Huberman Lab - LIVE EVENT Q&A: Dr. Andrew Huberman Question & Answer in Seattle, WA
Episode Date: August 17, 2022Recently I had the pleasure of hosting two live events, one in Seattle, WA and one in Portland, OR. These events were part of a lecture series called The Brain Body Contract. My favorite part of each ...evening was the question & answer period, where I had the opportunity to answer questions from the attendees of each event. Included here is the Q&A from our event in Seattle, WA. Get notified when new live events are announced: https://hubermanlab.com/tour Thank you to our sponsors Momentous: https://www.livemomentous.com/huberman InsideTracker: https://insidetracker.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) The Brain Body Contract Q&A (00:01:07) Sponsors: Momentous, InsideTracker (00:01:35) Upcoming Live Events: Los Angeles & New York (00:02:16) What Is Your Most-Used Protocol? (00:04:12) Should You Vary Wake-Up Time Seasonally? (00:06:05) Why Is My Drive Depleted Upon Waking-Up? (00:08:42) What Are Your Favorite/Most Impactful Books? (00:12:08) What Excites You About the Future of Mental Health Treatment? (00:17:25) What Is the Biggest Area for Performance Enhancement? (00:21:44) Can You Still Do a Kickflip? (00:22:32) Tips on How to Improve Memory (00:24:54) How Do You Manage Social Media Addiction? (00:27:43) Were You Nervous Tonight/ How Did You Prepare? (00:29:10) Is Learning from Failure Equal to Learning from Success? (00:32:23) When Are You Going to Start Training Jiu-Jitsu? (00:33:28) Discuss the Supplements You Take (00:36:29) Advice or Protocols to Improve Learning & Retention (00:38:42) What Exciting Research/Work are You Doing? (00:40:22) How Does Dopamine Factor into Neuroplasticity? (00:43:12) What Advice Do You Have for Future Scientists? (00:46:47) Is Age 66 Too Old for Neuroplasticity & Learning? (00:48:00) How Do You Read Research Papers? (00:49:40) What is Your Favorite Condiment? (00:50:10) Most Important Takeaway from Your ADHD Research? (00:52:58) What Future Episodes Are in the Pipeline? Title Card Photo Credit: Mike Blabac Disclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Huberman Lab podcast where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Huberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and
Optomology at Stanford School of Medicine.
Recently, I had the pleasure of hosting two live events, one in Seattle, Washington and one in Portland, Oregon,
both entitled The Brain Body Contract where I discussed science and science-related tools for mental health, physical health, and performance. My favorite part of each evening, however,
was the question and answer period that followed the lecture. I love the question and answer
period because it gives me an opportunity here directly from the audience to what they want to know
most and indeed to get into a bit of dialogue. So we really clarify what are the underlying mechanisms
of particular tools, how best to use the tools for things like focus and sleep.
We also touch on some things related to mental health and physical health.
It was a delight for me and I like to think that the audience learned a lot.
I know that many of you weren't able to attend those events,
but we wanted to make the information available to you.
So what follows this is a recording of the question and answer period from the lecture in Seattle, Washington.
I hope you'll find it to be both interesting and informative.
I'd also like to thank our sponsors of these live events, the first is
Momentus Supplements, which is our partner with the Hubertman Lab podcast,
providing supplements that are of the very highest quality that ship
on international and that are arranged in dosages and singling
gradient formulations that make it possible for you to develop the optimal
supplement strategy for you. And I'd also like to thank our other sponsor, which is Inside Tracker,
which provides blood tests and DNA tests, so you can monitor your immediate and long-term health
progress. I'd also like to announce that there are two new live events scheduled. The first one is
going to take place Sunday, October 16th at theter & Theater in Los Angeles. The other live event will take place Wednesday, November 9th at the Beacon Theater in New
York City.
Tickets to both of those events are now available online at HubermanLab.com slash tour.
That's HubermanLab.com slash tour.
I do hope that you learned from and enjoy the recording of the question and answer period
that follows this.
And last but certainly not least, thank you for your interest in science.
What is your most used protocol?
I'm assuming that you mean the protocol that I use the most.
I genuinely do the morning sunlight viewing in this evening.
I went and looked at the sunset every single evening
and I absolutely do 10 to 30 minutes of some non-sleep,
deep rest protocol every single day.
Every single day.
The reason I called it non-sleep deep rest
is because while I love the classic traditions of,
and things like yoga, knee-dram,
my fear was that if I called things yoga, knee-dram,
that people would get spooked.
But I also have to say that I rather loathe
the fact that scientists use so many fancy terms
that it also vaults information
from the very people that fund the work.
So I have a kind of an axe to grind with the scientific community too.
So non-sleep deep rest was my attempt to kind of put my arms around a number of different
things like Yoganidra, which I have great reverence for, and other tools like that.
I do that usually in the early afternoon, or if I wake up first thing in the morning and
I haven't slept enough or not that well, I'll do 30 minutes of yoga, and I feel terrific after that.
I'll just mention a brief anecdote. I learned about yoga, while researching a book that I
never wrote, that may or may not ever be published. I wouldn't spend a week in a trauma center
and addiction treatment center in Florida, and saw some amazing work
of some amazing people and some amazing transformations.
And it was a big part of their daily routine
for these people to do yoga, knee-drawn, non-sleep, deep rest.
And I thought they're really onto something here.
So almost religiously for me, every day, 10 to 30 minutes.
Not that it matters, but the CEO of Google's
really into NSDR, I don't know him,
but he's written about that a number of times.
In Seattle, Sunrise varies from 4.30 AM to 9 AM,
depending on season.
Are you recommending to vary your wake up
outside time with the seasons?
Somewhat, you don't need to see the sun cross the horizon.
That would be great, but not everyone can wake up with the sun.
You want to get so-called low solar angle sunlight.
