Barking Up The Wrong Tree December 26th, 2022 ---------------------------------------------------------------
Before we commence with the festivities, I wanted to thank everyone for helping my new book become a bestseller! To check it out, click [here](. --------------------------------------------------------------- These 5 Things Will Make You Smarter ([Click here]( to read on the blog) John von Neumann could multiply two eight-digit numbers together in his head â [when he was six-years old](. At 22 he was helping to develop what would become quantum mechanics. His off-the-charts mathematical ability made the Manhattan Project a success. He all but invented game theory. (Ever hear the term âzero-sumâ? He coined the phrase.) And building on work by Alan Turing and Kurt Godel he laid the groundwork for the computer youâre using. Students could barely keep up with his brilliant lectures but they loved him because heâd crack risqué jokes during class (in three languages.) Heâd throw wild parties at his house, occasionally pausing to prove a theorem on a cocktail napkin. And he loved annoying one of his co-workers. A guy named Albert Einstein. Edward Teller, another genius physicist who worked on the Manhattan Project once said: âVon Neumann would carry on a conversation with my three-year-old son, and the two of them would talk as equals, and I sometimes wondered if he used the same principle when he talked to the rest of us.â Donât worry if youâre feeling a little intimidated. John Von Neumann was, debatably, the smartest person to ever live. Smarts matter. But most of what we hear about intelligence is a heartwarming tale of utter nonsense. (For one thing, no, you donât only [use 10% of your brain](. Thatâs one of those 20th century myths trapped in amber.) IQ isnât just âbook smartsâ or academic skill. Itâs general problem-solving ability. Sure, other things matter, like motivation, curiosity, personality, etc. IQ isnât everything -- but it influences nearly everything. Unsurprisingly, smarter employees are, on average, [better employees](. But itâs not just that smarter people can do more complex jobs. IQ also impacts performance of less complex jobs. Higher IQ janitors are, on average, better janitors. There doesnât seem to be a threshold. More IQ generally means [more better]( (And, no, on average, Emotional Intelligence [is not more important than IQ]( when it comes to job performance.) And its benefits are not limited to job performance. In fact, some studies find intelligence is as predictive of a long life as [not smoking](. Is there anything IQ doesnât improve? Not really. (Okay, thatâs not totally true. People with higher IQâs are more likely to [need glasses]( So whatâs our problem here? IQ is [largely genetic](. It has a heritability of .5 and that pretty much sets the range youâll stay in. It generally stabilizes between ages 7-10. Small changes are possible; large changes are very unlikely. Big increases are usually only due to addressing deprivations, like lack of childhood education, iodine deficiency, getting lead out of the water, etc. Most interventions have little effect and those that do generally fade out after the intervention ends:
- Listening to Mozart? [Doesnât work](.
- Brain training games? [Donât work](.
- Giving kids preschool? [Fades out](.
- Having a âgrowth mindsetâ? [Greatly exaggerated, at best](.
Yeah, this is the kind of info that leaves welts. And now that I have seemingly painted myself into a corner, letâs get practical. No, you and I are not going to be John von Neumann. (When I went from graduate school to posting online, the average IQ of both arenas went up.) But then again, the vast majority of us donât have the genes to be professional athletes either. We canât improve our genetics but a lot of our mediocrity is self-imposed. There are a number of prescription-strength things we can do to make sure weâre firing on all cylinders and making the best of what we have. We canât do much to become dramatically smarter but we can do a lot to be less dumb. Alright, itâs time to lift the zoning restrictions on your brain. Letâs get to it... Get Your Sleep I know, I know â that sounds obvious. But as Christopher Hitchens wrote, âAh, please never forget how useful the obvious can be.â Because as obvious as it may sound, we just donât do it. UC Berkeley sleep researcher [Matthew Walker]( reports, âTwo-thirds of adults throughout all developed nations fail to obtain the recommended eight hours of nightly sleep.â Getting enough sleep is a cognitive cheat code. Meanwhile, sleep deprivation knocks the intellectual right out of you. [Educational studies]( show missing an hour of sleep turns a sixth graderâs brain into that of a fourth grader. Thereâs actually a clear correlation between sleep and grades: âTeens who received Aâs averaged about fifteen more minutes sleep than the B students, who in turn averaged fifteen more minutes than the Câs, and so on.