The
Open Mind – Dan Siegel
The
most vivid part of the mind bubbles up through sensation and new experience
when unencumbered by analytical thought.
For
some 2,500 years, humans have located the mind in the brain inside our heads.
But we ought to consider the origin of mind with an open mind. Is the mind
truly within the brain? Or is this an illusion?
I
gained some insight back in the 1980s, as college drew to a close. I was in my
20s and working in Mexico for the World Health Organization on a project to
study curanderos – folk healers – in a region where the press of modernisation
of a local dam, La Presa Miguel Alemán, 250 miles south-east of Mexico City,
was changing communities and local medical services. One morning, on a
horseback journey to interview a local healer as part of my project, the saddle
on my horse loosened and, with feet still strapped into the stirrups, I was
dragged, they tell me, a hundred yards over gravel and rock, my head banging
against the ground beneath the horse’s racing hooves. When the young and
frightened horse finally came to a stop, my riding companions thought I must be
dead, or at least that I’d broken my neck. I did break my teeth and nose, and
damaged my arm. The head trauma induced a state of global amnesia that lasted
about a day.
In
the aftermath of the horse accident, I became attuned to a level of knowing
beneath personal identity, personal belief and personal expectation. I had no
idea what to call this change in ‘me’ so I never discussed it with anyone,
putting it into a category of some existential wakeup call to lighten up, given
life’s fragility following that near-death accident, to be grateful to be able
to move my neck, be alive, be awake and aware. I didn’t think of it then as a
gift, but I realise now it was one of those unplanned experiences that are
turning points, even if we don’t realise their impact at the time.
How
do all these layers of reality, these domains of life, find some common home,
some common ground of understanding? Two terms that offer some insight and
indicate how information is processed in our minds and brains are ‘top-down’
and ‘bottom-up’. These terms are sometimes used for the anatomical location of
processing: the higher cortex (seat of executive function) at the top, the
lower brainstem (heart rate, breathing) and limbic areas (emotion) at the
bottom. But the same terms are also used for layers of processing not related
to the anatomical distribution of up and down. Instead, they are used for the
degree of processing of information.
In
the view we will be using here, top-down refers to ways we have experienced
things in the past and created generalised summaries or mental models, also
known as schema, of those events. For example, if you’ve seen many dogs, you’ll
have a general mental model or image of a generic dog. The next time you see a
furry canine strolling by, your top-down processing might use that mental model
to filter incoming visual input, and you won’t really see the uniqueness of
this dog in front of you. You have overlaid your generalised image of ‘dog’ on
top of the here-and-now perceptual stream of energy that creates the neural
representation of ‘dog’. What you actually have in awareness is that amalgam of
the top-down filtering of your experience.
So
here, ‘top’ means that prior experience is activated, making it difficult to
notice the unique and vibrant details of what is happening here and now. The
top-down generalised notion of dog will shade and limit your perception of the
actual animal in front of you. The benefit of top-down is that it makes your
life more efficient. That’s a dog, I know what it is, I don’t need to expend
any more energy than needed on insignificant, non-threatening things, so I’ll
take my limited resources and apply them elsewhere. It saves time and energy,
and therefore is cognitively efficient. That’s top-down processing.
On
the other hand, if you’ve never seen a spiny anteater before, the first time
you come across one on the trail, it will capture all of your attention,
engaging your bottom-up processing so that you are seeing with beginner’s eyes.
These are eyes leading to circuitry in the brain, not shaping and altering
ongoing perception through the top-down filters of prior experience. You’ll be
taking in as much pure sensation from eyesight as possible, without the
top-down filter altering and limiting what you see now based on what you’ve
seen before.
When
we travel to a foreign country, bottom-up perceiving can fill our journey with
a profound sense of being alive. Time seems extended, days full, and we’ve seen
more details in a few hours than we might have seen in a week in our familiar
life. What seen means for bottom-up perception is that we become more attentive
to novelty, seeing the unique aspects of what is, literally, in front of our
eyes. The social psychologist Ellen Langer at Harvard University calls this
‘mindfulness’, and has done numerous studies to reveal the health benefits of
being open to the freshness of the present moment.