Why? Because of that yellow, blue contrast that we talked about before.
Many people wake up before the sun is out.
If that case, if you want to be awake, turn on as many bright lights as you can.
Up here, I don't know, does anyone here, you don't have to admit this if you don't want to,
but maybe not or raise your hand if you're comfortable
in being that in the winter you feel less well,
or typically in the transition, but yeah, it's huge up here.
It's really, it's amazing.
And then when you're on campus, or that's where I've spent
time and you see Rainier, and it's like the blossoms
are outing, you feel almost high,
because that's dopamine.
You know, animals that have white pelage in the winter and then it turns dark in the summer
and spring months.
That pathway, the melanin pathway is from tyrosine which is the precursor to dopamine and
also to melanin production in the fur.
So the whole system is linked, it's not rigged. It's linked. So what do I suggest?
I suggest in the winter months getting 30 minutes of sunlight viewing. I know it's a lot, but it's
much better than feeling lousy all day. And then the real key in the winter is to try and catch
some sunlight before it goes down. If you're indoors and it goes down and then you go outside and
it's dark, your brain and body don't really know where they are in time.
And then you flip on Ozark and you're watching Ozark.
And then you really don't know where you are in time.
I have one more episode.
Don't tell me what happened.
That shows.
When I was at postdoc, I used to recommend the wire to my competitors. True. I go to sleep, fired up, ready, excited to do whatever it takes.
When I wake up, that drive is depleted.
Why and what can I do?
Interesting.
I have not heard that one before, but if I were to venture a guess, you know, it didn't
spend much time tonight talking about the autonomic nervous system, this kind of sea
saw that takes us from very alert, potentially panicked, but to very, very deep sleep, even, you know, God forbid, we
go into a coma, it's because the parasympathetic nervous system is overactive relative to the
sympathetic nervous system, seesaw, autonomic function.
You may be sleeping very, very deeply, and when you are in deep, deep rest, the last thing
you want to do is get into that forward
center of mass, thinking, planning, predicting.
Right?
You know, again, in Yogan-Nitra, again, non-sleep, deep rest, there's this common theme in
the script of going from thinking and doing and predicting to being and feeling, they say.
And I'm not making fun of them as a moment I hear that go, just going to be and feel.
What are you doing? You're actually just moving into sensation,
but no planning, right?
There's nothing mysterious about it,
sensation, but no planning.
Now in sleep, a very deeply parasympathetic sleep state,
what's happening?
You actually, that visual aperture is actually so big,
right, you're not in panoramic vision.
Your eyes are actually closed.
Space and time are from past present and future
invited into your thinking.
You're in a deep, deep state of relaxation.
And it may be, Dustin, that when you're waking up,
you're having a hard time transitioning out of that
because you're sleeping so deeply.
You may be waking up mid-sleep cycle.
Many people find it useful to set an alarm so that they wake up at the end of a 90-minute
so-called ultradion cycle.
There are some sleep apps that do this on the phone.
I can't recall their names, but so rather than sleeping seven hours, you might be better
off sleeping six or seven and a half hours, waking up at the end of one of these 90-minute cycles.
Try that.
That would be consistent with what we know about the biology.
But I think it's common to, if you sleep very deeply,
to wake up and not necessarily want to spring out of bed.
I've heard of these people that just want to spring out
of bed and attack the day.
Jocco willing for 30 in the morning is Cassio.
Phone, watch, I'm seeing his watch when it's like eight for me.
I'm like, wow, like like again these people are amazing. I must be doing something wrong
But these are you know, I don't wake up that way, you know like Tigger
I'm like I want water. I want
Sunlight 90 minutes later. I want caffeine
Yeah
What are some of your favorite books that have had the biggest impact on you?
Kyle G, thank you, Kyle. Gosh, so many.
You know, for nonfiction, well, Oliver Sacks' autobiography on the move had a profound
impact on me. You know, people hated him. The scientific community tried to kick him out. They said horrible things about him,
created all sorts of scandals.
It wasn't until Awakenings became a blockbuster movie
that suddenly he got appointments at NYU in Columbia.
Then now they wanted him back.
And the revered neurologist, like incredible, right?
But he was also a real seeker and the cuddlefish thing,
and he had a lot of internal struggles too,
some of which I relate to, some of which I don't.
Actually, I've been in touch with his former partner
because it actually moved to Topanga Canyon for a short while
just because Oliver lived there, I thought,
if I go there, I'll actually finish this book.
Guess what?
Just moving someplace doesn't allow you to finish a book.
He lived in Topanga, so I was like, that's the key.
It didn't work.
And people were wondering why I was
hanging around their house all the time,
because it was Oliver's former home.
So that's an amazing book.
And tells you my obsessive nature.
The other books that had a profound influence on me,
I would say in the nonfiction realm,
well, I learned how to make a decent stake
and a few other simple recipes, not well,
from Tim Ferriss's book, The Four Hours Chef,
because I really needed help.
That was a fun one.
I like Robert Green's book, Mastery,
because I've had amazing mentors, and that book is all
about finding mentors and assigning mentors to you, even if you don't know them.
And as you can tell from my stories about Oliver who I never met, and a few other folks
that I've just decided that they don't know it, but I'm mentoring them.
They're mentoring me, excuse me.
That book was really important for me. And that mentor-mentee relationships always involve a breakup,
either by death or by decision or by consequence,
your circumstance rather.
There's something happens, and they're supposed to break.
You're not supposed to apprentice with somebody forever.
That was an interesting book for me.
I would say in the fiction realm, I say in the fiction realm it's all childhood
books because it's been a long time since I've read fiction. I read a lot of poetry,
I'm a big Wendell Barry fan. I like poetry because poetry to me is like the subconscious.
The structure is all messed up and you think you understand what they're talking about
but you don't really know. And so it always feels important and consequential,
even though it's your own interpretation.