â And the old maxim â[sleep on it]( is true. You do make better decisions after a good nightâs rest. Well, I donât get enough sleep, but I feel fine... That is the slumber equivalent of a drunk saying, âGimme the keys. Iâm okay to drive.â In [studies]( sleep-deprived people consistently underestimate how impaired they are: âafter just a few days, the four- and six-hour group reported that, yes, they were slightly sleepy. But they insisted they had adjusted to their new state. Even 14 days into the study, they said sleepiness was not affecting them. In fact, their performance had tanked.â But isnât there an easy magic pill? Well, kinda: coffee and cigarettes. [Caffeine and nicotine]( both boost brainpower, temporarily. (This must be how Cinderella felt.) But theyâre a double-edged sword. Cigarettes, obviously, are mucho bad for your health. And while moderate amounts of caffeine are healthy, it can seriously monkey with your ability to sleep. (I am not a caffeine addict. I prefer the word âenthusiast.â) We think that college students who like to party get worse grades because of drinking, but [studies]( show the majority of negative impact comes from daytime drowsiness due to caffeine and poor sleep. So what else can we do to be less dumb? Get Your Exercise Believe it or not, your brain is part of your body. And whatâs good for your body is good for your brain. [Hereâs]( a sentence for you: âScientifically, on the current evidence, exercise is the best way to enhance your cognitive function.â When you exercise it boosts BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor) which helps you learn faster. How much faster? [As much as 20%]( In fact, [cognitive control]( is measurably better after just a single exercise session. And if you want to hold on to those precious IQ points as you age, thereâs [this]( âAn analysis of sixteen prospective studies including more than 160,000 individuals found that moderate levels of physical activity lowered the risk of Alzheimerâs by 45 percent.â âDumb jocksâ arenât looking so dumb anymore. So taking care of your body with sleep and exercise is important, but we can also stay smart by improving what we do with that gray matter⦠Stay Calm Your car can have the most powerful engine in the world, but if someone else grabs the wheel, youâre not going to get where you wanna go. Impulsive feelings can lasso you and hogtie your judgment. Even if you have a high IQ, if youâre caught in a Pigpen cloud of emotion, youâre going to make bad decisions. Itâll be puberty redux. Staying calm is the séance that precedes the exorcism. Scientists refer to it as âarousal control.â How do we stay chill? When you start to get stressed, relax yourself with deep breaths. Teaching recruits to monitor their breathing helped [increase Navy SEAL passing rates]( from 25 to 33 percent. They didnât freak out, screw up or quit. Whenever you know you have something challenging coming up, take the time to prepare. A [feeling of control]( reduces stress and keeps our thinking clear. Sounds simple but itâs powerful. When I interviewed someone who [defuses bombs for a living]( what did he say was vital for staying calm and making the right decision? Always knowing what you need to do next and focusing on that. Like I said, IQ isnât everything. Itâs great for simple straightforward decisions, but with complex decisions rational IQ-style thinking can backfire. With complex decisions the [research]( shows going with your gut can often be the better choice. And if youâre an expert at something, definitely go with your gut. Emotions can be useful. To make smart decisions we need to listen to them â but not be controlled by them. Still with me or are you checking text messages? That raises another issue... Focus The internet is half enlightenment engine, half dehydrated concentrate of stupidity. Spend too much time on social media (the epicenter of modern tantrum culture) and you will end up theatrically troubled. It feels like your brain is having trash shoveled into it. What else has such a capacity to make us both simultaneously exhausted and overstimulated? [Neuroscience]( conclusively shows your brain canât multitask. Yes, you may think youâre good at it but just like sleep, this is an area where you shouldnât trust your perceptions. Shifting between tasks is not seamless for your brain. Your focus and attention [take a hit]( every time you switch. Constantly bouncing around between tasks produces the equivalent of a [10-point IQ drop](. Meanwhile, what does [research]( show the most productive computer programmers have in common? An environment free from distraction. So when you want to [be at your best]( silence your phone and distance yourself from all those attention burglars. âBatchâ all email checking, texting, and social media into pre-designated times. Then turn off notifications. This allows your brain to hum at full capacity and increases the secretion of elbow grease to get good work done. But whatâs the most powerful and easiest way to get smarter? Well, itâs not even about you... Ask For That Thing Called âHelpâ Handling every challenge in life by yourself builds character (mostly through nightmares). Your education isnât complete until youâve learned to take a hint. When youâre unsure, get help. Youâre not in middle school anymore where getting someone elseâs answers is called cheating. You canât learn the smartest way to handle everything on your own. Ask for advice. People are busy. They donât wanna help me. Wrong-amundo. The [research]( says: âpeople underestimated by as much as 50% the likelihood that others would agree to a direct request for help...