The
novel experience of foreign travel, in contrast to the sense of dullness in our
lives back home, also reminds us of what life is like in familiar terrain:
top-down can dominate bottom-up and give us a familiar sense of the same-old,
same-old. A street at home with just as much detail seems dull compared with
the novelty of a street in a foreign town seen for the first time. This loss of
attention to the familiar can be called top-down dominance. Prior learning
creates top-down filters through which we screen incoming data and lose the
detail of things seen for the first time.
This
top-down dominance is one of the side effects, if you will, of experience and
knowledge. It’s one of the downsides of expertise – we stop seeing clearly
because we know so much. We know what a dog is, so let’s move on and not lose
attentional energy by focusing on something we already know. We save our
attentional resources for something more pressing than the familiar. Knowledge
from prior experience helps us become selective in what we perceive so we can
be more efficient in allocating attentional resources and more effective and
rapid in our behavioural responses. But something gets lost with that efficiency.
We literally walk next to the roses and pass them by, naming them, knowing them
as the flowers they are, but we don’t stop to immerse ourselves in their scents
or notice their unique rainbow of colours and textures.
One
general way of considering the distinction between these perception modes is
that with the bottom-up we are experiencing the mind as a conduit of sensory
experience, whereas in top-down we are additionally a constructor of
information. A conduit enables something to flow freely, directing that flow
but not changing it much; a constructor is fuelled by input and then generates
its own output, a transformation that changes the fuel into another form: it
constructs a new layer of representational information beyond the initial
sensory stream.
The
mind can be a bottom-up conduit and top-down constructor.
To
help answer the question ‘Who are we?’ consider that we are at least a conduit
and constructor. It might be that if only one or the other is utilised in our
lives, we become blocked in our functioning. Without the constructor, we don’t
learn; without the conduit, we don’t feel. Could this be an extreme constructor
thing to say? My conduit mind somehow urges me to stay open about this – maybe
being only a conduit is fine. But if I have put these thoughts into words, my
conduit is connecting with my constructor to stand up for itself – a sign of
the importance of both, don’t you think, don’t you feel? Both are important,
each playing an important but distinct role in our experience of being alive.
Use one without the balance of the other, and our lives become limited.
Differentiate and then link the two, and we become integrated.
The
mind is both embodied and relational. In our communications with one another,
we often send linguistic packets of top-down words with narratives and
explanations that are already constructing the reality we are sharing with
another. Even when we try our best to use words to describe what we are
experiencing, rather than explain what is going on, we are still using the
construction of linguistic forms.
And
in our brain? Energy and information flow within us as well as between us. The
nervous system, including its brain, plays a major role in shaping our embodied
energy-flow patterns. This is how brain research illuminates, though not with
totality, what the mind is and who we are.
One
recent finding is that in the brain there are two anatomically distinct
circuits mediating conduit and constructor. A more lateralised (side) process
involving sensory input areas includes the anterior insula (which some say is
part of the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex) and the consciousness-mediating
dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (the upper side area in the front of the brain,
behind the forehead and above and to the side of the eyes). Notice the term
lateral in each of these regions. These side circuits seem to be active when we
focus primarily on moment-by-moment sensation. In contrast, we have a more
centralised circuit in the brain that seems to generate thought and construct
all sorts of top-down chatter about others and the self.
Sensation
might be as bottom-up as we get. Since we live in a body, our within-mind experience
is shaped by the physical apparatus that lets us take in energy flow from the
outside world. We have our first five senses of sight, hearing, smell, taste
and touch; we have our proprioceptive sense of motion; and we have our
‘interoceptive’ sense of the signals from the interior of the body. These
perceptual capacities to sense the outer world and internal bodily world are
built upon the physical neural machinery that enables energy to flow.
Information is created with these energy patterns, generated as ions flow in
and out of membranes and chemicals are released in the pathways of neural
activity. As energy flows into the brain from our external sense organs, such
as our eyes and ears, or from internal receptors of our body’s muscles, bones
and internal organs, we move from sensation to perception – with pure sensation
as close as we get to being fully present in the world.
