Huberman Lab - Dr. Emily Balcetis: Tools for Setting & Achieving Goals
Episode Date: August 1, 2022My guest this episode is Dr. Emily Balcetis, PhD, Professor of Psychology at New York University (NYU). Dr. Balcetis’ research focuses on how our perception of the world, particularly our visual per...ceptions, influences our level and persistence of motivation, how we conceptualize goals, actual goal achievement, and our emotional state as we pursue goals. Dr. Balcetis explains how to best visualize and overcome challenges in pursuit of larger, complex goals. We also discuss the science of how to define goals and intermediate milestones, overcome obstacles, and effectively track progress. This episode highlights science-based, immediately actionable tools that anyone can use to set and achieve physical and/or cognitive goals more effectively. For the full show notes, visit hubermanlab.com Thank you to our sponsors AG1 (Athletic Greens): https://athleticgreens.com/huberman LMNT: https://drinklmnt.com/huberman Supplements from Momentous https://www.livemomentous.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) Dr. Emily Balcetis, Visualization of Goals & Motivation (00:03:41) Sponsors: LMNT (00:08:08) Vision & Motivation (00:11:37) Tool: Narrowing Visual Focus & Improving Exercise (00:21:39) Adjusting Visual Attention & Perceived Fatigue (00:25:14) Tool: Visual Focus “Spotlight” (00:27:57) Tool: Goal Gradient Hypothesis, Visual Spotlight to Increase Effort (00:32:23) Sponsor: AG1 (00:35:00) Defining Goals vs. Accomplishing Goals, Dream Boards & Goal Lists (00:41:28) Tool: How to Setting Better Goals & Identify Obstacles (00:46:38) Vision is Unique, Challenging the Visual System, Realistic Goals & Micro-Goals (00:57:12) Do Fit People View the World Differently?, States of Body & Visual Experiences (01:05:54) Caffeine, Stimulants, Visual Windows & Motivation (01:10:13) Tools: Goal Setting & Cognitive (Non-Physical) Goals, Data Collection (01:21:54) Year in Review & Memory (01:26:32) Visual Tools & Mental Health, Depression & Visual Priming (01:31:33) Focusing Attention & Increasing Visual Detail/Resolution (01:36:12) Zero-Cost Support, YouTube Feedback, Spotify & Apple Reviews, Sponsors, Neural Network Newsletter, Instagram, Twitter, Momentous Supplements Title Card Photo Credit: Mike Blabac Disclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Uberman Lab podcast where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Uberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and
Ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. Today my guest is Dr. Emily Bouchettis.
Dr. Bouchettis is a professor of psychology at New York University. Her laboratory studies motivation,
goal setting, and tools for successful
goal completion. I learned about Dr. Balcettis' work some years ago because I'm a vision scientist.
That is, I study the visual system. And I heard about this incredible psychologist at New York
University who was studying how vision, that is how we visualize problems can predict whether or not we will successfully
overcome challenges and how we strategize in order to set and meet goals.
And in 2020, I learned of Dr. Balchettis' book, which was written for the general public,
entitled Clear, Closer Better, How Successful People See the World.
And I read both the hard copy of the book and listened to the audiobook.
And I absolutely both the hard copy of the book and listened to the audio book. And I absolutely loved the material.
As you'll learn directly from Dr. Balchettis today, how people visualize a problem.
That is whether or not they think of a goal or a problem as residing at the top of a very
steep hill or on the top of a shallower hill or whether or not they visualize a goal or
a problem as far off in the distance or closer to them in the distance
visually in their mind
strongly dictates whether or not they will arrive at the challenge of meeting a goal or overcoming a problem with more energy or less energy
Indeed it dictates whether or not they can
Push to immediate milestones or whether or not they will think they have to overcome the entire task all at once.
Basically, Dr. Balchettis' work has discovered that how we visualize a problem or a goal
in our mind has everything to do with how we lean into that goal, whether or not we think
of it as overwhelming or tractable, whether or not we think that we can overcome that goal
and then it will lead to yet more possible rewards and goals, or whether or not we think that we can overcome that goal and then it will lead to yet more possible rewards and goals or whether or not we feel that we're going to arrive
at the finish line and then just be overwhelmed with fatigue.
In other words, how you visualize things in your mind.
And when I say visualize, I mean literally how you visualize them as a visual problem or
a visual goal has everything to do with whether or not you will be able to
meet those goals and whether or not they will lead to still greater goals that you will
be able to achieve.
Today's episode is an especially important one, I believe, because you're going to learn
about quality peer-reviewed science from the expert in this field of goal-setting motivation
and pursuit.
And you're also going to learn an immense number of practical tools that you can apply toward your educational goals, your career goals, relationship goals, goals of any sort.
By the end of today's episode, you will be better equipped to set and achieve your goals.
Dr. Bouchette also shares with us her own experiences of how to set, visualize, and achieve goals. And she does that within the context of her role as a parent,
as somebody navigating relationships of various kinds,
and a demanding career.
So again, I think that you'll find the information today
to be both extremely academically grounded
in terms of research, extremely practical,
and realistic in terms of how you might apply it in your own life.
Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching
and research roles at Stanford.
It is, however, part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost to consumer information
about science and science-related tools to the general public.
In keeping with that theme, I'd like to thank the sponsors of today's podcast.
Our first sponsor is Element.
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In fact, in order for your neurons to function properly,
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purchase. Again, that's drink element LMNT.com slash Huberman.
And now for my discussion with Dr. Emily Belchettis.
Well, thanks for being here.
That's my pleasure.
Yeah, I've been looking forward to this for a long time because as a vision scientist,
who is also very interested in real life tools and goal setting and motivation,
your work lands squarely in the middle of those interests.
So just to kick things off, you could tell us just a little bit about the relationship
between perception and in particular how we see the world and goal setting and goal retrieval.
It's a vast landscape, but you're the expert.
So I'll turn that over to you.
And then as time goes on,
I may have some additional questions
as it relates to different kinds of vision.
But what's the deal with vision and motivation?
How do those two things link up?
Totally.
When psychologists ask people,
how are you doing to help make progress on your goals?
They say all kinds of things.
A couple of things.
A couple of things always pop to the top, which is, you know, try to shock myself in
encouraging ways, self-self-pepp talks, or I remind myself of how important it is to do
this job, or, you know, I'll put up post-it notes around to, like, constantly be nagging
me about what I need to do.
So those are common tactics that people use.
What we'll notice is that those are really effortful.
Happy to constantly remind yourself,
having to constantly talk to yourself,
having to create those posted notes.
Remember to look at them, all of that takes a lot of time
and effort and commitment.
And so what a surprise that people burn out, right?
It's exciting to work on a goal.
When you first set it, you might make some initial progress,
but then eventually we get, you know,
not even to the halfway point,
but before things get real, things are, not even to the halfway point, but before
things get real, things are challenging and we fall by the wayside. And that's I think
because of tactics that are our go-to strategies are themselves a goal to maintain. So it's
like, you know, double-sided. We're putting so much on ourselves to try to advance the thing
that we originally set out to accomplish. So then I, you know, with my team, I was trying to think of like, well, what are strategies that don't require as much effort thing that we originally set out to accomplish. So then with my team, I was trying to think of,
what are strategies that don't require as much effort,
that we can automate, that we can take advantage of what's already happening
within ourselves, within our body, within our mind,
that might overcome one of those challenges,
that'll be easier, more automated.
That's when we started to land on the idea of vision.
We look at the world without even thinking of it for those of us that are cited.
And we thought, you know what, there are strategies
that we can use to look at the world in a different way
and that we can automate that might help us
to overcome some obstacles, to make progress on our goals,
to maybe literally see opportunities
that we hadn't been able to see before.
So we started playing around with the idea of visual illusions
to see, do people even know that there's other ways
of seeing things around them?
Can we tweak that?
Is there room for intervention?
Can we encourage people to take a new way of looking
to see things that they hadn't seen before?
And that's what really opened us up
to trying to look at that intersection
between vision science and motivation science.
It's great.
I always say, and here I'm strongly biased as a vision scientist, that vision is the dominant
sense by which we navigate the world and survive.
I love this idea of real-world real-time access to vision.
I'm certainly familiar with how goal-settingers or post-its and magnets on refrigerators
can have an immediate impact, but then over time,
they become so part of the visual landscape
that you overlook them.
And we know as vision scientists,
if something is stably in your environment,
eventually you're blind to it.
So that makes good sense.
So you've published a number of studies in this area,
but maybe you could highlight some of the more,
what you would consider important findings in the area of how people can adjust their vision in order to meet goals more quickly and more efficiently.
And perhaps also how we all arrive at goals with different visual perceptions and that
in some way may divide us into highly motivated
and less motivated people.
In other words, what's the link between vision and motivation, and how can we leverage that
in order to better reach our goals?
Totally.
So, you know, we started thinking about what are the goals that are most important to people
that they struggle with the most?
So we asked hundreds, thousands of people what their New Year's resolutions are.
We look to all the other polls
that do the same kind of work.
And regardless of where you look or who you ask
or when you ask it, people's number one goal
is something related to their health, right?
To lose weight, to exercise more,
to get out, get more steps for mental wellbeing,
physical wellbeing.
And that's like the number one goal every January first.
So if we were able to accomplish that goal, you'd think it would drop a little bit in the
rankings, but it doesn't, because it's really hard.
So we thought, I wonder if there's a way for us to make some progress on that, on helping
people to exercise better, more often, stick to it longer, and make some progress there.
We know diets don't work, and why don't diets work for the same reason
that that self-talk doesn't work,
is that we go in it full bore, hard core,
and it requires a major commitment
and effort to a lifestyle change.