â Fine, but theyâll be irritated and think Iâm stupid. No, that perspective is stupid. Wharton professor [Adam Grant]( finds: âresearch shows that people who regularly seek advice and help from knowledgeable colleagues are actually rated more favorably by supervisors than those who never seek advice and help.â Know whatâs even better than just occasionally asking for help? Find a mentor. But does needing someone to guide you mean youâre not a genius? Quite likely the opposite... For his book [Creativity]( Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi interviewed over 91 of the most brilliant people in the world (including 14 Nobel prize winners). What did they have in common? By the time they were college age, almost every one of those earthshakers [had an important mentor]( (To learn the best way to select and get a mentor click [here]( Okay, time to round it all up and learn the good news about the bad news regarding what happens to your smarts as you age... Sum Up Hereâs how to get smarter:
- Get Your Sleep: As a hard-working blogger and author, I assure you that the fact I sometimes get only 5-6 hours of sleep a night is the fine good for think when importantly function productive.
- Get Your Exercise: What helps your body helps your brain. (If youâre the one person reading this who has friends insisting âYou really need to exercise less to improve your health!â then feel free to ignore this.)
- Stay Calm: Weâre grown-ups â but often only theoretically. Impulsivity is considered a negative in research studies and on witness stands. Increase calm to increase smart judgment.
- Focus: Things are rarely so bad that distractions canât make them worse. You do not need the latest cultural software update from social media. I know singletasking sounds like something only elderly people do, like pinochle or saving money, but give it a try.
- Get Help: Pre-masticated knowledge is often the best kind. Thatâs why youâre reading this. Ask for advice. Become the chimeric blend of the smartest people around you.
Do we become less intelligent as we age? The scientific answer is: yes and no. The [research]( shows there are two kinds of intelligence: fluid and crystallized. Fluid intelligence is raw processing power. Figuring things out with no knowledge. Crystallized intelligence is closer to expertise, based more on prior learning and information. Fluid intelligence declines rapidly as we get older. In fact, it begins dropping at around age 25. Yeesh. But crystallized intelligence doesnât even peak until age 60. Itâs well known that top mathematicians and physicists do their best work in the first half of life. Meanwhile, great authors usually create their masterworks in the second half. (Fingers crossed.) So as you age, focus on building skills and knowledge. Your processor may not be as fast but you can make up for it with a bigger hard drive. Become an expert at something deep and rich that youâre passionate about -- and keep learning. You may not be as sharp as the young whippersnappers but if you focus on gaining more information about your field they wonât be able to keep up with you. IQ isnât everything. Itâs just a measure of potential. Itâs what you do with what you have that really matters. And, as P.J. Oâ Rourke noted, maybe itâs a good thing weâre not John von Neumann: âSmart people don't start many bar fights. But stupid people don't build many hydrogen bombs.â ***If you are one of those lovely people who bought "Plays Well With Others" please leave a review on Amazon [here](. Thanks!*** Email Extras Findings from around the internet... + Want to know a fun way to increase happiness? Click [here](. + Want to know if you need a high IQ to be a good investor? Click [here](. + Want to know how to be more productive -- when you just don't feel like it? Click [here](. + Miss my prior post? Here you go: [This Is How To Get Promoted: 5 Secrets From Research](. + Want to know which memory problems are totally normal? Click [here](. + You read to the end of the email. Your brain is already so much bigger you've gone up a hat size... And I thank you. Yes, yes, yes -- it's Crackerjack time: The insightful, incredible and virtually indestructible [Dan Pink]( (author of [Drive]( and [The Power of Regret]( and I did a great (and short!) video together. If you'd like the scientific skinny on how to detect liars, check it out [here](.
Thanks for reading!
Eric PS: If a friend forwarded this to you, you can sign up to get the weekly email yourself [here](. This email was sent to {EMAIL}
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