When
we assemble those bottom-up sensations into perceptions, or go even further and
reflect on the meaning of a sensation or perception, associating it with
thought and memory, we are utilising the activity of a more central circuit
that involves distinct areas, including midline areas of the prefrontal cortex,
and regions such as the precuneus, medial and temporal lobes, lateral and
inferior parietal cortex, and cingulate cortex. All this observing circuitry is
a part of a brain system that neuroscientists call the default mode network,
which matures during development into a cohesive, integrated whole residing at
the midline front and back areas of the brain.
This
circuit is called ‘default’ because when a test subject is at rest in a
scanner, the network continues to fire as the baseline without the volunteer
having been assigned a specific task to perform. What does this circuit involve
itself with? ‘Self and others’, also known as the OATS system. In fact, some
neuroscientists have suggested that elements of the default mode circuitry give
rise to our sense of personal identity and might be connected to our mental
health. Studies of mindfulness meditation have pointed out that this system
becomes more integrated with sustained practice. We are reflective and social
beings, and it would be natural to focus on others and self as a baseline
activity when we’re just hanging out with no particular assignment – even in a
big blasting brain scanner.
Perhaps
it was this OATS system that was temporarily disabled after my horse accident.
Without the engagement of a more distanced constructor of this top-down
circuitry, the direct sensory input of each moment at that time could then more
easily fill my awareness. Without the top-down filter of prior experience and
personal identity, I was literally seeing things for the first time. The
lateral sensory bottom-up conduit circuit and the midline top-down
constructor/observing circuit have been shown to be reciprocal in their
activation: when one is turned up, the other is turned down. When my midline
construction circuit was knocked offline for a day, I could experience a
fuller, richer, bottom-up, sensory world through the conduit of my within-mind
machinery.
Construction
could have many top-down layers. One is at the level of perception, so when we
see a familiar dog it is just a dog. We literally sense the visual input of the
dog but do not perceive that input with any great detail of awareness. We can
also have the experience of observing at a distance, having the experience of
‘Dan is seeing a dog. How interesting for him. Let’s move on.’ Such observation
with the presence of an ‘observer’ – in this case, Dan – might be just the
beginning of the OATS activity. Now there is a personal identity that indicates
who is doing the seeing. Once I actively link autobiographical and factual
memory together with linguistic forms, top-down has become the active
constructor, and the OATS activity is off to the races.
We
are now observing, not sensing. Such observation can then give rise to a
well-defined witness – we witness an event from an even more distant stance.
Language emerges from this observational flow, and wording the world can make
us more distant still from the sensory richness that surrounds us. We then move
further in a top-down mode to narrating what we are witnessing and observing.
This is how we OWN an experience, as we observe, witness, and narrate an event
– and become far more distant than if we were simply immersed in the sensory
bottom-up flow of our conduit circuitry in the present moment. This is the
balance we live day-by-day, moment-by-moment, between top-down and bottom-up, conduit
and constructor.
The
experience of living in the moment is potent and profound – and one
longstanding hypothesis holds that it bubbles up from an ultra-thin layer of
the upper brain. Vernon Mountcastle and other neuroscientists noted decades ago
that the flow of energy in the cortex, the highest part of the brain, was
bidirectional. Movement was through the cortex’s vertical columns, most of
which are six cell-layers deep. The highest layer is labelled number one; the
lowest is labelled six. Folded over and over itself, the cortex appears thick,
but six layers of cells is actually quite thin, like six playing cards laid on
top of one another. The cortex serves to make neural ‘maps’ of the world –
taking in our sensory input of sight and sound and building larger maps,
finally constructing our conceptual thoughts about self and other – OATS.
Imagine
the possibility, yet-to-be verified, that our sense of wonder, the thrill of
the new, moves from the outside world through our senses to those microscopic
layers – six to five to four. Travel up one more layer, and we start to parse
and analyse, then add language, and reality shifts again. We humans revel in
the experience the mind provides, even as its boundaries and contours remain at
large.
Reprinted
from ‘Mind: Journey to the Heart of Being Human’ by Daniel J Siegel, Copyright
© 2017 by Mind Your Brain, Inc. With permission of the publisher, W W Norton
& Co, Inc. All rights reserved.