And then I love the psychologist.
I love young, I love Ericsson, I love the psychologist
and could read endlessly about the early days
of attachment theory and things like that,
because I find that stuff to be fascinating.
So those books have been a lot of fun,
and I love picture books with animals.
And so if you can get a hold of Joel Sartore's Instagram account,
the PhotoArc, he decided to take pictures of every animal
on the planet, especially the ones that are endangered.
He's an amazing photographer, but his books are even better, so if you like animal books.
What excites you most about the future research of mental health treatment, particularly anxiety
and depression?
Oh, we.
Michael, thank you, Michael.
Well there, I think that we're in an exciting time.
I am, I'll just reveal my biases, I'm quite pessimistic at the idea that we're
going to have better medication soon for most things.
What I do think we are starting to approach is a time in which we understand how broad
categories of drugs impact broad categories of chemicals which kind of
shift our mind in broad categories of directions. What does all that mean? I
think we're starting to realize that because there are different receptors for
all these chemicals all over the brain and body that that side-effectless drug is
unlikely to exist for mental health but that the combination of maybe some pharmacology, but especially
behavioral tools, people actually learning how to drive this thing that we call our nervous
system is potentially helpful, maybe very helpful.
Now in cases like schizophrenia, autism, and I didn't put those next to one another for
any reason, by the way.
OCD, eating disorders, and I'm very mindful of the fact that, you know,
anorexia is the most lethal of all the psychiatric disorders, right?
Amazing, and sad fact.
I think for those conditions, we are soon going to enter a time in which it's going to be
combination, behavioral, drug therapy, and yes brain machine interface.
I don't mean putting chips down below the skull.
I think there's going to be, and there are things happening now of people using devices
like virtual reality, as well as transcranial magnetic stimulation, placing a magnet on
particular location in the head, combined with a particular maybe drug, maybe psychedelics, maybe not
to enhance plasticity.
I hear a vote for psychedelics, and I want to make a serious point about psychedelics.
Five years ago, when I started doing a bit of public facing stuff, I was absolutely
terrified to say that word, terrified.
I thought I'd lose my job.
I really did.
I thought, don't say psychedelics.
And I'll be very honest.
You know, for me, I think that the clinical data on MDMA and on psiliceibin are very interesting. Very interesting. I don't think they are the first and only pass
at rewiring the brain, but it is clear that the brain
can enter a state of heightened learning capacity,
but it needs to be directed towards something.
The goal of opening plasticity, it opens plasticity.
That's not the goal.
It's like running.
The goal isn't running.
The goal is to run in a particular direction.
So what I think is really needed
is to drive that plasticity in particular directions.
And I would love to see more directed use of those
in, of course, the safe clinical setting
where it's appropriate.
And a guest on the podcast, Matthew Johnson, who's at Johns Hopkins,
I asked him, what's the deal with microdosing?
And you know what his answer was?
I was very surprised.
He said, macrodose.
And I thought, okay, I'm not a guy who, you know, I'm not into,
I'm not pushing this, I'm not a proponent,
I said, you're kidding me, why?
Why would you say this guy runs an NIH-funded lab
at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine,
that why?
And he said, because the one session
with a trained professional
that triggering, rewiring plasticity that's guided
is as far as they know from the data.
You can go back and listen to these are his words, not mine, but he's the expert in this area.
Our encouraging plasticity in a particular direction, and he thinks that that's far more useful
than just kind of nudging the system a little bit without any particular goal or outcome. Very interesting and very surprising.
And again, a trained academic at one
of the most elite institutions in the world.
I think we're in very exciting times
for those compounds.
And there are studies at Stanford and elsewhere
on ketamine and other things.
But it's early days.
Young people should be very cautious,
young, young people, and adults should be cautious, especially people with preexisting
psychiatric issues, and people who have a, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the
the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the,
the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the if I didn't say that it is very exciting time for psychedelic therapies.
Where do you see the biggest area and I've done only one clinical trial?
True. I took part in one clinical trial, so I don't speak from a lot of experience
there just a little bit. I was a subject in that trial.
Where do you see the biggest area for performance enhancement within the elite athletes and
operators that already hit marks of proper sleep and nutrition?
Meg Young, thanks for your question, Meg.
Yeah, I think that, well, first of all, very few of them hit marks for proper sleep, but
for those that do, so once you have your sleep dialed in
and you've got your nutrition dialed in
and the motivational component is there,
I think where there's a lot of work still to be done
and where people can really get outsized effects
is in this weird little cavern of human existence
that we call creativity.
And I didn't have time to talk about it tonight.
But there's a very unique brain state that we call creativity, which is taking pre-existing
neural maps and starting to combine them in unique ways to create new ways of performance.
Performance can be basically summarized in any domain as essentially four stages.
You have unskilled, skilled mastery, which is when the brain can generate movements
or cognitive computations that create very predictable outcomes.
And then there's this fourth tier,
this fourth layer, which is virtuosity.
And virtuosity, by definition,
means inviting back in a component of uncertainty.
What this looks like in terms of operators, or this looks like in terms of operators,
or this looks like in terms of athletes,
or even we can say musicians, or people
who are in the cognitive fields, or poets, or writers,
is what it means is introducing that uncertainty
about what's going to happen next.
And the way to do that is to destabilize the system.
In other words, to create states of mind
in which there are literally sensory disruptions.
It's like what I would like to see
is more training in a kind of fun house of mirrors
type environment.
That's when you start to see incredible performances emerge.
And Virtuoso's invite in uncertainty, they actually don't know what they're going to do next.
And so this becomes a little bit of a vague concept. And what I'm about to tell you next might seem a little silly, but one of the best ways to access creative states is to no surprise,
use your visual system to view things that are highly unstable and uncertain.