So again, we were looking for something
that might be easier than that
that could produce big, big payoff, right?
That's the golden ticket,
something that requires less effort for a bigger payoff.
So one of the first things that I did was go over to Brooklyn to this old
armory building. It used to be a military armory space.
Yeah, I know that building. It's a beautiful building now that houses a lot of
businesses, right? With plants on the walls? Yeah, there's businesses. There's a couple
armories all around the burrows here around New York City. And the one in Brooklyn in particular is now YMCA, right? So it's a family YMCA
that's within a beautiful old red brick building that used to be a military establishment
long, long ago. And what's really cool is that, you know, one winter after afternoon,
somebody had invited me a physical therapist that said, hey, you should come out and check out what's happening here with your
interest in exercise and trying to find new ways of helping people, new tactics
that they can add to their tool belt. I think you're going to find some
interesting people that are working out there. So I showed up, I look around,
you know, there's families, there's new moms, there's kids that are, you know,
moms trying to get kids to burn off some winter, you know, energy that they
have. There's people that look like they're just there for their, you know, every couple of
days going out for a run.
There's some people that look like they're training with a team.
And that's who this physical therapist introduced me to, is that it was the coach of this team.
There's a bunch of people that were sitting down on the ground.
And I would be hard pressed to know who's the high school student that's in this group.
And then who, as it turns out, are some of the fastest runners in the world.
Like, you know, one of the people that was in the last Olympics before I showed up,
when the gold medal for the 400 meter.
And from the looks of them, I mean, of course, their bodies are in better shape than mine,
but there's nothing so pretentious.
The course are not wearing their medals.
There's nothing pretentious about how they're walking around or anything like that that
would let me know, like know this person's amazing.
And they probably have some insight that I don't have.
So once I got introduced to them and knew who are these people
that were part of this pretty elite training team
that happened to work out at this family gym,
I had the chance to talk with them about what strategies do you use?
Now, I am not an elite runner.
And having recently had a baby, I'm not really a runner right now at all.
But I thought when these people are running,
I bet they are like hyper aware of everything that's going on in their surroundings.
Where are they relative to the competition?
What's happening in their peripheral vision?
What's going on on the side?
Who's behind them?
Who's in front of them?
They probably have this like master sense, this master visual plan at any point in time, and that's what probably
makes them elite.
So when I started asking them, is that the case?
Do you really pay attention to what's in your surroundings, what's behind you, what's
on the side?
They said, no, like all of them said no.
And sometimes when I do do that, it's a mistake.
It doesn't work for me.
So that was surprising.
We're totally winning against my intuition about what they do that likely contributes to their
success.
What they said instead was that they are hyper focused.
They assume this narrowed focus of attention.
Almost like a spotlight is shining on a target.
Now when they're running a short distance, that target might literally be the finished line,
the line that they're trying to cross.
But it's a longer distance.
They set some goals, like, you know, the person, the line that they're trying to cross. But it's a longer distance, they set sub goals,
like, you know, the person,
the shorts on the person up ahead that they're trying to be,
or they choose some sort of stable landmark,
like a sign that they would pass by.
And like a spotlight is shining just on that,
or like they have blinders on the sides of their face,
that's all they're paying attention to.
It's really narrowed scope of attention.
And that was a strategy that all of these elite athletes said that they used and those that were better rather than slower
were ones that used it more. And I thought, oh, that's something we can play with. They
are elite and they are accomplished, but that visual strategy isn't necessarily something
that you have to be in the perfect physical condition to be able to adopt.
And so I wonder, can that help the rest of us who aren't competing for an Olympic gold and
who have no chance of ever getting one, but who want to exercise better?
Have a better time doing it and maintain a commitment to that exercise goal that they
might have that they might otherwise, you know, by February or March, be giving up on
if they had said it at the beginning of January.
So that's really where the work started was, you know, what you might call like
focus groups or case studies of these incredible athletes. And then we did other studies looking at,
you know, you know, people who are an Olympic athletes, but who are competitive and New York
roadrunners, runners, and how are they running in races? And what we found is that those people
have better pace, faster pace, better time. They use that narrowed strategy more often than
this more expansive or open scope of attention. And there seem to be a correlation between that
better performance among a wider swath of hundreds of runners who are doing it competitively,
but still could be like the person that you're sitting next to in the office or yourself, right?
And the more often that they did it, the, and the more consistently they had adopted that, that technique of the narrowed focus of attention, it seemed that they were doing better in their runs.
So then we started thinking like, okay, what about people who aren't competitive runners? What about like my mom? Can she do that? Or me when I'm trying to get back on the bandwagon
and exercise more? Is this a tactic we can teach people? The answer is yes. You can tell people
about what these Olympic athletes are doing. You can tell them about what the New York Roadrunners
runners are doing. And just using the same language that I just use with you, right? Imagine that there's a spotlight shining just on a target. Choose something up ahead.
The stop sign, two blocks up that you can just see. And imagine that you have blinders on,
so that you're not really paying attention to the people that are passing by or the buildings,
or the garbage cans, or the trucks that are on the road. You know, tune those out and focus in on that target until you hit it
and then choose another one.
So recalibrate, choose the next goal.
And so we would test, can people do that?
If you're listening right now,
you probably are imagining that experience too
and the answer is yes, I can imagine that.
I know what those words mean and I can do that.
And our work found that too, if people can do that,
we have them say out loud, what is it that's captured your attention?
And of course, sometimes something in the periphery,
like movement captures our gaze and we're pulled there
for an instant, but then we can refocus up again
and adopt that narrowed attention.
Now, one of the first studies that we did
was teach that strategy and juxtapose or compare it
against a group that we said, just look around naturally.
You might see that finish line up ahead,
and there's things on the periphery,
whatever your eyes want to do,
whatever you think is gonna work best,
feel free to do that and tell us what you're looking at.
Then we gave them a finish line.
We created sort of, in exercise,
that's moderately challenging,
but possible, we put ankle weights on
that accounted for about 15% of their body weight,
told them to lift their knees up, sort of high stepping to a finish line
So this would be challenging for them to do
But we said you know, it's an indicator of overall health and fitness
Some of these people had narrowed their focus of attention and some were just looking more
expansively or naturally
And what we found is that those people that we trained just everyday normal people
Doing this this moderately challenging exercise, they were able to move 27% faster. They could do
the exercise more quickly and they said it hurt 17% less. The exercise was exactly the same. For
all the people, we set the weight and we set the distance. It was in our lab space, so it was
a constrained environment. Everybody was in the same sort of circumstance, but yet their experience was really different.
We helped them to move faster, burn calories at a higher rate, right?
Exercise more efficiently.
The amount of time they put in is going to produce a better physical outcome.
And it also, it didn't hurt them, right?
They're saying it doesn't hurt as much.
So we were really excited about that, right?
Because it meant that this strategy,
we could use it on people who are not elite athletes.
It could be easily adopted, a quick training session,
right, can teach people to look at the world
in a different way.
Again, this narrowed attention was different
than whatever they do naturally, the comparison group.
But it had a big outcome.
It had a big difference on the way
that they were engaged in the exercise. It had a big difference on the way that they
were engaged in the exercise. It was like some of the first work that we did, and then since then,
we've done dozens more studies to look at, well, what happens with that, and what else can we do
with playing around with this? Yeah, those are impressive differences as a consequence of narrowing
visual attention. A couple of questions about the actual practice of narrowing attention. Is there any indication of whether or not subjects
are constantly updating their visual attention?
So for instance, if, let's say the goal line is in view,
literally from the beginning,
I could imagine just holding visual attention
on the goal line.
But if it's an oval track or it's a trajectory along a trail or through a city,
how often do you think they are updating their visual aperture and setting a visual goal?
And I could imagine that there's some energetic expense to that, so that meaning how, you
know, you wouldn't want to do every crack on the sidewalk unless those cracks on the sidewalk
We're very far apart right because I think at some point that itself would be
Exhausting. Mm-hmm. So is there an optimal strategy or a semi optimal strategy?
Yeah, so you know those Olympic athletes that we that we started by interviewing they tended to be sprinters
They were more often sprinters short-distance sprinters
So when they said like yes, I narrow in more than I assume
an expansive focus, that's because they're not going that far.
They have to do it as fast as humanly possible,
but they're not going that far.
And so we started asking that question too,
about wouldn't that be tiring?
And the answer is yes.
So when we start to look at what people who aren't sprinters,
who are accomplished, but who are more long distance
runners, that's what we find that they do is that they
you know, they're using that narrowed attention strategy strategically and it increases in use they use it more often as the race progresses and they really start to do this you know major switch
about the halfway point of say like a like a 10-kilometer run. So people who are seasoned runners,
they really start making a switch
with what they're looking at about halfway through.
And that's where they more often,
more frequently and are more intentionally adopting
a narrowed focus of attention,
when they're in the last couple miles of a run,
when maybe their resources are starting to get more thin,
maybe their motivation is starting to fade.
That tipping point in the middle
is with any kind of goal where people struggle the most.
And that's when they're doubling down on a strategy
that they know to be effective.
So at first longer distance runners
are not using that narrowed strategy.
They're looking more expansively
because I think that, well,
first of all, distraction is a thing. It's useful,
not necessarily that they're distracting themselves because people are still trying to hold pace
and jostle among probably a more concentrated group of runners.
But it is a strategy that they use and then sort of ween off of as the race goes through. And
it's particularly effective when we're looking for that last push, right?
The last push to get over the finish line when like you might be literally neck and neck
with somebody that you're trying to just beat out or when you're most tired, but you know
like that last push, you don't want to drop off. And you know, you want to push through
hard through that finish line. That's when people are using it at its peak level of intensity. I see. Yeah, to me, this makes total sense why it would work. Without going down the rabbit hole
of visual neuroscience of something for another time, the when we do these virgin-sci movements,
when we bring our eyes to a visual target, it's clear that some of the brainstem circuitry for
alertness gets engaged to a greater degree.
