of an ultra-dian cycle, doesn't matter.
What you need to watch for, or pay attention to for a day or so
is when you start to experience your greatest state
of mental alertness in the morning.
And here we can discard with all the issues
and variables around caffeine or no caffeine,
hydrating or no hydrating.
Exercise is one variable that we'll consider in a moment,
but here's the deal.
These ultra-d trading cycles are actually triggered by fluctuations in the so-called glucaquartic
chord system, the system that regulates cortisol release.
And as some of you have probably heard me say before, cortisol, even though it's often
discussed as a terrible thing, it's chronic stress, cortisol, cortisol, etc., cortisol
is essential for health.
And every day we get a rise in cortisol in the morning that is associated with enhanced
immune function, enhanced alertness, enhanced ability to focus, so on and so forth.
In fact, the protocol that I'm always beating the drum about, that people should get sunlight
in their eyes as close to waking as possible, that actually enhances,
we're increases the peak level of cortisol
that's experienced early in the day. And that sets in motion a number of these all-tradient cycles.
So for instance, if you wake up at 7 a.m. and you find that for the first hour after waking you tend to be a little bit groggy,
or you happen to be groggy on a given day,
but then you notice that your attention and alertness starts to peak somewhere around 9.30 a.m. or 10.
A.m.
You can be pretty sure that that first
Ultradion cycle for learning is going to be
Optimal to start at about 9.30 or 10 a.m.
How can I say about if it's indeed a 90-minute cycle?
Well, this is really where the underlying neurobiology and these all-tradient cycles converge
to give you a specific protocol.
The changes in cortisol that occur throughout the day
involve, yes, a big peak early in the day
if you're getting your sunlight and caffeine
and maybe even some exercise early in the day.
But typically that peak comes early
and then across the day, the baseline jitters a little bit.
It comes down but it bounces around a little bit.
It's not a flat line if we were to measure your
glucocorticoid levels.
Each one of those little bumps corresponds to a shift in these all-tradient cycles.
So if you find that you are most alert at 930 or starting to become alert at 930 and then typically you have a peak of focus and concentration around 10 a.m.
That is really valuable to know
because the way that the molecules
that control neuroplasticity,
that is the changes in neurons and other cell types
in the brain that allow your nervous system to learn
and literally for new connections to form between neurons,
which is basically the basis of learning,
those fluctuate according to these ultra-dian cycles.
What does this mean?
This means if your peak in alertness and focus
and energy could even be experienced as physical energy,
occurs at about 9.30 a.m.,
I would start your first all-tradient cycle for learning
somewhere around there.
Certainly 9.30 a.m. would be ideal,
but 10 a.m. would be fine as well.
And then you have about one hour
to get the maximum amount of learning in,
even within that ultra-dian cycle.
This is where there's a lot of confusion out there.
People think, oh, ultra-dian cycles are 90 minutes.
Therefore, we should be in our peak level of focus
throughout that 90 minutes.
In reality, most people take about 10 or 15 minutes
to break into a really deep trench of focus,
and then periodically throughout the next hour,
they'll pop out of that focus.
They'll have to deliberately refocus.
This is why if possible, you wanna turn off Wi-Fi connections
and put your phone in the other room or turn it off.
If you do need your phone or Wi-Fi,
just be aware of how distracting those things can be
to getting into a deep trench of focus.
But the point is this, these 90 minute cycles
occur periodically throughout the day, but
there is going to be one period early in the day, and here I'm referring to this period
as starting at about 9.30 or 10 a.m. and then likely another one in the mid to late afternoon
that are going to be ideal for focused learning, and that focused learning about should ideally
have you set your clock, a stopwatch or something, to measure
90 minutes, but do assume that there's going to be some jitter at the front end where you're
not going to be able to focus as deeply as you would like.
Then you'll get about an hour of deep focus, and then you really start to transition out
of these ultradian cycles.
How do you know when the afternoon ultradian cycle occurs?
Well, just as in the morning,
it occurs because there's a brief,
but significant increase in the glucocorticoid system
in the mid to late afternoon.
I wish I could tell you it's going to be 2 p.m.,
or it's going to be, you know, it's going to be 3 p.m.
That's really going to depend on the individual
when you ingest caffeine,
some of the other demands of your day.
But you can learn to recognize
when these two periods for optimized learning will occur
and here are the key principles.