For
some 2,500 years, humans have located the mind in the brain inside our heads.
But we ought to consider the origin of mind with an open mind. Is the mind
truly within the brain? Or is this an illusion?
I
gained some insight back in the 1980s, as college drew to a close. I was in my
20s and working in Mexico for the World Health Organization on a project to
study curanderos – folk healers – in a region where the press of modernisation
of a local dam, La Presa Miguel Alemán, 250 miles south-east of Mexico City,
was changing communities and local medical services. One morning, on a
horseback journey to interview a local healer as part of my project, the saddle
on my horse loosened and, with feet still strapped into the stirrups, I was
dragged, they tell me, a hundred yards over gravel and rock, my head banging
against the ground beneath the horse’s racing hooves. When the young and
frightened horse finally came to a stop, my riding companions thought I must be
dead, or at least that I’d broken my neck. I did break my teeth and nose, and
damaged my arm. The head trauma induced a state of global amnesia that lasted
about a day.
In
the aftermath of the horse accident, I became attuned to a level of knowing
beneath personal identity, personal belief and personal expectation. I had no
idea what to call this change in ‘me’ so I never discussed it with anyone,
putting it into a category of some existential wakeup call to lighten up, given
life’s fragility following that near-death accident, to be grateful to be able
to move my neck, be alive, be awake and aware. I didn’t think of it then as a
gift, but I realise now it was one of those unplanned experiences that are
turning points, even if we don’t realise their impact at the time.
How
do all these layers of reality, these domains of life, find some common home,
some common ground of understanding? Two terms that offer some insight and
indicate how information is processed in our minds and brains are ‘top-down’
and ‘bottom-up’. These terms are sometimes used for the anatomical location of
processing: the higher cortex (seat of executive function) at the top, the
lower brainstem (heart rate, breathing) and limbic areas (emotion) at the
bottom. But the same terms are also used for layers of processing not related
to the anatomical distribution of up and down. Instead, they are used for the
degree of processing of information.
In
the view we will be using here, top-down refers to ways we have experienced
things in the past and created generalised summaries or mental models, also
known as schema, of those events. For example, if you’ve seen many dogs, you’ll
have a general mental model or image of a generic dog. The next time you see a
furry canine strolling by, your top-down processing might use that mental model
to filter incoming visual input, and you won’t really see the uniqueness of
this dog in front of you. You have overlaid your generalised image of ‘dog’ on
top of the here-and-now perceptual stream of energy that creates the neural
representation of ‘dog’. What you actually have in awareness is that amalgam of
the top-down filtering of your experience.
So
here, ‘top’ means that prior experience is activated, making it difficult to
notice the unique and vibrant details of what is happening here and now. The
top-down generalised notion of dog will shade and limit your perception of the
actual animal in front of you. The benefit of top-down is that it makes your
life more efficient. That’s a dog, I know what it is, I don’t need to expend
any more energy than needed on insignificant, non-threatening things, so I’ll
take my limited resources and apply them elsewhere. It saves time and energy,
and therefore is cognitively efficient. That’s top-down processing.
On
the other hand, if you’ve never seen a spiny anteater before, the first time
you come across one on the trail, it will capture all of your attention,
engaging your bottom-up processing so that you are seeing with beginner’s eyes.
These are eyes leading to circuitry in the brain, not shaping and altering
ongoing perception through the top-down filters of prior experience. You’ll be
taking in as much pure sensation from eyesight as possible, without the
top-down filter altering and limiting what you see now based on what you’ve seen
before.
When
we travel to a foreign country, bottom-up perceiving can fill our journey with
a profound sense of being alive. Time seems extended, days full, and we’ve seen
more details in a few hours than we might have seen in a week in our familiar
life. What seen means for bottom-up perception is that we become more attentive
to novelty, seeing the unique aspects of what is, literally, in front of our
eyes. The social psychologist Ellen Langer at Harvard University calls this
‘mindfulness’, and has done numerous studies to reveal the health benefits of
being open to the freshness of the present moment.