I don't just love fish tanks, I love staring at videos of aquariums in Tokyo
and actually watching the fish because it's completely unpredictable.
There's some evidence that doing things like that, or people will say, oh, I was in the shower, I took a walk in nature and then I had this idea.
I actually don't think it was the walk or the shower.
It's that nature is filled with unpredictable visual
stimuli, auditory stimuli.
When you can predict what's going to happen next,
you have very little opportunity to up-level your game,
so to speak.
It's only by way of unpredictable sensory input
that you can do that.
So if you're a coach or you're working with people
who are very high-level performers,
do you want them to stand on one leg and spin around
and then do what they're not necessarily.
What you want to do is try and get them into brain states
that are different than the brain states
that they're in when they normally enter their practice.
The liminal state between sleep and waking, excuse practice. The liminal state between sleep and waking, excuse me,
the liminal state between sleep and waking
is a very powerful one for accessing creativity.
Many people access ideas as they're waking up in the morning.
They have great insights.
Other people while strolling in nature,
I don't think it's the strolling or the waking up.
I think it's the lack of, as we call it,
top down regulation on rules.
You are able to access combinations of neural maps that are unusual.
So you can play with this a little bit.
A lot of people throughout history have used compounds, drugs, to do this.
Great writers would get drunk and then try and ride or wake up.
And the amount of self abuse that people,
including athletes and creatives,
put themselves through to try and capture these windows
of cognitive ability is pretty intense.
And I don't think that's a good idea.
I think one should be an explorer and try
and find these cognitive states in ways that are non-destructive.
Starting to sound like my mother with all this.
Heal flips on lock, no kick flips. Next question. There's some skateboarders in the audience. My first
non-biological family, there's some amazing skateboarders in this audience and I'm not
going to be the one doing it, kick flip anytime soon. But they're great to have one of the
reasons we built the podcast with the help of the great Mike
playback is because I learned a long time ago that if you want things done right
and you want to do them outside the lane lines and you want to have control over
how things come across, you do it with skateboarders because I didn't come
from a community where you know I didn't have parents at my sports games and things like that.
So thanks to the skateboarders and the misfits
and those folks.
Do you have any tips on how to improve memory?
Yes, Ron Vered.
Yes, OK, this is a wild literature, and I love it.
And it's changing the way that I do things.
I thought that to remember things,
you're supposed to get really, really excited, really focused
and remember them.
And guess what? That's not how you do it.
There's, there are data and there are stories going back to mid-evil times
that they used to teach kids things and then throw them in the river.
There's a beautiful annual review of neuroscience
written by the late James McGaw, brilliant researcher,
who taught me that in this review.
And it turns out that if you want to remember something,
you want to spike adrenaline after you
acquired that information, after.
That means the double espresso and the ice bath
after you study for math.
Immediately after.
And you think about this, you know, that makes perfect sense, right?
Think about the one trial learning that nobody wants to experience, which is a car accident
or some traumatic thing.
You didn't get the spike of adrenaline first, you got the spike of adrenaline after.
Again, I discourage the use of excessive stimulants or anything like that.
But if you're going to try and remember information, you need to get your brain and body into a high autonomic arousal state.
Literally, you need to deploy adrenaline into your system after you have made the attempt to learn some
information. So much so that if you give people a beta blocker after learning emotional
information, they don't learn it as well. Incredible. Just incredible data in animals and
humans. This is the beautiful work of Larry K. Hill at UC Irvine and James McGaw. So
that's how I would focus on remembering things better.
And it's also true that if you tell yourself
that something's really important to you,
you'll be able to learn it better.
If you meet people and they tell you their name
and you forget two seconds later,
well, you should probably be thinking,
and now I do this, I meet people and I think,
okay, what terrible thing do this person do,
just try and spike my adrenaline or something like that?
It's a terrible trick, but I haven't figured out a better way.
But that's actually one that data supported way to do that.
Easily, it doesn't or more studies in humans
on that very topic.
How do you manage social media addiction, Paul?
Oy.
Well, be careful with the use of the word addiction,
because here I think it's entirely appropriate
When you're engaging in a behavior over and over and over again and you're thinking to yourself
This isn't even that interesting. You're officially addicted
That's the litmus test for addiction not this feels so good people talk about the dopamine hits of social media
Those only come at the beginning
But then when you find yourself scrolling, you're like, what am I doing?
Maybe it's that narrow visual aperture, you're a hypnotized chicken.
But maybe also you are seeking more dopamine hits because guess what?
That dopamine wave pool is depleted, at least for that activity.
It is true that dopamine, you have a baseline,
and then you have peaks on that ride on that baseline.
I do think that we can have dopamine
for one behavior or not for another,
but it's a generalized phenomenon.
So how do you manage it?
You have to stop seeking within social media.
And so I've taken on the practice of turning off my phone
for a couple hours each day.
It's incredibly hard.
People get really upset, too, by the way.
So you have a notice?
These tethers that people expect.
We recorded a podcast recently, and so I don't want to go
into too much depth now about attachment and grief.
And we all have a map, now you know,
understanding what the maps are, of space time
and a dimension called closeness to everyone that we know.
Space where they are, time when they are,
dead alive, when will I see them again, et cetera,
and closeness.
And the phone has allowed us to tap into space time
in this closeness map, which define all our attachments
on a very regular basis.
So you can understand why it's so valuable to people, you know, the plain lands in everyone's
texting.
The planes say, everyone's texting.
It's like, where are you?
Well, the planes in the air, there's this thing called flight track or no one cares about
that anymore.
You want to hear from the person.
So I do think that I used to do in every odd hour of the day my phone was off and like
half the relationships in my life disappeared.
They couldn't tolerate it.
I loved it, but I loved them too.
So I would say take breaks and I would say at least an hour.
And if you find yourself excited to get back on the phone, that excitement, that is the
dopamine system.