The other thing is that we know that when we focus on an object, the optics of the eye
change and narrow the visual field.
That brings about, this is a very detailed question, but I'm sure the audience is wondering,
let's say I'm focused on a goal line or an intermediate goal, are they focusing
on a specific point, or is it kind of the entire horizon of that goal? Because the
finish line is indeed a line. So, and of course, it's impossible to know what someone is
actually doing in their mind's eye, but how do people report this? Do they see it literally
as a spotlight? And if so, how broad is that spot? Yeah, so what is the link of their aperture
rather than maybe the diameter or the sphere size of it?
In our interviews with people,
our sort of focus group studies,
it seems like it's more like a circular point.
And that's in fact what we're teaching people,
what we're training them to do. So
rather than going broadly looking across a line from left to right, we are encouraging them to like
imagine a circle of light that's shining on some target. Now of course a finish line is a line,
but if they're staying in their lane, if they're on a track, right, you can imagine that there is
that there is a circle shining just on where in their lane they'll cross that finish line.
Or if it's a stop sign, you could imagine a circle of light illuminating that.
So that's what we're teaching people to use, and that's what seems to be effective
to maintain that focus rather than sort of being pulled to engage with peripheral vision.
And there's some amazing people, some runners in history like Joan Benoit, Samuel Senge,
one of the first female marathon competitors
who has won multiple marathons.
She's Canadian, I think she's one,
feel free to correct me, like 10 marathons in her life.
And she talks about sort of not assuming this like,
this wide, but narrow, wide, but not deep at all.
Attention focus, she talks about like, but narrow, wide but not deep or tall,
attentional focus, she talks about like finding the shorts on somebody ahead of me and focusing on those shorts
until she passes them and then resetting that goal.
So in her interviews that she's done
with Runner's magazines, she talks about it
in terms of this circle of attention.
I think I've experienced this a little bit
because we're visiting New York now to do this interview the circle of attention. I think I've experienced this a little bit
because we're visiting New York now to do this interview
and runners here seem more competitive.
The recreational runners here seem more competitive.
People walking on the street seem competitive.
You're walking at near pace to somebody
they'll quickly speed up.
If you speed up, they'll speed up.
I think there have been some studies about walking speed
in different cities and New York ranks among the fastest walkers around.
I won't mention the slowest walking cities because we don't want to cast any judgments.
But fascinating.
And again, makes total sense based on the way the visual system measures both space and
time, something maybe we'll get into a little bit later.
But I'm curious whether or not this, the whole thing
works in reverse as well. Meaning, do people who are very motivated to exercise, do they think
this way naturally? People who are averse to exercise or who find it hard to get motivated to exercise?
to exercise or who find it hard to get motivated to exercise. Do they view the world differently, literally?
Yeah, I have so much that I can say about this. So if you'll humor me, I'll give you a couple
different stories about how we can answer that. So you don't have to do a deep dive in
a vision science, which of course you are capable of doing. But what I can share with you
is some like animal studies where this work
kind of first started. This is in the 1940s, 1950s, rat labs, mice labs, and they
were looking, you know, those were the first models of human behavior that
people were trying to understand motivation, motivation science within. So they
would, you know, deprive these poor rats and mice of food or water,
so that they were motivated to get it. They were hungry and they were thirsty and they had practice
running a maze so they knew where they could find that food or water, whatever that they were looking
for. And what these researchers were studying was the pace of movement through the maze.
pace of movement through the maze. So as the rats were going through the maze, they found that even though these rats were hungry and they're having to expend limited caloric energy to make it
to the finish line, they actually ran faster the closer they got to that finish line. So once that
finish line became nearer to them, they actually used their
resources, probably sub-optimally, to make sure that they crossed the finish line and got their
reward. So that was like some of the first early work that was showing that proximity to a goal
increases the investment in resources that people, that animals, use to meet that goal.
Even when they don't have that much despair and with the mice, the same kind of thing, you know, in resources that people, that animals use to meet that goal.
Even when they don't have that much to spare,
and with the mice, the same kind of thing,
they actually had these little harnesses on them.
They were looking at how hard the mice pull
to try to make it to the food or the water
that they were trying to get.
And the same deal, the closer they got to getting
their reward, the harder they were pulling.
Even though they didn't have that much energy
to spare.
And they had R2U sum up getting to that finish line.
So that was that early animal research from the 1940s, 1950s, then spurred a whole wave
of work in humans.
Do humans do the same thing?
Even when they're tired, but they can see or they can feel that their goal is close,
do they double down and work even harder to cross that finish line?
Either like a literal finish line if we're talking about exercise or metaphorical finish
line if we're talking about any other kind of goal that people might have. And the answer
is yes, they call that the goal gradient hypothesis. The closer you get to the goal, generally
the harder people and animals work to finish that goal. That's what led us then to think,
okay, you know, those rats, those mice, those people are seeing a finish line, right? And it's been
there maybe seeing that finish line, seeing that reward, seeing the goal they're hoping to accomplish.
That is what's leading them to, you know, try harder to invest more so that they can finish it off.
What if we induce that illusion of proximity?
What if we can induce a visual illusion,
a visual experience that approximates
what the real rats and mice were actually experiencing
as they got closer?
So that is what is happening.
That's what's happening visually
when we create that narrowed focus of attention.
When we tell people, imagine there's a spotlight
on the shorts of the person up ahead
or the stop sign that you're seeing,
it induces an illusion of proximity
that then is responsible for people trying harder,
walking faster, feeling that it defied their expectations
and that it wasn't as bad as they thought it would be.
So we do things like measure, like measure
their visual experience.
How far away is that finish line?
Of course, we can ask them to report in feet.
How many feet is it?
But that's challenging, right?
Like, nobody really knows what three feet versus four feet
really looks like, but they do.
So we can ask them how many feet it is.
We also use these other measures of visual matching measures
to know that distance of the finish line
looks about as far away as this other target,
they're matching up their visual experiences.
So what we know is that inducing that narrowed focus of attention is creating an illusion
of proximity that goal looks closer to them.
And then there's all kinds of downstream motivational psychological effects that happen from feeling
like you're closer by visually misperceiving that space,
it can have a really positive consequence.
So your first question was, which way does it go?
Does it go both ways that people who are better runners happen to do this thing?
Yes.
Some of our research shows that if they, for whatever reason, happened upon this strategy
and continued to practice it,
they tend to be the better runners. But we also know from our experiments in the lab where we take
people who don't know about these strategies and by a flip of the coin, we randomly assign them
to either learn the strategy and use it or do whatever comes naturally to them. We can create that
illusion of proximity that has a direct
and causal impact on improving the performance when they're exercising. So yes, it goes both ways,
but you can also teach yourself that you don't have to just rely on luck, luck of the draw for
being a person who happens to be better at exercising or whose eyes happen to do this on their own.
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The most pressing question I have in my mind is, can we, I, all of us use this strategy to make the starting line a goal point?
Because for a lot of people, it's not about going from start to finish, it's about getting
to start.
And I would say here I'm estimating, but 15% of the content on social media is about motivation
and how to get motivated to do things.
Norochemicals like dopamine of course
being at the heart of motivation.
I, in my mind, am making strong links
between some of these visual aperture effects
and goal lines and dopamine that we could also dive into.
But the simple question is,
can I use this finish line strategy to make the start line a
goal and get my system more engaged or motivated?
And is there any physiology or physiological changes, I should say, to reflect the idea
that maybe just visually focusing on the start line would actually get me more excited as opposed to make me less excited to engage in effort.
There's certainly vision science that's tied up in that very first stage of goal setting, like identifying what that goal is in the first place and taking those first steps.
A lot of people's go to strategies that involve vision are vision boards or dream boards or, you know, post
it notes, right? They're creating some sort of visual representation of what it is that
they want to accomplish. Where is it that I want to be in five years, ten days, ten
years, whatever, whatever that timeline is that they're working under. The idea of vision
boards or dream boards is that you, you know, almost like a scrapbook, collect visual
icons that reflect where you want to be to motivate yourself.
It's a really common tactic that people use.
And it's not bad to do that, right?
For some people, just even knowing what they want
in life is a major accomplishment.
Defining the goal can be really challenging for people.
And that's a strategy that works
and involves our visual experience.
It's not just people aren't saying,
like why don't you just sit around and imagine
what you want your life to be like in 10 years.
The strategy that people are suggesting is like,
no, cut out the pictures, put it on a board
and stick it by your bathroom mirror
so you see it every day, right?
We'll make a list.
We'll make a list.
People are big on these lists.
I have a lot of friends who have you made your list.
The list of things that you insist on having in the context of fitness, relationship, job,
et cetera, et cetera.
This seems more and more common.
Yeah, totally.
And the idea, like, write it down, right?
They're telling you write it down, like, or create a visual manifestation of it.
And so, yeah, that's effective for identifying what you want.
But it may not actually be effective for helping you to meet the goal, to get the job done.
So colleagues of mine at New York University have probed why.
Why is that?
Why is just thinking about what you want in your life and sort of putting yourself vicariously
into those shoes, imagining what my life will be like if I can accomplish everything on this list.
Why doesn't that work? Well, first of all, does it work? The answer is no. And why does it not work?
Because what happens, these colleagues, Gabrielle Oten-Gene and her research team have found,
is that, you know, going through and dreaming about or visualizing how great my life will be when I get X, Y,
and Z done, that is like a goal satisfied. I have identified what it is that I want. I have
experienced it, even if just in an imaginary way, I've had that positive experience of thinking
about how great my life is going to be when I get this thing done. And it starts to sort of rest on their laurels.
