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| USING YOUR BRAIN | |
May 10, 2005 | |
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Paul Solman investigates what really goes on in our heads when we make economic decisions. Researchers are beginning to understand how the pre-frontal cortex, or more often our "lizard brain," drives our decisions in the stock market. |
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PAUL SOLMAN: An MRI of the human brain, cross-sectional images right through to the mind's deep core to see what's cooking inside -- cooking not in sickness, but in health. This animation is a composite of normal brains made at UCLA's Laboratory of Neural Imaging, one of dozens of labs where researchers are now trekking, "Fantastic Voyage"-style, to discover where specific thoughts and feelings arise.
SPOKESPERSON: This is for real money. They're getting paid now. |
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| What is the lizard brain? | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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PAUL SOLMAN: Now, economists usually start from the premise that we
humans are up to the task of choosing the Indeed, the GEICO gecko may be an especially apt image given the latest brain research summarized in a new book, "Mean Markets and Lizard Brains." Author Terry Burnham is a former Harvard Business School professor who has taught both economics and evolutionary biology.
PAUL SOLMAN: Now, in fact, many of us think that, when we're engaged in high finance, we're making the most of our noodles using the highly evolved, reason-based prefrontal cortex. JORDAN GRAFMAN: Where I'm pointing to is the prefrontal cortex of the brain. PAUL SOLMAN: Jordan Grafman is chief of cognitive neuroscience at the National Institutes of Health. JORDAN GRAFMAN: Now, this area, if we were to look at my head, comes all the way forward to my forehead, lies over my eyes and goes back as far as my ears. |
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| The lizard brain vs. the prefrontal cortex | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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PAUL SOLMAN: But as recent experiments at the National Institutes of Health have shown, financial decisions involve both the high-level cortex and the more primitive lizard, which comprises the rest of the brain. And surprisingly often, the lizard calls the shots, especially when reacting to a financial situation.
NELLY: I'm getting the idea that I, by being the first mover and I kind of screwed the first time, she didn't like that. So, now, she's doing it back to me. PAUL SOLMAN: She is? CLAIRE: Yes. We've created a competitive atmosphere. NELLY: For me, it wasn't worth to try and work with her since it didn't feel -- she wasn't going to cooperate with me. So, I kind of just followed her lead and went for the bigger payoff for myself, as she was doing. PAUL SOLMAN: When subjects like Nelly and Claire are put into MRI machines and their brains scanned while they continue playing, both the rational cortex and the impulsive lizard brain light up, but the relative intensity depends on who goes first. JORDAN GRAFMAN: So what I'm holding up here is an image of the brain that's showing brain activation patterns. PAUL SOLMAN: Neuroscientist Jordan Grafman runs the NIH experiments.
PAUL SOLMAN: So that's -- that's Nelly, for example, deciding what her strategy is going to be with respect to her partner, Claire. JORDAN GRAFMAN: Exactly, exactly. PAUL SOLMAN: So, the first decision maker is scheming away with the front of her brain. And the second? JORDAN GRAFMAN: The blue areas represent decision maker two making a judgment about how to respond to the initial move by decision maker one. PAUL SOLMAN: So, less prefrontal cortex activity. JORDAN GRAFMAN: Yes. PAUL SOLMAN: And more activity in the limbic system, the brain's emotional center. What does this high-tech head game have to do with investing? Well, think about it. The front of the brain is where we learn rational rules of personal finance -- to diversify, to buy low and sell high -- but the lizard brain is often running the show, reacting to situations impulsively. Take this rather subtle example:
PAUL SOLMAN: But think of what this means for picking a stock for your retirement. TERRY BURNHAM: The stock that you fall in love with has four up days in a row. Must be a good stock, right? There must be some reason it's gone up four days in a row. People are excited about it. They buy it. It plummets. At the bottom, they hate it, they can't stand it. They -- it's called "puking it out" in the Wall Street lingo. You puke out the position. You get rid of it. You sell it at the low. This process pushes us to buy high and sell low, exactly the opposite of what we want to do. |
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| Impulsive decision-making | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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PAUL SOLMAN: With the advent of brain scans, experiment after experiment is now showing exactly how much the lizard brain can cost you. For example, in a study published last fall, researchers at Princeton scanned people while asking them if they wanted $20 right away or $25 in a week.
And they actually can measure who has more strength in the prefrontal cortex and who has more strength in the lizard brain. When the lizard brain wins, they say, "Give me the $20 now." And when the prefrontal cortex wins, they say, "Give me the $25 in a week." PAUL SOLMAN: Humans boast the animal kingdom's most highly developed prefrontal cortex... TERRY BURNHAM: Right here at the end. PAUL SOLMAN: ...Especially this part, Brodman Area Ten, which, says brain expert Jordan Grafman, allows you: JORDAN GRAFMAN: In real time to carry out events that maximize gain for you, whether it be in economics or social behavior or politics or any endeavor you choose. |
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| The right approach to your investments | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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PAUL SOLMAN: If the prefrontal cortex is kind of like top management trying to control the unruly rest of the brain, Brodman Area Ten is the CEO. Sadly, though, the cortex is the last part of the brain to mature, between ages 25 and 30, and the first to go, starting at age 50 or so. PAUL SOLMAN: I'm 60. You now tell that my prefrontal cortex is fading fast. JORDAN GRAFMAN: Slowly, slowly. Not as we're speaking, but slowly. PAUL SOLMAN: What should I be doing about my investments?
PAUL SOLMAN: For our final words of advice, we return to author Terry Burnham. TERRY BURNHAM: Step one is to know I am not the boss of the lizard brain. There are things driving my behavior that I'm unaware of and that I can't control directly. PAUL SOLMAN: A recent MIT study of professional traders confirms what Burnham's saying. The least emotional were the most successful, which leads to step two.
PAUL SOLMAN: The problem is, the Warren Buffetts are the exceptions, not the rule. Most of us are all too vulnerable to the whims of our lizard selves, which, in the end, suggests that personal investing for the future, essential as it may be for both our ultimate welfare and that of the American economy as a whole, could entail some risks of which we're only now becoming fully aware. |
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