Ginger Dunn 2009-09-27
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As someone who shares a great curiosity for all things neuro-related, Synaptic Self: How Our Brains Become Who We Are, was an entertaining and engaging exploration into the many complexities that are at work inside a person's brain. While I am certainly an enthusiastic reader on the topic of neuroscience, I am by no means an authority on the discipline. However, Joseph LeDoux crafts an entertaining and relevant account that both novices and brain experts can enjoy. Following the success of his previous book, The Emotional Brain, the renowned neuroscientist convincingly articulates how in essence, we are our synapses.
The single best description I can think to describe this book is all encompassing. From the book's onset, LeDoux makes it clear that his aim is to leave no stone unturned so that regardless of any previously acquired knowledge, each reader will be able to fundamentally grasp each aspect of his proposed scientific formulation. The book really takes off in chapter two entitled, "The Most Unaccountable of Machinery," where LeDoux enlists each reader in a "crash course on what neurons are, how synapses connect them together, and why synaptic connections are the key to brain function." Arguably the driest section of the book, LeDoux is still able to engage the reader by supplementing the chapter with numerous figures and illustrations. Additionally, LeDoux uses the entire book to highlight and in some cases build on the groundwork laid out by other researchers. For example, in the chapter entitled "Small Change," LeDoux synthesizes the complete history of how the term synaptic plasticity came to be. With so many research references, it is no surprise that LeDoux's compilation of the notes, citations, and index sections comprise one-fourth of the book. While at times it could be a little daunting to keep all of the referenced scientists and studies straight, ultimately the inclusion of such background information only served to frame and solidify LeDoux's take away point: you are your synapses.
Following the abbreviated introduction to neuroscience, LeDoux finally begins to get down to business. In chapter ten, "Synaptic Sickness," LeDoux highlights the neurological pathologies of schizophrenia, depression, and anxiety in order to illustrate his view of how synaptic changes underlie mental illness. Citing the age-old nature versus nurture debate, LeDoux assumes an intermediary stance, asserting that both are mechanisms which alter the transmission and organization of the brain's synapses. For example, in the case of schizophrenia, LeDoux notes that in identical twins there is a fifty-percent chance that both will share the condition, leaving the remaining fifty-percent unaccounted for by genetics. While critics of the biological-based treatment approach (which cites chemical imbalances as the root of mental illness) use this statistic to advocate psychotherapy, LeDoux argues that neither effectively addresses the problem at its true source: the synapse, where all neural information is transmitted. Because alterations in chemical messengers undoubtedly have the capability to affect neural transmission at the synapse, it is easy to accept the notion that correcting this imbalance can restore proper neural functioning. On the other hand, experience can also impact the synapse in the form of plasticity, a consequence of learning, which explains why psychotherapy can be helpful in the treatment of mental disorders. LeDoux points out that due to the complexities of the brain, it is impossible to untangle which mechanisms are specifically causing the malfunction when both ultimately affect the same thing, the synapse. Furthermore, LeDoux notes, "regardless of whether the initial cause is social stress or a genetic time bomb, unless the changes in the brain that accompany the disorder can be reversed or circumvented, the problem is unlikely to dissipate."
In the final chapter, "Who Are You," LeDoux delivers his most convincing argument for why synapses are central to what makes a person who they are. Comparing the brain to a parallel processor computer, LeDoux asserts that " life requires many brain functions, functions require systems, and systems are made of synaptically connected neurons." Because we are alike in the fundamental components (neurons) and overall system (brain) which unifies us as human, in LeDoux's view, "the particular way those neurons are connected is distinct, and that uniqueness, in short, is what makes us who we are." To illustrate this idea, LeDoux outlines seven principles, which he believes are the mechanisms by which the synapse coordinates the self. In particular, principle five (Downwardly Mobile Thoughts Coordinate Parallel Plasticity) reasons that by embodying thoughts as synaptic transmissions, brain activity as a result of one thought can inspire activity in other brain systems involved in perception, motivation, etc, resulting in elaborate convergence zones. From LeDoux's formulation, "we can begin to see how the way we think about ourselves can have powerful influences of the way we are, and who we become...one's self-image is self-perpetuating." In this way, LeDoux points out that when our parallel processing becomes unhinged at the synapse, that is when neurological malfunctions can be seen. In his closing paragraph LeDoux points out the inherent "curse" of such a complex synaptic system that is responsible for making each of us individuals, while noting the contrasting beauty in a system that can accommodate an endless amount of new connections and possibilities.
Taken as a whole I found this book to be an intriguing and engaging read. Regardless of your school of thought, LeDoux showcases a well thought-out scientific formulation that would interest anyone who has ever wondered how our brains make us the person that we are.