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423 pages, Paperback
First published March 15, 2007
Competitive plasticity in adults even explains some of our limitations. Think of the difficulty most adults have in learning a second language. The conventional view now is that the difficulty arises because the critical period for language learning has ended, leaving us with a brain too rigid to change its structure on a large scale. But the discovery of competitive plasticity suggests there is more to it. As we age, the more we use our native language, the more it comes to dominate our linguistic map space. Thus it is also because our brain is plastic—and because plasticity is competitive—that it is so hard to learn a new language and end the tyranny of the mother tongue. But why, if this is true, is it easier to learn a second language when we are young? Is there not competition then too? Not really. If two languages are learned at the same time, during the critical period, both get a foothold. Brain scans, says Merzenich, show that in a bilingual child all the sounds of its two languages share a single large map, a library of sounds from both languages.Neuoroplasticity also offers an answer to the question on pain in "phantom" limbs—that is, the question on why some of owners of limbs that have been lost still suffer from pain "from" the lost limb. This also gives rise to an amazing theory about pain really being based in the brain:
But as phantoms show, we don’t need a body part or even pain receptors to feel pain. We need only a body image, produced by our brain maps. People with actual limbs don’t usually realize this, because the body images of our limbs are perfectly projected onto our actual limbs, making it impossible to distinguish our body image from our body. “Your own body is a phantom,� says Ramachandran, “one that your brain has constructed purely for convenience.�I could go on, but I'll limit myself to just these two examples, but the incredible stories on brains radically restructuring really made this worth a read.