So you can kind of learn where it is for you.
But if you find yourself scrolling mindlessly
and it's not doing anything for you,
you're driving that wave pool down, down, down, down, down.
So hopefully that analogy will help.
It's weird to call myself Dr. Heberman.
In my business, if you refer to yourself
in the third person, it means you're officially a narcissist.
So I'm just gonna start with, where are you nervous tonight?
And so what did you do to prepare, Brianne?
You saw my nervousness, didn't you?
No, I asked myself that question.
I was excited, and I think I'm good at lying to myself and telling myself that
autonomic arousal that might be nervousness is excitement.
But in truth, I wasn't, I was,
was an am really excited to tell you all these stories and about biology. I know this might
sound like a little bit of a line, but I actually don't feel myself as a, as a, like a person
when I do the podcast or I do this stuff. I took a walk before I got here and I have to be careful.
There are only two topics that make me cry.
One is talking about my bulldog, the other is talking
about my graduate advisor.
So I have to be very careful.
But I took a walk and I imagined that they were here.
And I know.
And I don't make me cry.
Lex Friedman made me cry on a podcast.
And it was really unfair.
And he was like digging and digging.
And there are a few people in the audience that know Costello.
And it's like, you know,
and I just kept thinking to myself before coming in here
like, you know, I love them and miss them,
and I, Costello would be entirely bored with this whole thing.
So I distracted myself a bit, and not so nervous.
Now I do get nervous about things,
sure I'm human, but when it comes to biology,
I think I still feel like that
little kid who just wants to tell you all this stuff, you know, so you know, can't help
it.
As learning from failure equal to learning from success is one more efficient than the
other Rachel.
Thanks for your question.
Well, on a trial by trial basis we know that when you fail at an attempt, on the next
attempt your forebrain is in a position to engage better.
And this makes total sense, right?
You feel that frustration, ah,
and you want to get the next one right?
Well, you're harboring or I should say funneling
more neural resources, you're focused
that aperture tightens.
Now, you have to be mindful of that too,
because when you have a failure and
then you're like you're going to hit the bulls, I'm thinking about a dart work because I'm
terrible at darts. You know, sober, I'm terrible at darts. I don't even drink. So that next
trial, part of the problem is that focus can narrow so much that you can start to lose
access to information that might help you if you're just to relax a little bit and dilate that focus a little bit.
But in general, on a trial-by-trial basis, focus is the queue that your nervous system is going to be positioned to learn better on the next trial.
Now, in terms of life experiences,
gosh, I wish for everyone fewer failures and more successes, but, you know, failures keep you humble.
And I've had a lot of them.
I mean, if people ever wanted and they, you know,
I'd be happy to tell you about it.
I mean, I've made a ton of mistakes in life.
A ton of mistakes.
Some of those were mistakes of persistence.
Like dumb decisions, like it's gonna change,
it's gonna change.
It's clearly never gonna change.
And then some were failures of misjudgment
about other people or situations.
And a lot of them were just plain failures like the experiment didn't work or it just
wasn't the right thing.
And you try to reframe those.
I do think that we owe it to ourselves and to the people that we know to try and generate
some wins here and there and try and help other people generate wins.
You know, in running a lab over the years and I still do, you realize that you want your
students to publish a paper and feel that success pretty early so that they can experience
A how much work it is, so they pick problems wisely, but B so they can feel that, like I
can do this. And I think that, you know, this gets into the psychological as well.
I think that, yes, failures help, but success is help.
And there, I think, you know, I function best in a team.
And I think that for those of you that feel like you're fighting some challenge alone,
I do think that there are great resources to be had
in trying to access other people as sources of support.
I think that that's a great tool.
There's this whole scientific literature around
social connection and how that can help us
reframe motivation and goals.
Anyway, maybe that's a topic to expand on another time,
but failure is important on a trial, trial, by basis.
People who don't experience enough wins
for a long period of time,
the brain is a prediction machine after all,
and they start to predict failure.
So it takes a bit more work to wedge one's self out of that.
When are you gonna start training Jiu-Jitsu?
Lex made me ask Ryan Flores.
Okay, here's the story with that.
Lex said, do you wanna try Jiu-Jitsu?
I said, sure.
Lex said, okay, it'll be great to show people
beginner's mind.
Said, sure.
We went and did a Jiu-Jitsu class.
He was very nice, nice, nice, Russian, nice,
like oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
Then he puts it on the internet with me in a rear naked,
him putting me in a rear naked choke.
It was actually Lex Friedman choking out Andrew Huberman.
There, I just talked about myself and the third person,
damn it.
Edit that one.
I have not had the time for jujitsu.
I like my ears the way they are.
Have you ever seen these people that do Jiu Jitsu?
Their ears literally look like stumps.
No, I should do it.
It looks like a great sport.
And unlike the other sports I've been involved in my life,
boxing, please don't do it.
It's not healthy, skateboarding, all this.
You don't really damage your head doing Jiu Jitsu.
So no, I'm going to get you back for that one, Lex.
Okay. Can you go through, oh wow, John Edwards.
There's a joke that my friends used to tell about the supplements I take.
They used to say, someone would say, what supplements do you take?
And they would just go, all of them.
I don't take all of them.
But I have been very systematic.
For about 30 years, I've been interested in compounds that
change the nervous system.
And I do think that the events of the last few years have
changed the way that people view supplements.
I think that more people are starting to think about how to take
better care of their health.
And people are realizing that obviously great sleep,
mind sets, social connection, exercise, nutrition and so forth are very important.
But I actually don't know anybody, granted I run with a strange crowd, but I don't know
anybody that doesn't take something nowadays.
You know, I could go through the whole list, but I would say the most fundamental things, and there's
no product pitch here.
The most fundamental things are the things that are going to support your kind of foundational
health.
