welcome to the huberman Lab podcast where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday [Music] life I'm Andrew huberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and Opthalmology at Stanford school of medicine today we are discussing working memory working memory is a special category of memory in which we are able to hold small amounts of information in our mind for short periods of time working memory is also very closely related to attention so for any of you that are interested in how to develop better focus and attention understanding what working memory is and some of the
things that you can do to improve your working memory can be very beneficial today I'm going to talk about what working memory is including some of the underlying biology although I promise irrespective of whether or not you know any biology or you are an expert in biology I'll make the conversation accessible to you in addition I will talk about tools to improve working memory and I'll also compare working memory to other forms of memory memory like long-term memory and short-term memory and through that understanding I'm confident that you'll be able to develop better focus as
well as be able to commit certain forms of information to your short and long-term memory stores before we begin I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate for my teaching and research roles at Stanford it is however part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost to Consumer information about science and science related tools to the general public in keeping with that theme I'd like to thank the sponsors of today's podcast our first sponsor is matina matina makes loose leaf and ready to drink ybba mate I often discuss ybba mate's benefits such as
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different continents directions from one location to another even one's name all of those things are examples of long-term memory now I want to emphasize that long-term memory really has two components there are what we call declarative long-term memories so these are the things that we can declare things like facts about ourselves or the world or others and then there are procedural long-term memories procedural long-term memories as the name suggests are aspects of our memory that allow us to perform certain procedures they are literally action steps that we take to for instance ride a bicycle or
drive a car which by the way we might not be conscious of ourselves doing after we learn that is after we pass information into our procedural long-term memory but even once those things become reflexive they are stored in our long-term memory now a discussion of long-term memory is not the focus today but me being a neuroscientist and I like to think you all generally being interested in the underlying biology I'll just mention that there's a key structure within the brain that is part of a larger neural network that is a collection of structures which is
absolutely essential for the formation and storage of long-term memories and that's the hippocampus which in Latin means seahorse and it does look a little bit like a seahorse but you actually have one on each side of your brain so we say hippocampi plural and so what we know is that if people have damage to their hippocampus of any kind that people have trouble accessing or forming long-term memory sometimes both and there's a lot more that we could say about long-term memory indeed I did an entire episode of The hubman Lab podcast about the formation and
storage of long-term memories including some tools to improve long-term memories we'll touch on a few of those tools later today but you can access that episode if you go to hubman lab.com and just put memory into the search function and you'll find it there in the meantime if we want to understand working memory we not only have to understand how it's different from long-term memory but also how it's different from short-term memories short-term memory is a capacity that we all have that as the name suggests represents a short-term memory bank for information that may or
may not get passed into long-term memory so for instance if you've learned anything and of course you have if you can understand what I'm saying you've learned English language if you can write you've learned how to write Etc well in order to learn those things and to commit them to long-term memory the information required to do those things and to have that knowledge needed to be held in short-term memory and short-term memories are the sorts of memories that we maintain for somewhere between a few minutes and potentially a few hours maybe a little bit longer
but only a certain percentage of that is passed into our long-term memory so for instance if you listen to this podcast or you go to a course lecture uh whether or not that lecture is about cognitive material or whether or not it's about learning a new physical skill regardless of what you learn you're only going to learn a certain amount of that information but were we to examine how much of the information you just heard or that you're hearing now you remember immediately after this podcast episode as compared to say a week later we know
based on gosh millions of scientific papers and studies that you are going to have more information in your short-term memory stores shortly after being exposed to new information then you will later in other words only a small percentage of what we perceive what we see what we hear Etc gets passed into short-term memory and then only a fraction of that gets passed into long-term memory now the neural circuits for short-term memory and the passage of short-term memories into long-term memory involve a lot of different brain structures but here again we can implicate the hip hi
campus Because the actual passage of short-term memories into long-term memories occurs in part within the hippocampus and then a lot of people don't know this some of the memories that we think of as long-term memories are actually distributed into the neocortex which is the outer portion of the brain now the point here is less to fill your mind with different names of things and nomenclature but rather to get you thinking about what's involved in creating short and long-term memories and equally important that even though the hippocampus is critically involved in the formation of short and
