| Do We Use Only 10% of Our Brain? |
The question is: Do we use
only 10% of our brains?
Let me state this very clearly:
In other words, the statement, "We use only 10% of our brains" is false; it's a myth. We use all of our brain.
Where Did the 10% Myth Begin? The 10% statement may have been
started with a misquote of Albert Einstein or the misinterpretation of the
work of Pierre Flourens in the 1800s. It may have been William James who
wrote in 1908: "We are making use of only a small part of our possible
mental and physical resources" (from The Energies of
Men, p. 12). Perhaps it was the work of Karl Lashley in the
1920's and 1930's that started it. Lashley removed large areas of the
cerebral cortex in rats and found that these animals could still relearn
specific tasks. We now know that destruction of even small areas of the human
brain can have devastating effects on
behavior. That is one reason why neurosurgeons must carefully map the
brain before removing brain tissue during operations for epilepsy or brain
tumors: they want to make sure that essential areas of the brain are not
damaged. |
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Text of the ad reads: "You only use 11% of its potential.
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Why Does the Myth Continue?Somehow, somewhere, someone started this myth and the popular media keep on repeating this false statement (see the figures). Soon, everyone believes the statement regardless of the evidence. I have not been able to track down the exact source of this myth, and I have never seen any scientific data to support it.According to the believers of this myth, if we used more of our brain, then we could perform super memory feats and have other fantastic mental abilities - maybe we could even move objects with a single thought. Again, I do not know of any data that would support any of this.
What Does it Mean to Use Only 10% of Your Brain? What data
were used to come up with the number - 10%? Does this mean that you would
be just fine if 90% of your brain was removed? If the average human brain
weighs 1,400 grams (about 3 lb) and 90% of it was removed, that would
leave 140 grams (about 0.3 lb) of brain tissue. That's about the size of a
sheep's brain. It is well known that damage to a relatively small area of
the brain, such as that caused by a stroke, may cause devastating
disabilities. Certain neurological disorders, such as Parkinson's Disease,
also affect only specific areas of the brain. The damage caused by these
conditions is far less than damage to 90% of the brain.
![]() Sheep Brain |
![]() The Action Potential |
The Evidence (or lack of it)Perhaps when people use the 10% brain statement, they mean that only one out of every ten nerve cells is essential or used at any one time? How would such a measurement be made? Even if neurons are not firing action potentials, they may still be receiving signals from other neurons. |
Furthermore, from an evolutionary point of view, it is
unlikely that larger brains would have developed if there was not an
advantage. Certainly there are several pathways that serve similar
functions. For example, there are several central pathways that are used
for vision. This concept is called "redundancy" and is found throughout
the nervous system. Multiple pathways for the same function may be a type
of "safety mechanism" should one of the pathways fail. Still, functional brain
imaging studies show that all parts of the brain function. Even during
sleep, the
brain is active. The brain is still being "used," it is just in a
different active state.
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| So next time you hear someone say that they only use 10% of their
brain, you can set them straight. Tell them,
|
| Did you know?
! |
Dr. James W. Kalat, author of the textbook Biological Psychology, has another idea for the origin of the 10% myth. Dr. Kalat points out that neuroscientists in the 1930s knew about the existence of the large number of "local" neurons in the brain, but the only thing they knew about these cells is that they were small. The misunderstanding of the function of local neurons may have led to the 10% myth. (Reference: Kalat, J.W., Biological Psychology, sixth edition, Pacific Grove: Brooks/Cole Publishing Co., 1998, p. 43) |