Watch for a day or two, meaning pay attention
to when you have your peak levels
of physical and mental energy in the morning.
That is between waking and noon.
And then again, between noon and about six or seven PM.
Although I'm sure that there are some late shifted folks
that will experience their peak and focus somewhere around six or seven PM, especially if'm sure that there are some late shifted folks that will experience their peak in focus somewhere around six
or seven PM, especially if they're waking up
around 10 or 11 AM as I know, some people out there are.
Once you know where those peaks in focus occur
on your schedule,
set a stopwatch for one-all trading cycle
in the early part of the day.
And this example I was saying 9.30,
but if you can't hop on it until 10, that's fine.
Set it for 90 minutes.
Consider that block wholly,
meaning rule out all other distractions,
but assume that within that 90 minute block,
you are only going to be able to focus intensely
for about one hour.
And just know that the molecules that control neuroplasticity,
and these things have names,
and yes, brain drive, neutrophic factor,
BDNF is sort of the most famous of those, but there are others as well. In fact, the
very receptors that control synaptic strength, the connections between neurons, some of
the neurotransmitters and neuromodulators involved in synaptic plasticity, they undergo regulation
by these ultradion changes in glucocorticoid. And then, try and capture a second all-tradient learning block in the afternoon.
Again, just knowing that the first 10 or 15 minutes
consider it mental warm up and then you get about an hour.
It's not exactly 60 minutes, but about an hour
to maximize learning.
So if you're trying to learn something
really capture it during that phase as well.
Now, is there a third opportunity or a fourth opportunity?
This relates to Jackson's question directly, and the
short answer is not really. You know, unless you're somebody who requires very little sleep,
within the 12 or 16 hours that one tends to be awake during the day or 18 hours that one tends to
be awake, they're really only two of these major peaks in the glucocorticoid system that trigger
the onset of these circadian cycles. Again, there's sort of a ramping up and a ramping down of
glucocorticoids throughout the day. But the real key here is to learn when you tend to be most focused
based on your regular sleep, wake cycle, caffeine intake, exercise, etc. And again, that's going to
vary from person to person. And you really only have two opportunities or two old trading cycles
to capture in order to get the maximum focus challenging work done, aka learning.
So for somebody that wants to learn an immense amount of material or who has the opportunity
to capture another ultradian cycle, the other time where that tends to occur is also early days.
So some people by waking up early and using stimulants like caffeine and hydration
or some brief high intensity
exercise can trigger that cortisol pulse to shift a little bit earlier so that they can
capture a morning work block that occurs somewhere, let's say, between 6 and 7.30 a.m. so let's
think about our typical person, at least in my example, that's waking up around 7 a.m.
and then I said, has their first ultradion work cycle really flip on?
Because that bump in cortisol around nine, thirty or ten a.m. If that person were say to set their alarm clock for five, thirty a.m. then get up, get some artificial light if the sun isn't out,
you know, turn on brighter artificial lights or if the sun happens to be up that time of year,
get some sunlight in your eyes. But irrespective of sunlight,
we're to get a little bit of brief, high intensity exercise,
maybe 10 or 15 minutes of skipping rope
or even just jumping jacks or go out for a brief jog.
What happens then is the cortisol pulse starts to shift earlier.
And so the next day and the following day and so on and so forth
provided they're still doing that exercise first thing
and ideally getting something light in their eyes as well.
Well then they have an opportunity to capture
an increase in cortisol that is now shifted
from about seven a.m. to about eight 30 a.m.
So they can capture an hour of work there
and then they will also still be within that rising phase
of cortisol in the nine 30 to 10 a.m. block
that lasts until about 1130 or so.
They might have lunch, perhaps after lunch they do a non-sleep deep rest, maybe they don't,
maybe you're an app or maybe you're not.
It doesn't really matter.
And then in the afternoon, and I would suspect it would now be in the earlier afternoon,
sometime around two or two 30 would be typical, although again, that exact time will vary person to person,
then they would want to schedule another 90 minute work block.
So that's how you can capture three.
Now you can start to see also why capturing four
all trading and work blocks would be exceedingly rare.
It's just not typical that people are awake
for that much of the day, you have to sleep at some point.