long-term memories that the formation of short and long-term memories is really a network phenomenon in fact among the more important themes that comes up again and again on this podcast anytime that we're talking about Neuroscience or actually biology in any case is that rarely if ever is there one location in the brain where something happens typically it's a network phenomenon meaning it's the collaboration of a bunch of different brain areas passing information from one location to the next and storing it in a kind of distributed way way now another key thing to understand about working
memory and how it is different from short and long-term memory is that the formation of short and long-term memories almost always involves neuroplasticity neuroplasticity is the nervous system's ability to change in response to experience now there are different types of neuroplasticity so often when we hear about neuroplasticity in the popular sphere people don't emphasize that there are different types of neuroplasticity and it's worth paying a little bit of attention to what those different typ are there is for instance what we call long-term potentiation long-term potentiation or ltp as the acronym goes is the strengthening of
connections between neurons as a consequence of their repeated firing very closely together in time okay there's a lot more to it but if you've ever heard the phrase fire together wire together sometimes that is misattributed to Donald Hebb who did talk about neuroplasticity by the way Donald Hebb was a psychologist up in Canada who talked about neuroplasticity in the context of lots of different forms of learning but that fire together wire together phrase was not actually stated by Donald Hebb it was stated by Carla shatz my colleague at Stanford and she was referring to ltp
but other forms of neuroplasticity that occur mainly in development when neurons fire very closely in time and thereby strengthen those connections which can include ltp okay so for now think of ltp as anytime that some small group of neurons could be two neurons could be 2,000 neurons are very active closely together in time and they have access to one another physically and the consequence is often not always but it's often ltp that is the strengthening of those connections such that after that barrage of activity subsides those neurons can speak to each other they can communicate
through electrical activity and chemical activity much more easily their communication is more robust it's like removing a wall between a a conversation such that the conversation can take place more fluidly now there are other forms of neuroplasticity including LTD longterm depression which unfortunately the name often calls to mind ideas about depression as a psychiatric or a psychological symptom but has nothing to do with that long-term depression is simply the inverse of ltp it's actually the weakening or the removal of connections that we call synapses between neurons I want to emphasize that both ltp and LTD
are both critically involved in lots of different kinds of learning and both of them tend to be involved in the formation of both short-term memories and long-term memories and this is very important in the removal of short-term memories and long-term memories literally forgetting of certain things because as we all know there are many things that we will never forget and there are also things that we almost always forget now there's a third form of neuroplasticity that's involved in the formation of short and long-term memories that's important for us to discuss just briefly but I do
want to emphasize that there are not just three forms of neuroplasticity there are many other forms dozens if not more things like Spike timing dependent plasticy paired pulse facilitation and on and on but the third type of neuroplasticity that I'd like to mention now is neurogenesis neurogenesis is the formation of new neurons now neurogenesis is robust in the developing nervous system we know this it's robust in the developing nervous system of animals and humans however neurogenesis the literal formation of new neurons in the brain is a very exciting idea and it does occur and it's
very exciting in a way that has motivated lots of popular press Outlets to talk about or to discuss papers that have discovered neurogenesis in the adult brain because let's be honest what's more exciting than the idea that your brain can add new brain cells later in life and indeed that has been shown even in people well into their 80s and 90s however it's very important to know that the total amount of neurogenesis that occurs in the adult human brain is infantes small as a mechanism for neuroplasticity and learning as compared to the other forms of
neuroplasticity that we discussed such as long-term potentiation and long-term depression so I don't want to you know throw cold water on the topic of neurogenesis it's an incredibly interesting and important topic but all too often they tend to eclipse the much more common mechanism for the formation of short and long-term memories which are those other forms we just talked about ltp LTD Etc so the point here is that yes indeed there are new neurons that can be added in the adult brain maybe even in the adult human brain and there is some evidence that some
of those new neurons are added to the hippocampus in fact a particular region of the hippocampus called the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus and there's been a lot of controversy about how much neurogenesis occurs or doesn't occur and whether or not it occurs after puberty or not there's a whole field of people battling over this now for several decades ades but one thing is very clear neurogenesis while it's very exciting and intriguing is not the main mechanism by which the formation of short and long-term memories occurs when you learn new information as you are right