The
novel experience of foreign travel, in contrast to the sense of dullness in our
lives back home, also reminds us of what life is like in familiar terrain:
top-down can dominate bottom-up and give us a familiar sense of the same-old,
same-old. A street at home with just as much detail seems dull compared with
the novelty of a street in a foreign town seen for the first time. This loss of
attention to the familiar can be called top-down dominance. Prior learning
creates top-down filters through which we screen incoming data and lose the
detail of things seen for the first time.
This
top-down dominance is one of the side effects, if you will, of experience and
knowledge. It’s one of the downsides of expertise – we stop seeing clearly
because we know so much. We know what a dog is, so let’s move on and not lose
attentional energy by focusing on something we already know. We save our
attentional resources for something more pressing than the familiar. Knowledge
from prior experience helps us become selective in what we perceive so we can
be more efficient in allocating attentional resources and more effective and
rapid in our behavioural responses. But something gets lost with that
efficiency. We literally walk next to the roses and pass them by, naming them,
knowing them as the flowers they are, but we don’t stop to immerse ourselves in
their scents or notice their unique rainbow of colours and textures.
The
mind is both embodied and relational. Energy and information flow within us as
well as between us
One
general way of considering the distinction between these perception modes is
that with the bottom-up we are experiencing the mind as a conduit of sensory
experience, whereas in top-down we are additionally a constructor of
information. A conduit enables something to flow freely, directing that flow
but not changing it much; a constructor is fuelled by input and then generates
its own output, a transformation that changes the fuel into another form: it
constructs a new layer of representational information beyond the initial
sensory stream.
The
mind can be a bottom-up conduit and top-down constructor.
To
help answer the question ‘Who are we?’ consider that we are at least a conduit
and constructor. It might be that if only one or the other is utilised in our
lives, we become blocked in our functioning. Without the constructor, we don’t
learn; without the conduit, we don’t feel. Could this be an extreme constructor
thing to say? My conduit mind somehow urges me to stay open about this – maybe
being only a conduit is fine. But if I have put these thoughts into words, my
conduit is connecting with my constructor to stand up for itself – a sign of
the importance of both, don’t you think, don’t you feel? Both are important,
each playing an important but distinct role in our experience of being alive.
Use one without the balance of the other, and our lives become limited.
Differentiate and then link the two, and we become integrated.
The
mind is both embodied and relational. In our communications with one another,
we often send linguistic packets of top-down words with narratives and
explanations that are already constructing the reality we are sharing with
another. Even when we try our best to use words to describe what we are
experiencing, rather than explain what is going on, we are still using the
construction of linguistic forms.
And
in our brain? Energy and information flow within us as well as between us. The
nervous system, including its brain, plays a major role in shaping our embodied
energy-flow patterns. This is how brain research illuminates, though not with
totality, what the mind is and who we are.
One
recent finding is that in the brain there are two anatomically distinct
circuits mediating conduit and constructor. A more lateralised (side) process
involving sensory input areas includes the anterior insula (which some say is
part of the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex) and the consciousness-mediating
dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (the upper side area in the front of the brain,
behind the forehead and above and to the side of the eyes). Notice the term
lateral in each of these regions. These side circuits seem to be active when we
focus primarily on moment-by-moment sensation. In contrast, we have a more
centralised circuit in the brain that seems to generate thought and construct
all sorts of top-down chatter about others and the self.
Sensation
might be as bottom-up as we get. Since we live in a body, our within-mind
experience is shaped by the physical apparatus that lets us take in energy flow
from the outside world. We have our first five senses of sight, hearing, smell,
taste and touch; we have our proprioceptive sense of motion; and we have our
‘interoceptive’ sense of the signals from the interior of the body. These
perceptual capacities to sense the outer world and internal bodily world are
built upon the physical neural machinery that enables energy to flow.
Information is created with these energy patterns, generated as ions flow in
and out of membranes and chemicals are released in the pathways of neural
activity. As energy flows into the brain from our external sense organs, such
as our eyes and ears, or from internal receptors of our body’s muscles, bones
and internal organs, we move from sensation to perception – with pure sensation
as close as we get to being fully present in the world.