And I should mention that if you're going to force yourself
to wake up earlier on a consistent basis, you probably should be trying to get
to sleep a little bit earlier as well because it's not just the quality, but the duration
of quality sleep that really matters for learning. And I should also remind everybody that the
actual rewiring of neurons does not occur during any focused work block. It actually occurs
during deep sleep the following night and the following night and during non-sleep deep rest. This is why non-sleep deep rest can accelerate learning because it's
in states of rest that the actual connections between neuron strengthen or weaken or new neurons are
added in a way that allows for what we call learning. Okay, so one or two, alternating work blocks per
day is typical. Three would be really exceptional and four would be
extraordinary. Look for them meaning look to see when you are feeling most
focused and alert typically in the period before waking and noon and typically in
the period between noon and bedtime given your standard intake of caffeine and
exercise and other life events.
Please also remember that even though it's an ultradian 90 minute work block,
the neural plasticity is going to be best triggered within a 60 minute portion of
that and there's no way to know exactly when that 60 minutes begins and ends
until you actually begin the work block. So this is really designed to be empirical.
You need to actually go do this.
What you'll notice again is that it's hard to focus at first and you'll drop into a state
of focus.
You may get distracted.
That's perfectly normal.
You refocus.
Get back into triggering learning.
That's really what you're doing.
You're triggering learning and then there'll be some taper and then you'll be out of the
all-tradian work block.
Now it's also key to understand that myself and other people should not expect that they're
only working during these 90-minute workblocks.
It's just that a lot of the sorts of demands of our day, including, you know, cooking and
shopping groceries and email and text messaging and social media.
A lot of those things don't require intense focus of the sort that I believe Jackson is
asking about maximizing and that I'm referring to when I talk about these
Altradian workblocks. And then as a final point, I've been talking about these Altradian workblocks and focus, etc.
In a context that brings to mind ideas about cognitive work. So learning a language, learning math, writing or creating, doing something related to music, et cetera. But these 90 minute, all trading and workblocks also directly relate
to physical skill learning as well
and to physical exercise as well.
So if you are somebody who's really interested
in improving your fitness
and your fitness requires a lot of focused attention.
So for instance, when I go out for a long run on Sundays,
which is part of my fitness routine,
I'm deliberately not thinking about much.
I'm just trying to cruise along.
I might focus a little bit on my pace and stride,
maybe an audiobook I'm listening to or a podcast.
But typically I'm just kind of cruising along.
It's low cognitive demand work.
These all trading work blocks can really be maximized
for pure cognitive work,
book type work, et cetera, music, et cetera.
Or they can also be leveraged toward skill learning.
So if you're trying to learn how to dance or how to perform a particular athletic move or you're
trying to get better at some skill that requires a lot of focus and alignment of muscular movement
and cognitive demands, et cetera, well then these are also going to be ideal for triggering neuroplasticity to get better
in the motor skill based domain, as it's called, et cetera.
If you'd like to learn more about ultra-dian shifts in neuroplasticity and ultra-dian work
bouts, I will certainly do more on this in the Standard Hubertman Lab podcast.
But the key words to look up, if you want to explore this further online, it's not something
that a lot of people know about.
It's called iterative met aplasticity.
It's a vast literature,
and one that I'd be happy to teach you
in a standard podcast episode.
But in the interest of getting to more questions
from you all, hopefully the answer I've given you
now has been complete enough, yet clear enough,
and yet succinct enough that you can start to
leverage these really powerful aspects of iterative metoplasticity and ultradian rhythms
for learning.
And I'd just like to point out that these opportunities for focused learning that occur
in these 90 minute ultradian cycles are really terrific opportunities.
They are offered to you at least twice every day,
and you can really learn to detect when they occur and when they're likely to occur.
You can certainly learn at other times in the 24-hour cycle, but for anyone who's tried to stay
up late at night cramming for an exam or for somebody who's tried to learn during the
sleepiest time of their afternoon, we can be very familiar with the fact
that there are times of day in which we are best at learning.
And as I've just described,
there are ways to capture those moments
and they are valuable moments.
So even though it's just about three hours per day,
or really only two hours per day,
because of the 60, 90 minute thing
that I talked about a few minutes ago,
learn to know when these occur and really treat them as valuable, maybe even wholly in the
sense that they are really the times that are offered up to you each day by your own biology
in ways that will allow you to get better pretty much at anything.
Thank you for joining for the beginning of this Ask Me Anything episode to hear the full
episode and to hear future episodes of these ask me
anything sessions.
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