now the storage of that information in your short-term memory networks which is then passed on to your long-term memory networks and that can be recalled that allows you to State certain facts about for instance the existence of this thing called a hippocampus hopefully you will remember that going forward or your ability to perform any kind of motor movement that you learned now or way back in childhood most of that is the consequence of the strengthening of particular connections and the weakening of other types of connections those are the two major forms of neuroplasticity okay so
I don't want you to get the impression that there's something wrong with my memory and that I forgot that this episode is not about short or long-term memory but it's about working memory and indeed I have not forgotten so now is where I tell you why I've been talking about short and long-term memory and the mechanisms of those because I want them to provide a stark contrast for what we call working memory working memory as far as we know does not involve neuroplasticity or at least if it does it's not a particularly robust aspect of
working memory rather working memory is the reflection of a particular neural circuit running an algorithm over and over and over for different types of information but the information isn't stored it is actually intentionally discarded now what sorts of daily activities and life activities would require working memory the answer to that is basically everything that you need to do but that you don't want to remember now what types of things would those be well let's think about it most all of us learned at some point in our life to tie our own shoes presumably you know
how to tie your own shoes if you don't perhaps you should learn or wear velcro or slippers I don't know but assuming you can tie your own shoes that's something that you know how to do and you can do it as a procedural long-term memory you can do that action you don't have to think about it too much working memory would come into play when say you wake up in the morning and you know that you need to head out for a jog but you also need to make a cup of coffee first and you
need to remember where the coffee is where your shoes are and perhaps you're making a phone call or you're having a conversation while you need to tie your shoes and so on and so forth working memory is basically the taking in of information that's critical for you to sequence your actions over a short period of time and then forget that sequence for instance I'm willing to bet that you put your shoes on to go running before you go running that's sort of a duh and if you're like me you drink your water your coffee your
yante before you go running the point here is that if you wake up in the morning and you like caffeine before you go for a run there are certain series of action steps that you need to carry out to hydrate make that cup of coffee or tea drink it put on your shoes head out the door you need to sequence things properly but you don't want to to commit your long-term or even your short-term memory stores to carrying out that sequence you simply want to be able to carry out that sequence and then discard that
information about the sequence and focus your attention on for instance what trajectory you're going to run through the park or around your neighborhood then you want to discard that information and you want to lean into the next portion of your day and so on and so on in fact working memory is involved in essentially every activity both cognitive and motor from the point wake up in the morning until the time you go to sleep at night for every single day of your life and we know this because there are indeed people who have diminished working
memory or even lack working memory entirely although the latter is somewhat rare it has happened and as you can imagine they have a complete failure of ability to sequence activities and their lives are extremely difficult they need a ton of assistance from other people even more assistants than do people who have minimal or no long-term memory okay so this is really highlighting just how important working memory is working memory is basically the way that you navigate any immediate environment and as I mentioned earlier it's very closely tied to attention because in order to know what
to do now and then what to do subsequently and then subsequent to that you need to be able to hold your attention to the things you need to do so working memory and attention collaborate literally at a neural circuit level and at a neurochemical level in order to allow you to move through your day in an Adaptive functional way and people who have challenges with attention or Focus or working memory and sometimes it can be hard to dissociate which one they're having challenges with really have a hard time moving through life as compared to people
whose attention and working memory is more robust now the good news is today we're going to talk about working memory some of the neural circuits involved and some of the neurochemicals involved that can augment or improve working memory and we're also going to talk about what one can do to directly increase the amount of neurotransmission of those particular chemicals within the circuits that control working memory in other words to improve your working memory now I can talk about working memory and the mechanisms Etc all day long but as is often the case sometimes it's better
to not just learn about Concepts but actually to experience them in real time so what we're going to do now is I'm actually going to give you a working memory test this is the sort of working memory test that you would take if you were to go into a psychology laboratory or a neuroscience Laboratory and they were studying working memory in humans now there's another advantage to us doing this in real time right here as you're listening or as you're listening and watching and that's because you're going to get data you're going to get information