She's actually measured systolic blood pressure
and heart rate.
And they found that people who do that,
who go through that experience of visualizing
how great my life will be when I get X, Y, and Z done.
Their systolic blood pressure,
the bottom number on your blood pressure reading, decreases.
Okay. Now I'm all about finding ways to relax, especially in New York, right?
You're constantly living at a high level of stimulation.
And so like, cool, great.
So maybe I should just like think about how awesome my life will be when I get my
bucket, my bucket list done.
But motivation scientists know that systolic blood pressure is actually an
indicator of our body's readiness to get up and act to do something.
Now, that can be the going out for a walk, going out for a run, hitting the gym.
It can also be things like doing math problems, right?
Even if it's something that's just mental, systolic blood pressure actually goes up in anticipation
of your body or your mind needing to do something, taking the first steps on a goal.
So then it helps us to understand.
I'm like, OK, if I've just created this dream board,
this vision board, and put myself psychologically
in that space of a goal satisfied,
why is it bad that blood pressure goes down?
Because it means your body is chilling out.
It's like, all right, cool.
I just accomplished something pretty major.
I actually now don't have the physiological resources at the ready to take the first step right now to do something pretty major. I actually now don't have the physiological resources
at the ready to take the first step right now
to do something about that.
So that was a pretty monumental finding
for motivation scientists to understand that like
creating these dream boards, these vision boards
or to-do lists might actually backfire
because it in and of itself is the creation of a goal
and the satisfaction of the goal,
and then people understandably give them some time
to just enjoy that positive experience.
So much for the secret.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
I guess now the secret folks will come after me
with good forks, but.
I tried to never say the name, right?
Oh, well, I'm not afraid to say the name.
I mean, I imagine that certain strategies
might work for other people,
but everything you're saying again, is consistent with what we know about the physiology I'm not afraid to say the name. I mean, I imagine that certain strategies might work for other people, but I
Everything you're saying again is consistent what we know about the physiology of dopamine circuits for motivation I have a good friend who
Perhaps incidentally perhaps not is a cardiologist at a major university said that one of the major
Errors that people make with book writing and completion as they will tell people they're
going to write a book and people will say, oh, you definitely should write a book. Everyone's
going to love your book. And they never end up writing it. And his theory is that they get so much
dopamine reward from that immediate feedback with all the protection of never having the book
criticized that they never write the book. I'm sure there are exceptions to this, but I guess it
raises the question, what's the better strategy? Yeah. So I'm sure there are exceptions to this, but I guess it raises the question,
what's the better strategy?
Yeah, so I'm not saying that people who enjoy
dream board creation should stop what they're doing.
That's not the take home message here.
I admire board.
Oh, definitely not that.
There's enough anxiety and fear in the world.
We don't need to encourage more of it.
But the process of goal setting shouldn't stop
with articulating what the goal is.
So at that same point that we're trying to figure out what we want to do, what is my vision
for the future.
In those planning sessions, we need to simultaneously think about a couple other things.
One is how are we going to get there?
So take it out of the abstract, take it out of this idyllic visual iconography, and start
thinking about the practical day to day.
We need to break it down into more manageable goals, not just my 10-year plan for myself,
but my two-week plan.
What can I accomplish in the next two weeks and the two weeks after?
That's going to set me on the right trajectory.
That's probably not surprising to anybody who's been thinking about how do I set goals better.
Plan, plan big picture, think big picture abstractly,
but then also break it down more concretely.
That's probably not surprising,
but it's an important aspect of the goal setting process.
Then again, Gabrielle Oden-Geneway Department
has identified a third often overlooked
or under appreciated stage that has to happen
at the goal in the goal setting process.
And that's thinking about the obstacles that stand in your way of success.
And that will actually help improve motivation in the long run.
And sometimes people think that that is counterintuitive.
You're saying, like, for if I want to increase my motivation,
have more motivation than I need to think about how hard it's going to be,
all the ways that I'm going to fail, How is that going to like jazz me up?
How is that going to help me get through when things get hard?
But it does.
Because it's like coming up with a Plan B, a Plan C, Plan D in advance of actually experiencing
that.
If you were on a boat and the boat started to sink, that's not the time.
You want to start looking for life jackets.
You already want to know where one is,
so you can go to it right away.
And the same thing with goal setting
is that you want to know, what am I working towards?
How I'm going to get there and if I experience this obstacle,
here's what I'm going to do about it.
You may never experience that obstacle,
but if you do, you're probably going to be shy on time,
then on resources, maybe experiencing an anxiety
that hijacks your brain so you're not functioning at that optimal level of judgment decision making.
You want to already have like the snap next step in place so you can just hop to it.
Right.
We're not going to do our best thinking when we're in crisis mode.
But we don't have to if we have used, if we have already used our resources in advance
to come up with that plan beer, that plan C. Michael Phelps, like incredible athlete, right?
This is something that he and his coach have routinely incorporated into
their training. So I love this story that like back in 2008, he was, you know,
hot, hot for the first time on the international stage. It was the Beijing Olympics.
Michael Phelps was on the brink of doing something that no one else in the
history of the Olympic Games has ever done, which is when eight gold medals in a single
Olympiad. At the time of this story, he had already won seven, and he had just the 200 fly
in front of him before he could do what no one else has ever done when the eighth gold medal.
And like the fly is his thing, right? This should have been, this should have been easy. Like,
a no-brainer, he's going to win this, he's going to break Olympic history. As soon as he dove into the pool, his
goggles started to leak. And by the time he had done three lengths of the pool, he just
had to flip around and come back to the starting line, slash finish line, back to the edge.
It's by the time that happened, his goggles were completely filled with water and he was
swimming blind. I would panic, I would have sunk to the bottom of the pool.
I wouldn't have been in the pool to be honest.
Like I'm not a swimmer, definitely not going to be in the Olympics.
But for him, he didn't.
It wasn't a moment of panic.
Like it probably would have been for nearly every other person in that situation because he
had foreshadowed that kind of possible failure.
He had imagined that obstacle hitting him in advance and not even just imagined it, but practiced it.
What will we do?
He routinely practiced swimming with his goggles
not fully secured on his face.
His coach notoriously would rip the goggles off of his head,
smash them on the ground for maybe dramatic effect
or something so that he didn't even have any goggles
possible to grab as he's in practice.
So because he had foreshadowed that possibility and the solution,
if my goggles start to leak, then I will do, in his case, start counting my strokes,
then I'll make it through. He knew exactly how many strokes it would take from him to get,
from one end of the pool to the other. He started counting his strokes. He won that race,
the 200 fly. He won his eighth gold medal and he'd go on to win 15 more in his career.
So we might not all be swimmers, we might not all aspire to Olympic level performance,
but I love that example because I think it helps sort of demystify or give us an alternative
perspective on the importance and the motivational reasons why thinking about obstacles and
advance, thinking about the ways, the two, three, four ways that your plan might go awry is actually effective at helping us overcome the obstacle that
might otherwise lead us to throw in the towel.
That's a beautiful example.
I'm going to springboard off that example to ask a question that has also been on my mind,
which is, is there really anything special about vision?
Because in the example you just gave, it was indeed vision that Michael Phelps was deprived of, and it was counting
strokes. Counting is another form of incremental measurement in the nervous system, obviously.
There are others, they could be the sensation of the hands smacking the water, breaking the
surface of the water. So there are any number of different variables or metrics that one could use.
I could imagine that setting out on a, let's say, a three mile run, which for me is a decent
distance run.
It's one I do a few times a week.
I'm also not a runner, but I try and complete some runs a few times a week at very slow
pace just for my health.
I could count every step.
That would be kind of exhausting.
But if I knew that three miles was, well, I'm going to estimate here, I don't know, a couple
thousand steps, I could count backward, I could count forward, I could count every 10.
I confess, I spend every morning trying to find sunlight to get sun and my eyes to set
my circadian rhythm and I do a hundred jumping jacks
So I'm the the guy that people are looking at strange on the street
But sometimes I count every 10 sometimes I count backwards. I'm like I count forward
Is there any indication that it matters or is it simply that we attach some sort of meaning to that increment and
the mode of
Reaching that increment because it does seem like there's something special
about vision, we can maybe dive into a little bit more
of why that is, but at a very basic level,
how broadly or finally should one set the increments
and does it matter if you're counting steps
or counting strokes, if you're,
maybe it's every other song,
you're gonna listen to an entire album.
That's something that I don't know if people do anymore.
Or you're gonna listen to a whole playlist, and then listen to it again,
and you're gonna run as long as the playlist is completed twice.
You can obviously see what I'm getting at.
But I know people are going to want to implement these tools,
and I have to guess that the nervous system is somewhat indiscriminate
when it comes to these things, but that there might also be some specificity.
I think vision is special, and I think you do too.
So for a variety of reasons, when you start, you can really nerd out on how cool the brain
is and how cool vision is within the brain.
And when you do, then you start to find some things that make vision unique, right?
More real estate, more neurological cortex, real estate is taken up by the visual
sense than any other sense, more than taste, touch, smell, right? Vision gets more real
estate, gets more neurological processing space than any other sense. Why is that? Well,
because evolution has led us to prioritize that visual, the visual experience. There's
some cool illusions where like maybe somebody's mouth is doing something different than what you're hearing,
when people sort of create these weird tricks that might go on YouTube and go viral.
And people are trying to figure out what did I hear? What did I see his mouth doing?
And what comes up is that people prioritize what they see over what they're hearing,
when the two are incompatible or kind of like out of sync.
Every time.