So, for that's going to mean mainly getting either by food sources or supplements is going
to be getting sufficient amounts of these essential fatty acids.
So important.
For some people, that's taking liquid fish oil.
For some people, it's capsules.
Some people are eating fish.
I don't like the way fish tastes.
Unless I'm in Seattle.
By the way, the seafood here is amazing.
Not so much in California.
So I think the essential fatty acids,
and then I'm big on the data dare I say out of Stanford,
Justin Sondinberg's lab lab and Chris Gardner's lab,
that these fermented foods of which all these cultures
have interesting fermented foods,
Kiefer and Sour Crout and Kimchi,
and you know, pick your fermented food,
that those seem to really encourage health
of the gut microbiome.
So I started eating a lot of those
and taking no probiotics except in, you
know, a few of the supplements that I was already taking. So I'm not trying to dodge
the question, but I think by and large, if you're eating well and doing the other foundational
behaviors well, you can get away with a minimum of supplements. D3 seems to be a lot of people
deficient in D3, but not everybody. So I think those are the main ones, however, I do think that nutrition should be the primary
entry point.
Again, it should be behaviors first, then nutrition, then supplements, then prescription
drugs, only if you need them, and then for some people their brain machine interface,
like TMS and things like that are going to be useful, but behaviors change your nervous
system. No supplement actually rew, but behaviors change your nervous system.
No supplement actually rewires you or changes your nervous system.
Behaviors do that.
I hope I didn't dodge that question, Tali.
I do take some of the things that we talk about on the podcast to do some focused work
sometimes, alphaGPC, but lately I've been doing this whole thing of cold water exposure
to spike my adrenaline because I hate it and it spikes my adrenaline after learning based on the McGon-Kayhill data.
What would be your best one or two pieces of advice recommend?
We're protocols for improving learning and retention.
We're graduate students in science and medicine.
We try to sleep sometimes.
Thank you, JD.
Oh, great.
Here, here, here, you, you, JD.
So, you know, I used to teach this course at Colts ring harbor on career development for
scientists and that there's a lot in there but the two things that are most important are
I for it's a bit of answering this question I would say are find non-destructive ways
to reset your dopamine and your energy levels
and do those at least every three days.
So for me, it was kind of a tough thing to take a long walk
or to spend, I said, work really hard on Mondays,
really hard on Tuesdays, and I would not go in until the afternoon on Wednesdays
and sometimes not at all.
And then I go in Thursday, Friday, and work really, really hard
and then not at all on Saturday.
And then maybe do a little bit of work from home on Sunday.
And I was very productive that way.
The, those breaks are absolutely key.
And it's not encouraged so much in academic or tech
or maybe anything now.
I hear about so much stress and overwork.
I say, you just do it and
define the culture and let the results and your focus be the thing that defines
you not how many hours you're in there. But I realize there's a huge cognitive
load and energetic load. And for that I do think these non-sleep deep-rest
protocols are where it comes in really handy. They're at least too faculty. I
know it's Stanford, one who's a so-called Howard Hughes investigator, who is big, those
are big deal appointments, they get tons of money, et cetera, et cetera.
And they do amazing science most of the time.
These individuals certainly do.
And they take two 20-minute naps per day in their office.
When this guy came and visited me years ago when I was at a different university, he took
the time that we were supposed to meet in my office and talk about data.
He asked if he could take a nap.
And he gave a great talk that afternoon.
So there you go.
I do think you have to take control of your schedule and do those things.
I hope that helps.
And then, of course, for some people, exercise and so on is the way they reset.
What research or work you're doing or that your colleagues are doing that you're most
excited about lately, Glen?
Yeah, one project in particular,
I hope this paper gets accepted soon,
it's been out for review forever
if the viewers are in the audience, please.
Just tell us, one or the other, you know.
We did a very large scale study during the pandemic,
we meaning David Spiegel and I,
and an amazing PhD named
Melissa, she now has two last names, excuse me, Yilma's Balban. And Melissa, we essentially
equipped people with remote monitoring devices and measured sleep and heart rate variability
and a bunch of stress and a bunch of other things. And we gave them a very brief set of pro-breathing protocols, and it turns out that this thing that
I'm talking about a lot on the podcast these days of this
double-inhale long exhale, the so-called physiological
sigh, was the most effective breathing practice for allowing
people to control their heart rate variability, reduce
overall heart rate, access better sleep, and these were
extremely short protocols.
So I'm very excited about this. I didn't discover physiological size. I love the idea that
people can do a very brief protocol once a day, maybe even just while walking down the street
or in a moment, and actually learn to control that autonomic seesaw better. So I'm very excited
about that. And then we are gearing up to do some studies on people who have more severe forms of anxiety
and panic attack using mainly respiration, but also looking at some of these eye-vision
related ways of controlling the nervous system.
I love that stuff.
If I keep talking about it, I'm going to give you a data presentation, so I'm going to
turn around.
How does dopamine factor into neuroplasticity, if at all, call in?
Great question.
It's a very strong trigger of plasticity, so much so, in fact, that there's some work that
shows if you stimulate with an electrode, the brain area that releases dopamine, and you
pair that with anything, anything, even just like an eight killer hurts tone. The brain remaps and it's like, oh, I love that eight killer hurts tone.
Remember, dopamine is dumb and it's just dumb.
And it's just, you know, it's like Costello when he said, this dog,
I could hang a rope from a tree.
This dog was so lazy, it wouldn't cross a room for a stake.
You had to give the stake to him.
But it would run across the field, he would run and jump on and hold onto that rope.
And he would, something I'd bite through his lip with, like blood dripping down, I was
like, oh my God, it's like breaking my heart.
He loved every set.
That's dopamine.
It turns us into idiots.
He was, he was a smart about what he needed to be smart about.
Dopamine, so if you trigger dopamine release with riddle and adderol
to a lesser extent, altirocene, and certainly please don't do this, but cocaine and fetamine,
whatever you're doing seems super interesting.