about what your Baseline working memory capacity is and you're going to want to keep those data in your short-term memory stores maybe even your long-term memory stores but certainly your short-term memory stores because shortly later in this episode I'm going to talk about different ways to improve your working memory depending on where your Baseline working memory starts which by the way turns out to be a pretty good proxy for the levels of a neuromodulator called dopamine within the neural circuits that control working memory so right now let's take a working memory task we're going to
do this purely through audio form because I realize some people are watching and listening to this on YouTube and others are just listening to this episode so there are not going to be any visual cues or slides that I present and that's perhaps what distinguishes what we're to do most from what would happen in a laboratory typically in a laboratory there would be some visual presentation of what I'm about to say but here because of the format that most of you are consuming this information by we're going to do this purely by Audio so the
first test of your working memory is very simple I'm going to read off a series of letters and your task is to remember as many of those letters as you can the first string of letters is J K k z p i okay just to make this really easy I'm going to say it twice although typically in a working memory task it would just be said once but I'm going to make this extra easy j k z p i okay now you in your own head can try and recite back those letters if you like
okay second string of letters r r o m k l e I'm going to make this extra simple and do it again not typical for a working memory task but there are some working memory tasks where that happens r o m k l e okay now a third string of letters this one's going to be a little bit longer so queue up that working memory and attention w a c q v d n I'll repeat that again w a c q v d n how many of the letters I just read can you remember okay
so depending on how many letters you can remember perhaps you have a low moderate or high degree of working memory keep in mind that some of you are perhaps doing other things you're attending to driving or other tasks within your home or your office and so perhaps you weren't able to pay full attention so there'll be some variation there but nonetheless after reading each of those strings of letters you were asked to recall those letters in your mind and if you wrote them down and you're rereading them yes that's cheating but how about this what
if I were to ask you now about the simplest first string of letters the one that consisted of only five letters how many of you can remember any of those five letters now okay I can't hear you if you're shouting them out uh I can't see you if you're raising your hand but chances are most of you have forgotten the first series of letters even though it was quite short and you could remember it early on that ability to remember that string of letters when you first heard them and indeed I read them twice so
I'd be very surprised if any of you couldn't remember that string of letters after hearing them twice but I also read you some other letters in the interim okay so that now just a couple minutes later I'm asking you to remember that first string of five letters and assuming that you didn't write it down you're not cheating chances are you remember anywhere from two to zero of those letters in that first word which is a perfect example of your working memory nothing got committed to short-term much less long-term memory rather your working memory was able
to work with that information hold it in mind for just as long as you thought you needed to know that information but then thank goodness that information was discarded you didn't know that I was going to ask you for that first string of letters again after reading you the longer string of letters but I did that deliberately to show you how your working memory works so in some sense the working memory task is a bit unusual in that it's a test of yes memory in the very very short term but also a test of your
ability to forget to discard information that's not critical and that gets us back to the original definition of working memory which is our ability to attend to specific small batches of information remember it for just as long as we think we need to and then to discard that information and by the way if you want to know what those first five letters were they were j k z p i I'd like to take a brief moment and thank one of our sponsors and that's ag1 ag1 is a vitamin mineral probiotic drink that also contains adaptogens
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in the brain that affords them either high or low working memory capacity now in reality it's a distribution in fact it's what we call a normal distribution so it really isn't two bins but during today's discussion and in fact in a lot of laboratory studies we can actually bin people into these two groups the neural circuitry underlying working memory involves a lot of different brain locations that is a lot of different neural networks collaborating to create this thing we call working memory however there are a couple of key hubs that is locations within the brain
that are especially important for working memory the ones that I'd like to focus focus on today involve the prefrontal cortex so this is neural real estate that resides just behind the forehead and the neurons in the brain stem so further back in the brain that manufacture dopamine and that send their little wires that we call axons up to the prefrontal cortex to release dopamine dopamine is a neuromodulator many people are familiar with dopamine and familiar with it in the context of motivation and drive sometimes people mistakenly think it's only involved in pleasure but dopamine is