Yeah, every time, right?
If you had to bet on it, bet on what it is
that you're looking at rather than what you're seeing.
And why is that?
Well, I guess a couple of other things too, right?
Like we can see you super far.
You can see like a flickering candle on our horizon
if it was a totally, you know, clear sky.
Several miles away.
You can see the International Space Station floating up
in the night sky, right?
Like hundreds of miles away.
Our eyes are amazing.
And we prioritize what we see.
That, and I think that's because we never,
we rarely get the experience of having
our visual experience second guest.
You know, oftentimes we're having conversation maybe in a loud restaurant and we know that
we didn't hear the person write and so we say like, oh, did you say that?
Or like, oh, I thought you said this and they're like, no, I didn't say that, right?
So people will correct us when our ears get it wrong.
Or we're tasting something amazing and we can't quite figure out what spices we're in
here.
And so we know that our tongue isn't quite picking up the
taste the right way. And that's why we read the menu to see what are the ingredients.
So we asked the chef, like, what did you put in this? It's amazing. So we know that our
tongue is getting it wrong. Or you might be touching something and you look at the tag
to see what sort of textile was used in this really amazing piece of clothing that you're
looking to buy. So we know that our sense of touch isn't quite getting it right.
But rarely do we have that experience of having our eyes get updated. So we know that our sense of touch isn't quite getting it right. But rarely do we
have that experience of having our eyes get updated where we're looking at something, oh I think I'm
looking at my mom. Oh no, actually it was actually my husband. Like, okay, like that never happens.
Right? That we have gotten vision as wrong as we might get any other thing that that we're experiencing
through any other sense. We trust our visual experience. We have sort of a naive realism
that what we see reflects the world the way it actually is
because it's never really fully tested.
We never get the input or the feedback
that you've seen something wrong
until a visual illusion pops up on social media, right?
Like the dress example or the last week or so,
there's been that horse seal line drawing
that's been all over social media too. What do you see? I see a horse someone says I see a seal
and then like you know chaos erupts or I thought the dress was blue and I thought it was
goal. I don't remember the option because I see it as blue so uh uh right and it's like dividing up
families and friendships because you've like seen something that the other person just literally cannot see.
And that's why we love those examples
when they pop up in social media when they do,
is because it defies all of our previous expectations.
There's a really amazing, if this interests you,
there's a really amazing visual artist,
Anish Kapoor, who plays with these ideas too,
and his installations are just fascinating.
I saw one at a museum once where
you know, walked down this long hall and it's just a big black rectangle that's painted on the wall.
And I was like, this guy's super famous. What the hell? It's just a big black rectangle painted on
the wall. What is this about? Like, what a hoax. You know, this museum paid how much? Whatever.
But then as you get closer, you get closer and your eyes start to settle in
and they adapt to the different visual lighting realize
it's not a black square painted on the wall.
It's a huge hole he's carved into the wall.
And there is a whole other world that's back behind there
that you can't see right away
until your eyes adapt to the different lighting conditions.
Beautiful.
It's amazing.
As a vision scientist, I have to see,
where is this exhibit?
It's not up right now.
I've seen there was a retrospective several years ago that was done in Sydney, but his
work is all over the place.
So Anish Kapoor, definitely worth looking up because it, like the dress example or the
horse seal line drawing or artist like Anish Kapoor's work, that is a moment that gives
us a different unexpected insight
about the world, that it challenges us to see something that we hadn't seen before
or it induces or tricks us into seeing something that we wouldn't have otherwise have seen.
And so it's those rare moments that I think are actually really important for understanding what
do our eyes normally do, because we wouldn't find these examples so surprising, so engaging,
so shocking, if we had routinely gotten the experience of realizing we're not seeing the world
the way that it is. So that is why I think vision is special and why it can be thought of as a tool
that we can add to our toolkit for how to better accomplish our goals. I'm not saying that we should
just only focus on
imagining the world through an attentional spotlight,
but maybe that's something that we can employ strategically
on occasion when we think it's gonna best help us.
When we need an extra little push to cross
that literal or metaphorical finish line,
but it doesn't have to be the only tactic that we use.
Just like it's not bad to use vision boards,
but let's use something else. Also, it's not bad to use vision boards, but let's use something else.
Also, it's not bad to talk to ourselves in encouraging ways,
but let's try adding another tool to our tool belt,
in case that's not enough to get the job done.
So I do think that there's great power
in thinking about our visual experience
alongside other tactics that we might use for meeting our goals.
And another one of those tactics might be like the numerics that you're talking about.
How do I think about my jumping jacks in terms of groups of 10 or as a set of 100?
You do it routinely. So you might be able to set a goal of 100 and have that sustain you through
number 16, number 70, when maybe it's starting to get harder. But for somebody who's just starting out
and wants to be able to make it to 100,
that's probably not gonna work.
That's gonna be maybe really,
that could be quite challenging for them
if it's the first time that they're trying it.
And so instead setting those micro goals of groups of 10
is gonna be useful because as we start to get to number eight
or nine or number 88 or 89,
and it's really getting hard,
we need that extra little hedonic hit of pleasure, of accomplishment, the microdopamine rush that you might get
by hitting another 10, you know, another decade milestone, another group of 10
milestone, I want to be get that little hit of pleasure excitement or self
congratulations, that might be enough to sustain us through the next
challenging physical obstacle, the next group of 10 that we might experience.
So there isn't any prescription that I would give and say every person should decide that 25 jumping jacks is the goal.
No, we have to be idiosyncratic and in retrospect about where are we at with this goal, this thing that I'm trying to accomplish,
and set those goals realistically, but inspirationally as well.
We want to set a goal that will challenge us, but isn't impossible.
We don't want to set goals that are too easy because we're not going to trick ourselves
into feeling so great about doing more than jumping jack.
Okay, great.
Like, I'm pretty sure most people, if that's a goal, they can do one.
So are you going to feel so great when you hit that goal?
No, because it was too easy. You didn't have any doubt that you could do that one. But what about 25?
Okay, yeah, I might feel pretty good about that. Well, what about the next group of 25? And now I'm at 50.
Those are goals that might seem just beyond the brink of what's possible, but I will feel good when I hit that and that's gonna
Give me the next sort of boost of energy that I'm going to need to go a little bit further, either that time
or the next time.
Yeah, I think vision is special. Again, I'm strongly biased here. My, you know, the reason
I initially learned about your work was, well, now you have this amazing book, but at the
time there wasn't the book. There were just the scientific papers, and of course, upon which the book rests,
and those papers are really important.
But was the relationship between vision
and our obviously is our sense of space,
but how the sense of space and time are related
and to make the idea quite simple for those listening,
you know, when you narrow your visual window,
you're measuring the time bin also gets smaller, right? Which makes, when you narrow your visual window, you're measuring the time
bin also gets smaller, right?
Which makes sense when you hear it, whereas if you take on a huge visual landscape, you're
actually carving up time differently.
It's sort of like moving from a slow frame rate to a fine frame rate, you know, slow motion
camera is actually taking a lot more snapshots, right?
So you're measuring distance over time more finally.
And so where a strobe would be the other example,
which is strobe is very low frequency.
So you're going here, here, here,
as opposed to slow motion, right?
Strobe gives a course view into the time domain
and high speed photography gives a fine view
in the time domain.
So I'm almost certain without any knowledge
of underlying data, but knowledge of the mechanism then,
I'm almost certain, if not certain,
that by placing a neurovisual aperture,
we change the way we perceive time.
Now, I have a question, and to be honest,
I know the answer in advance,
but I'd love for you to tell us a bit about
how some of this works still further in advance, but I'd love for you to tell us a bit about how some of this works
still further in reverse, meaning how unfit people view the world versus how fit people
view the world or how unmotivated people visually see the world as opposed to highly motivated
people. You talked about the easy-lead runners, you give them Michael Phelps' example, but maybe
you could describe that study.
I think it's a particularly important one, mostly because yes, it identifies perhaps a physiological
or psychological differences between motivated and unmotivated or fit and unfit people, but
it also provides a path to remedy that.
Yeah, so there's out of my lab, but also out of several other labs, there's
been work looking at that relation between states of the body and visual experiences.
They haven't necessarily tried to integrate the motivation science element to it, but
they were looking to see, the visual experiences change as a function of different states of
our body. So they've looked at people who experience chronic fatigue, the elderly, people who are overweight,
those that are wearing heavy backpack and so who are sort of put into that experience
of being overweight, what happens to their perceptions of the environment?
Well, what they find is that distances look further to those that are overweight, chronically
tired, older, rather than younger,
weighted down with extra baggage.
Distances look farther and hills look steeper.
We've done some of those studies, too, where we try to give people more energy or deprive them of energy,
and see, does that change their perception of space?
And we did that by a sort of a classic technique
of a double blind study,
where the participant doesn't really know
what they're experiencing.
I thought you were gonna say a double espresso.
That is also a good psychological experience
to give people.
Yeah, so a double blind experiment
where the participant doesn't really know
the full extent of what they're doing or their experiencing.
And the researcher who's interacting with them also doesn't.
You know, they do this a lot in medical studies.
You give somebody a drug and you give somebody a placebo, a sugar pill.
And then importantly, nobody really knows who's got what until you've analyzed all the data and the results are revealed that these are the people that had the drug, the active agent. Same idea and the psychological research. In this case, what we did was give people
coolade to drink. And for some people that coolade was sweetened with sugar, an actual caloric entity.
It could give them energy. Other people drank coolade, sweetened with Splendum. So yeah, it's sweet,
but it actually doesn't have any caloric value. You're not giving people energy, you're just giving them that experience of sweetness. Now, some people of course are
really good at identifying like what's real sugar and what Splendid, but when you put it in a
coolade, a pretty noxious powder, it actually masked it for everybody and nobody had any idea.