When
we assemble those bottom-up sensations into perceptions, or go even further and
reflect on the meaning of a sensation or perception, associating it with
thought and memory, we are utilising the activity of a more central circuit
that involves distinct areas, including midline areas of the prefrontal cortex,
and regions such as the precuneus, medial and temporal lobes, lateral and
inferior parietal cortex, and cingulate cortex. All this observing circuitry is
a part of a brain system that neuroscientists call the default mode network,
which matures during development into a cohesive, integrated whole residing at
the midline front and back areas of the brain.
This
circuit is called ‘default’ because when a test subject is at rest in a
scanner, the network continues to fire as the baseline without the volunteer
having been assigned a specific task to perform. What does this circuit involve
itself with? ‘Self and others’, also known as the OATS system. In fact, some
neuroscientists have suggested that elements of the default mode circuitry give
rise to our sense of personal identity and might be connected to our mental
health. Studies of mindfulness meditation have pointed out that this system
becomes more integrated with sustained practice. We are reflective and social
beings, and it would be natural to focus on others and self as a baseline
activity when we’re just hanging out with no particular assignment – even in a
big blasting brain scanner.
Wording
the world can make us more distant still from the sensory richness that
surrounds us. We then move further in a top-down mode
Perhaps
it was this OATS system that was temporarily disabled after my horse accident.
Without the engagement of a more distanced constructor of this top-down
circuitry, the direct sensory input of each moment at that time could then more
easily fill my awareness. Without the top-down filter of prior experience and
personal identity, I was literally seeing things for the first time. The
lateral sensory bottom-up conduit circuit and the midline top-down
constructor/observing circuit have been shown to be reciprocal in their
activation: when one is turned up, the other is turned down. When my midline
construction circuit was knocked offline for a day, I could experience a
fuller, richer, bottom-up, sensory world through the conduit of my within-mind
machinery.
Construction
could have many top-down layers. One is at the level of perception, so when we
see a familiar dog it is just a dog. We literally sense the visual input of the
dog but do not perceive that input with any great detail of awareness. We can
also have the experience of observing at a distance, having the experience of
‘Dan is seeing a dog. How interesting for him. Let’s move on.’ Such observation
with the presence of an ‘observer’ – in this case, Dan – might be just the
beginning of the OATS activity. Now there is a personal identity that indicates
who is doing the seeing. Once I actively link autobiographical and factual
memory together with linguistic forms, top-down has become the active
constructor, and the OATS activity is off to the races.
We
are now observing, not sensing. Such observation can then give rise to a
well-defined witness – we witness an event from an even more distant stance.
Language emerges from this observational flow, and wording the world can make
us more distant still from the sensory richness that surrounds us. We then move
further in a top-down mode to narrating what we are witnessing and observing.
This is how we OWN an experience, as we observe, witness, and narrate an event
– and become far more distant than if we were simply immersed in the sensory
bottom-up flow of our conduit circuitry in the present moment. This is the
balance we live day-by-day, moment-by-moment, between top-down and bottom-up,
conduit and constructor.
The
experience of living in the moment is potent and profound – and one
longstanding hypothesis holds that it bubbles up from an ultra-thin layer of
the upper brain. Vernon Mountcastle and other neuroscientists noted decades ago
that the flow of energy in the cortex, the highest part of the brain, was
bidirectional. Movement was through the cortex’s vertical columns, most of
which are six cell-layers deep. The highest layer is labelled number one; the
lowest is labelled six. Folded over and over itself, the cortex appears thick,
but six layers of cells is actually quite thin, like six playing cards laid on
top of one another. The cortex serves to make neural ‘maps’ of the world –
taking in our sensory input of sight and sound and building larger maps,
finally constructing our conceptual thoughts about self and other – OATS.
Imagine
the possibility, yet-to-be verified, that our sense of wonder, the thrill of
the new, moves from the outside world through our senses to those microscopic
layers – six to five to four. Travel up one more layer, and we start to parse
and analyse, then add language, and reality shifts again. We humans revel in
the experience the mind provides, even as its boundaries and contours remain at
large.
Reprinted
from ‘Mind: Journey to the Heart of Being Human’ by Daniel J Siegel, Copyright
© 2017 by Mind Your Brain, Inc. With permission of the publisher, W W Norton
& Co, Inc. All rights reserved.
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