involved in motivation and drive when dopamine systems go Ary that is if their levels get too high that can create manic States it can create addictive States when dopamine levels are too low you can get movement challenges such as in Parkinson's which is a deficit or a literal destruction of the neurons that manufacture dopamine there are a bunch of different areas of the brain that those dopamine neurons in the brain stem project to but for right now we're going to focus almost entirely on the dopamine projections from the brain stem to the prefrontal cortex which
is called the misoc cortical circuitry I'm not going to get into the origins or the meaning of the misoc cortical versus other dopamine projection systems I did that in a couple of episodes about ADHD and attention and dopamine in particular and you can find those at huberman lab.com just put dopamine and circuits into the search function and it will take you to those particular time stamps where I describe that but since we want to keep things fairly top Contour at the level of neural circuit here just know that there are a bunch of neurons that
manufacture dopamine back in the brain stem that send their axons those little wires up to the prefrontal cortex and that the amount of dopamine released per unit time so in a certain amount of time strongly dictates the extent to which working memory capacity is going to be high medium or low now I want to be very clear because I'm going to come back to this a little bit later again and again it is the case that when dopamine levels are lower that is either there are fewer neurons that have the potential to release dopamine in
the frontal cortex or for whatever reason less is being released in the frontal cortex that working memory performance tends to be lower as compared to conditions where dopamine release or the availability of dopamine is higher however it is not the case that more dopamine is always going to equate to improved working memory this is so important that I'm going to say it again it is not always the case that increasing the amount of dopamine Transmission in the frontal cortex leads to improvements in working memory there is a specific criteria that allows us to predict whether
or not it will improve or maintain or actually degrade working memory performance so before you head to the end of the podcast to try and figure out ways to increase dopamine to improve working memory please keep that fact in mind don't just commit it to your working memory commit it to your short and long-term memory because that's very important if your goal is to improve your working memory with that said I do want to describe just a little little bit of research showing the relationship between having a low working memory span as it's called the
ability to only remember a few letters or numbers or short batches of information as compared to a high working memory span meaning longer strings of letters longer strings of numbers which of course in the real world translates to being able to carry out shorter versus longer action sequences as described earlier in the scenario where you're getting up in the morning and you're making coffee and you're heading out for run etc etc people do differ in terms of their working memory capacity and there's a classic study done by kols and desposito and colleagues this was published
in 2008 where they had a way to label the amount of dopamine that is available for release in the frontal cortex in human subjects they did this by the injection of a specific Dy that Dy gets taken up specifically by the neurons in the brain that manufacture dopamine then they were able to image the brains of those people while those people were Wide Awake using something called positron emission tomorrow graphy again the specific tool isn't necessarily important but since some of you like to know and what they found is that for people that had a
high working memory span that is could remember long strings of numbers or letters or other information they tended to be the people that had more dopamine available for release in the frontal cortex either because they had more of the dopamine neurons themselves or similar number of neurons but those neurons had more dopamine to release okay and they also found the converse individuals that had a low working memory span and ability had less dopamine available for release so that establishes a correlation but it's not causal a different study which is also a classic was carried out
by brazowy Brown roswold and Goldman and this is a really important study because in this study they were able to introduce small amounts of dopamine directly into the cortex and evaluate working memory capacity now anytime working memory test is done the same pattern always emerges this is regardless of any dopamine being infused into the brain which is people and animals for that matter are very good at remembering short spans of numbers letters or other types of information so if you tell them one thing like the letter a and then you ask them do you remember
the letter almost everybody remembers that but if you give them a string of 10 letters they remember fewer of those 10 letters that's sort of obvious but it's an important point to emphasize nonetheless and so there's a kind of a dropping off curve of performance as one progresses from fewer to Greater number of items to be remembered in this study when dopamine was introduced to the frontal cortex the number of things that individuals could remember simply increased it was a very straightforward result more dopamine introduced allowed longer letter number and information strings to be remembered
and of course forgotten because that's what working memory involves remembering and then discarding of information shortly thereafter now the findings I just described complement what I said before which is the naturally occurring experiment bring people into the lab measure their working memory span look at how much dopamine they make higher dopamine better working memory lower dopamine lower working memory the experiment I just described was one in which dopamine is introduced showing that dopamine is very likely the rate limiting or the capacity limiting it's probably the better way to put it the capacity limiting neurom modulator