Because it tastes like garbage to everybody. It tastes like garbage. It's so hard to coolate. I mean, I'm sure there are many people that love coolate.
I guess the sales of coolate will reveal the data.
Yeah.
I grew up in Nebraska actually where coolate is from.
It originated in Nebraska.
So I do feel like I'm betraying my roots slightly
by casting some shade on coolate.
But that's how it worked.
Is that we asked them to guess what they got.
We tested them afterwards and they were wrong.
So nobody is able to guess with accuracy what was your drink sweetened with, which is important because they were blind.
The way that scientists use it, they didn't know what it was that they were drinking.
We give it, you know, we give them about 10 to 15 minutes for that sugar to metabolize and we measured their circulating blood glucose levels
to make sure that we had in fact,
to give in their body, circulating glucose energy
that they might use in the next activity.
And the researcher again didn't know
whether they had just served sugar or splendor.
Then we asked people to estimate distance.
So we gave some people more energy
or we kept others sort of at at whatever their normal level was.
And what we found is that those people who didn't even
know it, but who had been given more energy
by drinking cool-aid sweetened with sugar,
perceived their space as more constricted.
That visual illusion of proximity was induced.
They felt that their finish line, again,
in the context of an exercise task, was closer to them.
So in just the same way that these other physiology labs, vision science physiology labs found
that people who are chronically tired, who don't feel like they have as much energy, or
those that are physically weighted down and for whom, you know, moving within an environment
is more costly, we could create that experience for people.
We did an experimental version of that, that if you have more energy, we could create that experience for people. We did an experimental version of that
that if you have more energy, the world looks easier.
The distances to a finish line don't look as far.
So that was some of the experimental evidence
that we had to show that people states their body
do impact their visual experience.
Now, I'm a motivation researcher.
So for me, the big question is,
well, what's the point of that study then? besides just showing this connection between the body and the eyes
and the visual experience.
We think that that's fundamental to one of the reasons that people experience difficulty
when they're exercising.
When it's really harder for your body because of its physical state to move within a space,
why don't you might say like, well, why don't they just go exercise?
Because the world looks harder to them.
Because that distance that they're supposed to walk
because a doctor tells them to
or that a partner encourages them to
or a hill that they should hike up
because someone told them that would be good for their health,
it looks more challenging to them than it does to somebody
who isn't better physical health. Now, if it looks that way, if it does to somebody who isn't who isn't who isn't who's in better physical
health. Now, if it looks that way, if it looks harder, if it feels like it might be harder,
then psychologically we know that it is. When you have set yourself up psychologically
mentally for that kind of failure experience, like, I don't know that I have the resources
that to get this job done, this this looks really hard. You're already motivationally in a place
for this task to be closer to impossible for you.
So to put it all together, then, what we know
is that people whose bodies might make it more challenging
for them to exercise are seeing the world in a more challenging
way, and that is having these downstream motivational and
psychological effects that makes it less likely for them
to try to take on the task in the first place, or to experience it as harder than other people would or
do.
Is the solution the same, however, meaning if these people are taught to adjust their visual
goal line or to set a visual spotlight on an intermediate goal, can they overcome some of this challenge
that they face simply by virtue of their skewed perception?
Yes.
So in all of the studies that we have done,
looking at that connection between this narrowed focus
of attention and improvements in exercise,
we do not find that it only works for the people who
are in shape or that are backfires for people
who are out of shape.
It works for everybody. This is a strategy that everybody can adopt because
it's just simply about like, what do you allocate attention resources to? What do you sort
of ignore and what do you focus on? And that visually induces the same kind of illusion
for everybody, regardless of whether you're overweight or you're at your target weight
or if you're struggling to get there or you've already accomplished where you want to be, that visual illusion can be induced for everybody
and it has the same kinds of consequences.
Terrific.
Earlier, I made a joke about double espresso, but now I'll make a serious statement about
double espresso, which is that it contains caffeine and caffeine as a stimulant, like all
other stimulants, cause a change in our visual world.
The most salient one is the one that police officers
look for, parents,
suspecting that their kids have ingested substances
of any kind, look for,
which is if somebody's pupils are unusually large
for a given visual environment,
that is an indication of high levels of autonomic arousal.
In the street drug translation of this, you know, people who take infetamine or cocaine
will have very big pupils.
People are very relaxed, have small pupils.
However, everyone should know that pupil size also is dynamically regulated by how bright
the visual environment.
So there are multiple things controlling pupil size.
However, we know that when we are very stressed or very aroused in any way, positive or negative, the people
get big, but within the visual system, what that equates to is a narrowing of the visual
aperture.
So rather than ingesting sugar, which I'm guessing most of the world, certainly the US needs
to ingest less sugar.
At least that's what we're hearing.
I'm sure there are a few sugar, you know, sucranistas out there, sucrose-synestas, who
will also come
after me with pitchforks.
But let's face it, most people will probably be better off ingesting less simple sugar.
But caffeine is a great motivator because of the internal sense of arousal, but it also
narrowed our visual window.
I could imagine using healthy amounts of caffeine combined with maybe even blinders of the
sort that horses wear, maybe like a hoodie and a hat,
maybe even blinders in order to get over
some of those more challenging milestones.
Is there any evidence that people are doing this
without, well, obviously people are doing it
without knowledge of how it works?
But are there any studies looking at how adrenaline
or epinephrine or any other stimulants impact motivation?
I don't know, honestly, yeah. I mean, energy drinks are a big thing now. Yeah. Yeah.
For sure they are. And, you know, if you actually are more physiologically aroused or jazzed or
whatever, you know, amped up, or you just think you are in our studies, we have found that they
work in the same way that it can produce
the same kinds of consequences. And I like that because it tells us like you can actually change
your state of your body to induce these kinds of experiences. Or you can try to, you can just think
that you can trick yourself. You can placebo affect yourself out and produce the same kinds of
effects. I had to give up coffee like 12 years ago, not because not for any. Sorry.
I love the taste. So decaf is my jam, but I can't drink the caffeine because it didn't actually
do the thing that it does for so many other people. Like make me feel more energized and
more awake. I just got sweaty and jittery and anxious and I couldn't focus.
Yeah, some people who already have a fairly high baseline level of attention and motivation,
they find that puts the autonomic sea saw too far in the
sympathetic tone. Yeah. And I happen to marry the same kind of person. He also can't drink caffeine,
but loves to taste a coffee. The interesting thing is that we both have to have coffee in the
morning to feel like we're ready to go for the day. So it's just part of our routine or whatever
to have that taste and have that sensation to feel like I'm ready to take on the day. Even though,
I mean, yeah, decaaff still has some caffeine in it,
but we're not drinking that much of it
to probably actually create a caffeinated experience
in our body, but we're tricking ourselves psychologically
into doing that thing that in years past
used to work for us both.
So I think that's something to keep in mind.
Like, you know, you might have a hoodie
that you can wear to induce that visual illusion, or you can take advantage
of the power of your mind.
At the end of the day, I'm a psychologist
and I believe that we have some non-zero power
over what our mind is doing, what we're thinking about,
what we allocate our attention to.
That can do the same kind of thing that a hoodie might do
or that a cup of caffeine might do.
I completely agree. The visual aperture is under our conscious control.
That's an amazing feature of our visual system.
We can narrow or expand it.
Takes a little bit of practice, I think, for people to learn how to do this without moving
their head around, to expand their visual aperture and how to narrow it.
But what I always tell people is just imagine a really troubling text message or a really exciting
text message coming in, all of a sudden you forget about the world around you.
So it can be triggered by these outside events and we can learn how to anchor our visual attention.
I'd love to ask about other kinds of goals, meaning non-physical goals, because many people
are trying to read more, I would hope, or learn music or a language or things that really
involve cognitive goal lines. or learn music or a language or things that really involve
cognitive goal lines or internal goal lines.
You know, reading one chapter out of a book
each night is a tangible goal.
The other that I've often wondered about are these systems
that allow you to highlight individual lines
or even words on a page.
That's a very visual obviously
and everything else has rolled out except that word. I've always wished for books that would naturally highlight
each page. As I say, that someone will put in the comments as probably existed for 10 years
and I'm just showing how what a Lodite am. But is there any example that or were tactic that
people could use to better approach cognitive goals of school work
recreational too, but that don't exist in the kind of fitness and sports domain.
Yeah, so just to shout out to my brother-in-law who has done some of that research
where it does highlight different parts of words in paragraphs and he
sounded to be an effective way for English as a second language learners to pick it up.
That is that tying that vision to the process of learning language is effective.
So there's, you know, whole, cool body of work and research is looking at that.
So you're right about that.
If you want to mention what he does, is there a place that people can learn more about
that?
We can provide links.
Yeah, let me.
Okay.
We will provide links to those resources because I want those resources.
I've been trying to learn a second language for a long time. Yeah, I speak Spanish pretty weekly
But I would love to get better at it. Okay. I'll approach you later. My five-year-old son speaks Spanish better than I do at this point
So yeah, yeah, so you know, I was thinking that too, you know
We started this work within the context of exercise, but of course, that's not people's only goal that they have in life.
And it isn't mine either.
I have interests outside of improving my exercise game.
A couple years ago, when I was writing the book, I also had a child, the same month that
I had the opportunity to pull all this research together, the same month that that my son came to be.
And I started to realize like I became a lot less interesting once he was around.
He was fascinating, but I was changing diapers and feeding him and like that was it.
People would come over like, what's up?
Have you been like tell me something that's going on in your life and like all I had to
talk about was this what was boring.
And I just felt like I've lost myself.