It's true, and that's why it's such a slippery slope.
It makes anything you're doing seem interesting and important.
And actually, I'll use this as an opportunity to say
something about the psychedelic thing earlier.
One of the issues with MDMA, it's a very unusual brain state.
It's high dopamine, high serotonin,
completely synthetic compound.
There are other things in there that it does as well.
One of the problems with people I see,
with the problem with people taking MDMA,
just at a basic level, is that if you're not pushing
that towards some therapeutic outcome, music sounds amazing.
Everything feels and sounds amazing,
but it's a very neurochemically severe state.
So that's why I think if people are going to explore those,
do it as part of one of the university-supported clinical trials.
One of the, those drugs make everything seem interesting,
even stuff that's not terribly interesting.
Now, they also have the potential for trauma healing capacity.
These are the map studies and so on.
So you have to be very careful with what you pair with dopamine
and what you pair dopamine
with.
And for those of you that are high sensation seeking novelty seeking and everything is
interesting to you and you want more and more and more experiences, you basically have
a eight cylinder car in you and you need to be very careful how you drive that thing.
Like any high performance automobile it's going to spend more time in the shop.
So learn to drive appropriately.
What advice can you offer to future scientists who want to make
an impact like you have Ryan O'Boyle, get 10 year first.
No, I'm kidding.
The, so I have this weird history in science,
and I'm not looking for sympathy here, but my undergraduate
advisor who I adored, it's like a father to me, my graduate advisor, and my postdoc advisor,
who I also adored, all three of them died.
Suicide cancer, cancer, really young.
So the joke in my field is you don't want me to work for you.
But in all seriousness, all three of them had a really morbid sense humor, all amazing people.
But it is this kind of weird curse that I've had.
So what scientists, what advice, Ben Barris, the late Ben Barris died of pancreatic cancer,
an amazing individual.
They're actually making a documentary about Ben's life.
He was transgendered, he was a totally irreverent.
He said whatever he thought, he transgendered, he was a totally irreverent, he said whatever he thought,
he offended everybody, he was awesome. Brilliant, too. Ben and I had a conversation as he was dying,
I recorded a lot of conversations with him. And I told him I was interested in doing public
racing education. And he said, well, you're 10 years now, and people are going to be upset.
And they're not going to like it.
And your colleagues are probably going to hate it.
So whatever you're doing, you better make it good.
And I was like, wow, that doesn't really help much, Ben.
And he said, you seem to have a compulsion for it.
So he was right.
I think that if you are excited about science
and sharing what you know, then do that.
And even if it seems super nerdy,
I mean, there are these, I think they call themselves
entomals, the insect people.
I mean, they make insect seem really, really cool.
And if you are excited about spindle kinetics or whatever,
you know, tell people about it. I really mean it. I think that the one caveat is that I do think it's important to get a formal rigorous training in it first
I think that you will go further and faster in the long run and there's some amazing people out there
There's a post-doc at Stanford. I think his name is Ben Reen
I think if you shorten it up on Instagram, it's actually brain.
He talks about brain science.
That's why it's where B-R-E-I-N.
He does a great job, and he's a really good example of someone who's still on the
Ascent with his career doing serious science and doing science communication.
But you have to be careful.
It's time consuming.
Look, people will dislike you for whatever.
I made the mistake once of saying that I eat butter.
Apparently that's a sin on the internet.
I like little bits of butter.
I actually like a lot of butter
by trying to eat little bits of butter.
But somehow, it's like there's this idea
that I eat sticks of butter.
So you have to be careful.
I mean, the things I've heard, I heard I was dead.
That was cool.
So you have to be careful.
And remember, everything is stamped into the cloud now and the metaverse or whatever it's
called.
So I would say, here are the rules that we have at the podcast.
And here's the rules that I created for myself.
I truly don't do it for me.
I do it because I think people want to hear about it.
But I've been telling myself that since I was six years old.
The other thing is never, ever, ever do it just
for your own gratification.
You should really try and think, is anyone
going to get anything useful out of this potentially?
That's the goal.
If you're doing that, it'll work out for you.
If you are thinking about how to get followers or something
like that, it ain't gonna work out.
That's my advice.
Is age 66 too old for neuroplastic?
No, no, I'll cut myself off to begin learning
at Sandra at Tzorari.
No, did I pronounce that right?
Thank you, Sandra.
No, Richard Feynman, the great Richard Feynman,
taught himself to draw later in life.
He was also really into flotation tanks.
Did you know that?
Yeah, he's also ended up bongo drumming naked
on the Rufa Caltech.
Richard Feynman did so many things
that would get most people fired nowadays.
He's just lucky he was alive when he was.
You can absolutely learn at 66 and way beyond.
There's an amazing study from Rusty Gage's Lab
at the Salcons Institute years ago showing that even people
who are very late in life, terminally ill, in fact,
are still producing new neurons in the dentary chirous
of the hippocampus.
These people were gracious enough to allow researchers
to inject them with dyes that would label these neurons
for analysis post-mortem after they died.
Absolutely, you can learn.
What's harder is focus.
Oftentimes, what's harder is sleep as well,
but the same mechanism supply.
There's no evidence whatsoever that neuroplasticity
disappears at any stage, despite what Huwunvizel
told the BBC.
How do you tackle reading research papers?
You have a specific strategy, Ann.
Yes, I do.
I take notes on everything.
There's four questions that we teach students,
and that I think I'd use.
The first one is, what's the question they're asking,
major, and more specific?
Second is, what do they do?
What are the methods wise?
What do they do?
You don't have to know all the details and the methods necessarily, but be versed in those
methods.
But you have to kind of understand, like, are they looking at mice, are they looking at
humans?
Is this a, you know, did they have people in two different conditions or just one?