I used to pride myself on like crazy adventures
and problems I would get myself in.
And I was a great storyteller.
And that all of a sudden disappeared
as soon as he came into the world
because he became my world.
So then I started thinking like,
I need to pull back some coolness.
And if I ever had it in the first place,
but I need to be a cooler person
than I'm coming across right now.
So I decided I want to learn to play drums.
I'm and I want to be like a one hit wonder as a rock star drummer.
I only want one song because I know I'm not going to be able to do more than that.
I'm not coordinated at all, you know, like from the beginning of time,
in fifth grade I have this really vivid like flash bulb memory of playing basketball for the very first time.
I lost my footing. I knocked into my own teammate, pushed her out of bounds where she had the ball.
We lost the game and I was not invited back on the team for the next season.
And so that, you know, formatted my self-definition of uncoordinated. I am a musician,
but I am not a drummer. And the idea of coordinating four limbs in real time was like,
if I could do that, I would be so proud.
So that's a goal that I set for myself.
At the same time that my son came into this world
when I was also trying to think about goal setting
and how to improve my ability and all of our ability
to get a job done when you're faced with some pretty big obstacles.
So I got to practice all these techniques
that we're talking about on myself and see for myself.
When I tell people, hey, try this thing,
like narrowed focus of attention, does it help with
something like becoming a better drummer?
And the answer is, yeah, these techniques,
at least work for me, sometimes under some circumstances,
and they do for other people who try them
for other goals that aren't necessarily about exercise.
You know, one that I found particularly helpful was overcoming my bad memory that everybody's
memories are faulty. Everybody has a warped perception of the past. It might be skewed more
positively than maybe we deserve or it might be skewed more negatively if you feel what looms large
in your mind as you reflect on something from the past,
are the mistakes that you've made, are the things that the social faux pas that you had,
or challenges that you faced at work when you got in trouble with a boss or with a colleague,
if that's what really stands out in your mind, or the good side of all of those possibilities,
we probably aren't getting the world right.
And that is something that our brain has evolved
to give us a faulty memory, to level and sharpen,
to not encode and remember and be able to recall
everything that we've experienced with accuracy and precision.
And that's a problem when it comes to assessing
our own goal progress.
When we want to be our own accountant
and try to determine how are we doing?
If I want to become a drummer,
am I on track for getting there before X, before my time runs out? Am I going to make it or not?
And I think that's an experience, whether they want to be a drummer or not, that a lot of people can
resonate with, like trying to determine, is this trajectory, is this rate of progress going to get
the job done by X amount of time? Well, I have my swimsuit body by summer or well, I save enough for retirement by the time I hit 65
for these goals where time is involved and there is a deadline
we do take moments to assess our
trajectory and if we just rely on our memory
we're probably going to do a bad job of assessing that
memory, we're probably gonna do a bad job of assessing that, that trajectory of knowing whether we're on pace
to meeting our deadline.
And I found that to be the case as I was thinking about,
am I actually gonna be able to learn this song?
I mean, I know that it's going a lot slower
than it probably would for anybody else,
but to give myself a deadline and a commitment,
I decided I was gonna put on a show,
I was gonna invite everybody I knew,
and also people I didn't know, and I was gonna play gonna put on a show. I was gonna invite everybody I knew and also people I didn't know.
And I was gonna play my one song for them.
This is while writing a book
and having just had a child.
Yeah, so when you read the book,
you'll see my story and it's the real truth of it.
I mean, I did play that show and it was fine.
And then I've, because I wrote about it in the book,
then some other opportunities to play it publicly have come up. And it's like, all right wrote about it in the book, then some other opportunities to play it
publicly have come up. And it's like, all right, I told people I can play drums, like better to like
show them that I actually still can play this song. Yeah, so that's been fun. I have become a one-hit
wonder. If you ask me to play this song again, like, like on-core, it's just going to get that same
song a second time. So like literally one-hit wonder. But so in the process of like figuring out, I might be able to play this show. I sent out invitations like the date is committed.
Like people are coming to listen to my one song. God bless them. How's it going to go? And it felt
awful. It just felt like I am not making progress here because there's a lot more things that actually
are pressing, right? Like the kid does need to get fed.
I do have to go to my day job.
The editor is asking for the next draft of this book,
and that is going to take precedence,
like it does for so many people.
That things command your band width,
even when you have this goal that you've committed to
and that you've got on the books.
And so I just felt this looming anxiety
about this goal that would require, you know, like,
didn't have to be daily practice, but like, you can't cram that kind of a goal.
It does take, you know, committed investment for a sustained period of time.
And so I had this looming anxiety that I'm not making good enough progress.
But that's because I was relying on my memory and my brain to recall, like, how many times
did you practice?
What was it like the last time you practiced?
What was it like when you tried to play this bit, you know, or this riff like two weeks
ago?
Have you gotten any better since then?
And it just felt like no, I haven't practiced enough.
I don't remember when the last time I played was, but it definitely doesn't feel like I'm
getting any better.
Then I thought, you know what, I should stop relying on my brain to tell me where am I
at and is, am I on an upward slope here.
I need to look at the data.
I love data, scientists love data.
So I started to collect data on myself.
What I did was download this app that a friend had told me about called the reporter app.
There's lots of these kinds of things out there.
Basically, it just like sets up your phone to randomly ping you with whatever questions you want your phone to ask.
It records your answers. You can download the data. You can make pretty graphs to see,
am I getting, what's my change and how I've answered these questions over time.
So I did that for a month. For a month, I had my phone ask me a couple of times a day,
oh maybe twice a day, really. Did you practice? Since last time I asked you,
Maybe twice a day, really. Did you practice?
Since last time I asked you, my phone says,
did you practice?
If mostly it was no.
And if yes, then it would funnel a couple other questions.
How did you do?
How do you feel?
Check a couple of different emotion words now
about your experience when you played.
So when I did that for a month, after a month,
went into my office, downloaded the data,
and first took stock before I looked at the numbers,
like, how do I think I did over the last month?
And I thought, same as every other month,
I didn't really get anywhere.
Yeah, I practiced, but I still feel awful.
And I cried.
I cried having to practice.
I was upset with myself for setting this goal
and feeling so anxious about all the memories that I cried.
Cried too much about this personal conquest that wouldn't matter to anybody else. Honestly, it really doesn't matter in the
scope of things anyway. I'm not going to become a drummer professionally, so who cares
if I embarrass myself publicly? But what I found from the data was my memory was totally
wrong. I actually had practiced far more times than I remembered. And when I looked at
like my emotion words that I used, it was a clear
upward trajectory. Yeah, I did cry. That part I hadn't misremembered or made up. But by the end of
that month, like I had gotten a compliment from my husband who actually is a drummer and said,
like, hey, that wasn't that bad. And then there was like one expletive you were,
a thing amazing at that one thing you've been practicing at. But like, okay, fine, he's my husband,
right? He's just, you know, so at the moment, it didn't really feel that at. But like, okay, fine, he's my husband, right?
He's just, you know, so at the moment
it didn't really feel that great.
And I downplayed it and as a result,
it didn't stick in my brain, right?
I remember how stupid it felt that I cried
because I can't make progress.
And I downplayed in my mind the thing
that actually should have been a legitimate indicator
that progress was being made.
So all of which is to say, I needed to see, to collect that data
on myself and to look at it objectively, accurately and completely, because my brain
wasn't doing that for me. That visual experience of downloading that data and looking at, like,
what was my actual experience, gave me a better insight as I was trying to assess the trajectory of my progress.
I became a more accurate accountant of my own progress, which is important for setting
goals or resetting them when you need to calibrate in light of what's left to do and how much
time do you have to do it in?
I love it.
So basically, if I understand correctly, when the intermediate goals of, say,
daily practice or twice a day practice or reading or math, etc. are not a visual goal line,
it really does help to visualize some aspect related to that non-visual goal line. In this
case, the reporter app was a useful tool. I've never heard of it. I plan to use it. I'm
sure a number of people will be interested in it.
Sounds like there are others out there,
but that's the one that you found most useful.
Yeah, yeah, there's another one too.
That is even more visual than that.
To the reporter app, although that has visual components
and is really effective if you like data
and want to collect numbers on yourself
or your experience,
there's another one called the one second every day app.
This is really awesome because the app is a mechanism
to record one second of your life.
The goal, there's such an awesome community of people
that just live by this and love having these experiences
and the creator of it.
I got a chance to talk with.
And he has done this.
He's taken a one second video
of some aspect of his life every day for 12 years,
13 years or something.
One second.
Yeah, one second.
And then what the app does is smash them together
and give you a chronology of what your year or your month
or your last decade of life has been like
and presents it as a streamlined video for you.
So you just see these flashes of your life over however long you tell the app to create
a montage for you. And so when you see these videos that people have made, especially those
that have been doing it for a really long time, it's fascinating. I did that for myself
too. I tried it one second of today's drumming performance, another second, it's not enough
to capture it. Am I actually doing a good job of drumming
or what's my trajectory for drumming?
But the guy who made it says one of the most awesome,
one second videos that he ever made is of a brick wall.
I was like, you didn't need a video of that.
What's the wall doing?
It's not crumbling.
It's not in earthquake land or something like that.
It's just slightly jittery, one second of a brick wall.
And I was like, how is that motivating or exciting to you?
Why is that?
You've been doing this for 13 years every day, one second.
Why is that the one second that matters to you most?
And he says, because when it comes up in my montage, it reminds me of like a really horrific
moment in my family.
That was the first wall that I saw when I walked out of the room having heard that my sister-in-law had this awful, awful experience her intestines started to twist up on themselves and not up and she
was on the brink of death. And we had just found this out. We just got into the hospital. They
diagnosed this issue that required immediate surgery and our family was already here about this and
we were all stunned that she might die right now.