You have to understand what do they do?
Then you ask, what do they find?
And then the last question is the most important one.
And you should write down the answer to this is, what they conclude and then you look back at the first question and
you go, did they actually answer that question or is it something unrelated?
And those four questions are essentially the way that I parse each paper.
Learning to parse papers is tricky for the podcast.
I use the telephone, I call people and I badger them and I ask them.
And I like who's doing the really good work in this area and I spend a lot of hours doing it.
And then the best way to remember science is to tell someone about it.
So before each podcast, I'll call someone and be like, hey, did you know that they used
to throw kids in the river?
After I do this, and my sister, my poor sister, and she's like, yeah, my sister by the way,
does not watch the podcast.
She's a therapist. And she's like, hey, my sister, by the way, does not watch the podcast. She's a therapist.
And she's like, hey, I learned this amazing breathing technique.
I was like, oh yeah, really?
Tell me about it.
And it's like someone else is there.
I'm like, you know, I have a podcast.
She's like, I don't like your podcast.
Yeah, it's older sister.
Older sister.
She's not lying.
What is your favorite sauce condiment seasoning sauce? There's one in
every audience. I like the spicy stuff. We've been fermenting our own food at
home. It's kind of cool. You put the cabbage in the stuff in the little ceramic
thing outside and then it goes pop. It makes this amazing sound and then you
can like make your own sourcrub and then with peppers and fermenting that stuff,
it's really good.
Okay, they're telling me one more question, so we'll do two.
What's most of your, from your ADHD?
Ah, Gabriel.
Got a lot of questions about ADHD.
For people on medication or not on medication,
so I'll answer both. For people on medication or not on medication. So I'll answer both.
For people on medication, I think work with somebody
really good who's willing to work with you
to allow you to find that minimal effective dose
and also timing that dose.
One of the key things that we know now is that
from that waking up point in your morning
until about eight or nine hours later, we've sort of named that phase one of the day
for lack of a better naming protocol.
The systems that release cortisol, dopamine, and epinephrine are essentially more effective
at producing those than they are in the later periods of the day,
which makes sense if you think about the way that the autonomies, nervous system works, etc.
So there's an important question that I can't answer for you, but you can answer for
you, which is if you're using Ritalin Adderall, Vive Ants, these things that enhance Dope
and Dope and Nurgic transmission, Modaphanel, Armodaphanel, by the way, for the people in
the audience like me
who didn't go to college when these things were all in use,
the numbers of people that use these compounds
on and off prescription is astronomical.
It's incredible.
I didn't realize it.
I think something like 80% of college students
use these at some point, incredible,
because they put you into a narrow aperture tunnel
of concentration.
So you want to, with a physician's support, of course,
to help get permission or not, to figure out what time of day
to take your medication.
Now, for people who are not on medication,
I'll just go right back to what I said earlier, which
is that you can train focus,
but it feels terrible to train it.
It is hard.
Again, there are these large scale studies in China
and elsewhere of people literally teaching themselves,
and yes, they blink, although less often,
to focus their vision on a narrow aperture,
and to really battle through that agitation,
stress, and learn how to keep their focus.
Now, focus will drift, right?
Focus is not a constant.
Focus will drift, and you pop out of focus states,
and then refocus and pop out and refocus.
That's something that you can train up.
I've heard from many people who've managed
to train themselves off medication,
or to lower doses of medication.
And look, some people can't do that.
They absolutely have to maintain doses of medication. And look, some people can't do that. They absolutely
have to maintain their standard medication protocols. This is a larger discussion, obviously, as it relates
to ADHD. We're going to do another episode on ADHD because the data are coming out so, so fast.
What future episodes are in the pipeline, David Nguyen? Okay, thank you for that question. We have
one on grief. We have an amazing episode with a guy from the Rockefeller University on the, this is my
loud say. It's gonna be my favorite episode. I love all the guests, but this
episode just blew me away on the relationship between language, speech, dance,
and music. And I have no musical talent and I'm not a very good dancer. So, that's being generous.
Amazing interplay between those things.
Exercise in the brain, OCD, bulimia,
binge eating disorder,
Peter Tia's coming on, he'll teach us about everything,
medicine,
and longevity, and I'm kind of blanking at the moment.
David Anderson from Caltech on Aggression and Emotional States, amazing.
And then there are a number of people, Lisa Feldman Barrett, or Barrett Feldman, I always
get it back.
We're sorry, Lisa, on emotions in the brain.
And really we do take suggestions about who to bring on the podcast very seriously.
What we're mostly looking for, what we're mostly looking for, the people that no one
else has heard of, that people haven't heard of, who are not going on podcasts every week
and that people should absolutely hear from.
And then I will tell you, they're going to kill me for saying this, but I'm going to do
it anyway.
We have some short series coming up with expert professionals. I'm going
to do a short series on trauma. And my hope for this series is that you'll actually get
to see an exquisitely skilled trauma therapist take someone through, excuse me, I seem
so excited, I'm spitting on the audience. Excuse me, so to take someone through actual
trauma therapy, this isn't staged, this is
somebody who's actually in a point of near suicidal grief and trauma, taking them through
it in the course of the podcast so people can see what this process actually entails.
That's a very meaningful project to me for a number of reasons, so we're really excited
about that.
And to be honest, I feel like there's just such a treasure trove of information out there
I just want to grab it all and tell you all about it until I always say if nothing else, I'll cure insomnia. So yeah Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you.
Appreciate it.
Thank you so much for your time.
I really appreciate everyone coming out on the weekday.
Thank you.
I appreciate it.
Thank you.
I appreciate it.
Thank you.
I appreciate it.
Thank you.
I appreciate it.
Thank you.
I appreciate it. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you so much for your time. I really appreciate everyone coming out on the week
day and I'd be remiss if I didn't say thank you for your interest in science.
you