She might die.
And that's the first thing that I saw
and it reminds me of how precious life is,
how important family is,
and how the rest of whatever we were doing that day
didn't matter because we all needed to be here together right now.
And that is like all of this emotion
and like purpose in life is conjured up
or reminded when he looks at one second of a brick wall
as it pops into his video feed.
So if you're visually oriented and you do want ways
to like remember what was life like,
what has my year in review, what does it look like?
That's an awesome app, one second every day
that can help you do that.
These are great recommendations and a couple of reflections.
First of all, the brick wall example is a beautiful way of highlighting this other feature
of the visual system, which is that the brain largely thinks in symbols.
It's very efficient.
It batches entire experiences into symbols.
In this case, the brick wall can be attached to a whole set of experiences that are very
meaningful to this individual that brick walls don't mean that
or didn't mean that to me until hearing this. So I think that the it highlights the fact that the
the actual symbol is less relevant than what we attach to that symbol, but that symbols are so
efficient that even in a one second view of something we can attach to it for better or for worse.
The other is that I'm a absolute, almost rabid proponent of people
getting morning sunlight in their eyes as the fundamental layer of setting their circadian
rhythms and sleep and health as a zero cost practice that believe you're not can be done any time
of year or anywhere. But it does take a little bit of effort. You have to get outside, you can't
do it through a window or windshield to be efficient, but it has huge outside effects on human health
This is now been demonstrated again and again and again and so I'll get to just do a sort of call to action if people aren't already doing this
I'm going to start using the one second app to record my
Morning sunlight viewing and prove that even through cloud cover you're getting more photons than you are
Indoor and then it's worthwhile. I also would love to do this for my next dog to go from puppy to full size dog
and maybe even to the end.
You know, it's great.
These are wonderful tools.
You've given us a huge number of practical tools,
which frankly isn't always the case on these podcasts.
We always strive to do science and science-based tools
as our kind of mantra, but you've given
a rich set of tools here to apply. I just want to briefly backtrack to something and then a final question.
Earlier, we were talking about how unfit people see the world as more challenging, maybe even
hills as steeper distances as further, and how shifting people into a state of energy, either
cognitively or through the ingestion of real glucose to get an energetic lift or maybe
through caffeine if that's within their practice and span of healthy behaviors, they could do that.
You know, there's so many people who are suffering from depression, which one of the
you know, key features of depression is a lack of energy, even though there can be anxiety associated
with depression. I have to wonder whether or not some of these tools are being deployed or will be deployed in the context of mental health,
because depression is this vicious loop, right? People feel a lack of energy and hopelessness,
and then things just look harder, and so that it just verifies their negative world view,
and it's a downward spiral. That's why medication in some cases and social support,
etc., can be helpful because they feel more energized.
The side effects often are a problem, however.
Have there been any efforts to implement some of these visual tools
to create this increase in systolic blood pressure and a kind of readiness
and willingness to lean into what people perceive as immense challenge?
And if not for anyone listening, I know we have a lot of listeners in the mental health
space and in the helping space, so to speak.
I can imagine these are zero cost, right?
We all provide with people are cited, have the apparatus to do it.
Are you aware of any studies like this or is your laboratory involved in any studies?
Because I just see an immense value of implementing the sorts of tools that you've developed.
Yeah, we haven't explored that.
Those ideas directly.
So call to all the scientists that are out there.
There's a great opportunity to start looking at these tools within the mental health space.
You're right.
Other researchers, though, have not this use of narrowed,
like inducing a narrowed attentional focus
and can they now feel more energized to go for a run?
But they have looked at their relationship
between anxiety, depression, and visual experience
and found over decades evidence that people
with depression or with anxiety,
what their attention is captured by
within the bigger global surrounding world are those things that are negative or reinforcing of their world view.
Now that happens for everybody. That things that are on our mind tend to like pop out that if whatever we're thinking about, we might start seeing some version of it showing up in the world around us.
It captures our attention. That's an idea called priming. What we're thinking about might then lead us to attend
to the world to see things in a way
that aligns with what we're already thinking about.
It's just that what we're thinking about
are those depressive, ruminative, anxiety, fearful thoughts.
When that is what is cognitively accessible,
when that's what's going through our mind,
then that's also what captures our visual gaze.
So when we think the world is hard,
the world is full of sadness, and that's the what captures our visual gaze. So when we think that the world is hard, the world is full of sadness,
and that's the thought in our mind.
And then we start seeing the people with frowns
on their faces or who are experiencing anxiety.
And that's what captures our attention,
even when there's other people around
that might not be seeing the world
or experiencing the world that way.
It becomes reinforcing.
When I think that the world is threatening,
and then I notice the threats that are around me
that confirms what I'm thinking, which
heightens my anxiety or my fear.
And then it further leads me to narrowly focus
on those elements of the environment
that are aligned with that worldview.
It's really hard to get out of that.
That's where the vicious cycle can come from.
So that has been really well established within the medical
community, this selective attention
relating to states of mental unwellness.
That's been pretty well established.
And so there's been some interventions done with people that have depression or anxiety
trying, saying, here's an array of photographs of a bunch of different faces.
Yes, it's artificial. It kind of looks like a page from a yearbook, a high school yearbook.
But look for the faces that are smiling. Look at the faces that are smiling.
Like, try right now. Spend 10 minutes having your eyes focus on those and look at those people
that it is an effective intervention at improving people's sense of self-efficacy of what can
I accomplish next, they feel a little bit more energized, it doesn't cure
depression, it doesn't cure anxiety. These are literal physical afflictions that
we have, so that's not a quick fix, but it can produce a temporary change
that might be a way to start getting out of that rut.
Yeah, and I think nowadays there's an increasing attention on tools that will help people orient
as they start to veer towards suicidal depression or veer back into a depressive episode or anxiety
episode.
I mean, you know, they're trying to reverse an entire syndrome or set of syndromes as far
more complicated.
Likewise in the health space, just trying to get people to deploy real-time tools to
adjust their anxiety or to exercise more often and so on.
As a kind of a final but also kind of high-level question, I'm imagining that, and I plan to
use this visual goal setting of spotlighting, I've been using it actually for some time
on runs.
It works really well.
Yesterday I took a run near the waterfront here and the entire I think I did it somewhat incorrectly. The entire run I was thinking about getting back
to the statue, which I started. But I did find that I ran fastest in the final 20 meters,
which I admittedly wasn't fast at all. But it was faster than what preceded it.
So it works and it makes perfect sense as to how it works. You've done other studies exploring some of the other features of vision, like the luminosity,
how bright something is, and how people perceive it.
That was in a completely different context.
But is there a higher level, a black belt version of what we're talking about here, where
not only am I focusing on a specific visual location, as in their intermediate or long-term
goal, or I'm using an app
to ask me a question and tap into how I'm feeling, create a visual representation of my
motivational state, but that I'm also making my phone as bright as possible.
I'm also trying to take that visual window and actually pay attention to more of the
details at that location, or is this simply a matter of kind of in in geek speak visual neuroscience we would
just call this like low spatial frequency just sort of grabbing a black and white snapshot
of something here or there in my mind. If I attach more detail and effort to the specific
thing that I'm focused on, is there any evidence that that's more effective?
It certainly you know changes what our brains are doing. So how do we define effectiveness?
That's a question for philosophers and that scientist will always be running.
Yeah.
It will when you use it towards the end of your run, just like you've picked up on.
Yeah, so there's cool studies that neuroscientists, not I, not coming from my lab, that neuroscientists
have done, looking at what is it doing to your brain?
When you've decided that you're going to focus your attention on this element of
the world and not pay attention to something else.
Is that just sort of like tricking your thoughts or is it doing something different to something
more basic, more low level?
And the answer is yes.
So there's an area of the brain, the fusiform face area.
It's part of our brain that's really specialized for making sense of faces. It's important as a social species to pay attention to other
people, pay attention to their faces with their trying to communicate through their face.
So our brain has developed a really specialized central area for doing that. And so these
neuroscientists will present a face to somebody, but superimposed over that
is a house or something else.
That is less special to us as a social human species.
And so both of those things, because it's sort of like both images are sort of transparent,
overlaid over one another, our eyes are getting both of those images in and our brain is getting
both of those images in, but we can will ourselves to focus on the house.
Just really pay attention to the features of the house, even though everything about
that face is still there too, or pay attention to the face.
Just tell me, what is it that you are deciding that you want to hold on to, that you want
to look at right now?
And you can see that the brain is responding to that.
So when people are saying, I'm really seeing that face, the details of the face, I'm paying
attention to the face, even though we know their eyes are also looking at, engaged with
the contents of the house, that's right there, smacked on top, the fused-of-form face
area lights up.
And when they're saying, no, I'm really focused on the house now.
We see activation of the fuse of form face area, decline,
and other areas of the brains and neurological real estate
start to engage.
So, yeah, I think there's something to it that we can,
at a high level, our brains are responding to our psychology as well.
And we have that great power to really, you know, with intention, with practice, decide,
how do I want to engage with the world?
And can it produce real change in our bodies in the way that we experience a world?
The answer is yes.
Fantastic. Well, you've given us a ton of mechanistic and conceptual and practical information.
So I'm speaking for a lot of people when I say thank you for taking the time out of your schedule.
I'm its kids and running a lab and teaching at the university and your book, which we will point
people to and provide a link to is a wonderful resource.
And we hope to have you back again.
Thank you so much.
It was a great conversation.
Thank you.
Thanks.
Thank you for joining me today for our discussion
about motivation, goal seeking, and research supported
tools for achieving your goals with Dr. Emily Belchettis.
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