for improving working memory that's a fancy nerd speaker way of saying more dopamine allows for better working memory but a critical feature of this experiment is that they did a number of experiments where they didn't introduce dopamine but instead they introduced other neuromodulators to the prefrontal cortex such as norepinephrine or serotonin and the interesting finding is that the addition of norepinephrine or serotonin which of course are other neuromodulators that can change the firing patterns of neurons in the prefrontal cortex but elsewhere as well it's just that in this case they were added to the prefrontal
cortex had no effect on working memory it neither improved nor degraded working memory when those neuromodulators were introduced in other words dopamine and perhaps only dopamine seems to be the dominant neuromodulator for regulating the degree that is whether or not you have small medium or large amounts of working memory capacity in the prefrontal cortex and of course there have been a bunch of other experiments that are worth mentioning briefly in this context such as taking people that have a high working memory capacity and indeed have their brains imaged and one sees that they have high
levels of Baseline dopamine especially the dopamine projecting to the prefrontal cortex and then they're given a drug that depletes dopamine within the prefrontal cortex and their performance drops and so what's so nice about the literature around working memory is that while I'm not covering all of that literature exhaustively it all tends to Jive it all points in a direction whereby the levels of of dopamine being released in the prefrontal cortex during working memory tasks correlates very strongly with capacity to perform working memory tasks lower dopamine lower working memory span as it's called higher dopamine higher
working memory span okay so next we're going to do another working memory task different than the one we did earlier and we're going to do that with a specific purpose in mind which is for you to be able to determine what your working memory capacity is and by extension your Baseline levels of dopamine or at least the levels of dopamine that are likely being released into your prefrontal cortex while you do these working memory tasks in other words we're going to try and figure out whether or not you are of the low medium or high
working memory capacity and of course we're doing that in part to try and establish whether or not you likely have low medium or high amounts of dopamine available for release in the prefrontal cortex of course we're not putting you into a positron Omission tomography scanning device we aren't able to do that for obvious reasons but keep in mind that what we about to do is very similar and in some cases identical to laboratory studies where the researchers were trying to determine what people's levels of dopamine within these particular neural networks we've been discussing the misoc
cortical pathway are likely to be in other words performance on The Working memory task that we are about to do is a decent indication of what the dopamine levels that are available for release in your prefrontal cortex perhaps might be now I say perhaps might be because I don't want to cause any unnecessary alarm if for instance you fall into the low working memory span group in fact if you fall into the low working memory span group there are actually some terrific tools that you can use to improve dopamine Transmission in those Pathways and improve
your working memory I also don't want people to get the impression that somehow performance on this working memory task is reflective of some larger dopamine issue in the brain and certainly it is not I repeat it is not diagnostic of Parkinson's or any kind of neurod deener generative condition although I will say that deficits in working memory are common in patients with Parkinson for obvious reasons those patients have deficits in dopamine neurons not only production but the number of dopamine neurons it's one of the Hallmark features of Parkinson's but also in things like traumatic brain
injury Etc but the working memory task that you're about to take when given to a general population or a group of undergraduates or you know so-called normals or typical control subjects which all of you are okay so unless you're dealing with with a traumatic brain injury or you know you have Parkinson's we know that the data that you're going to get back right now is very similar to the data that people get back when they do these sorts of studies in a laboratory that is it's typical for some people to have a short working memory
span some people to have a medium working memory span and some people that have a high working memory span and today we're actually just going to divide into two bins short working memory span and high working memory span and we can have some degree of confidence that correlates with the amount of dopamine available for release in the front Al cortex but and this is a very important Point as we progress along this discussion of working memory the neural circuits dopamine Etc I want to make clear something that I said earlier which is that it is
not the case that increasing the amount of dopamine that's available always increases working memory spin in fact there's a common circumstance whereby people with a relatively High degree of working memory capacity increase their dopamine levels even further using pharmacology or other methods that we'll discuss and their per performance actually can degrade okay so if any of that is confusing now we'll make it all very simple going forward so that if you decide to implement any of the protocols discussed in this episode that you are aware of what you can expect and whether or not you
in the category of people that should or perhap should not incorporate those protocols okay let's test your working memory again this time the working memory task is going to be a little bit different than the one you did previously this working memory task involves me reading six different sentences to you and your job is to pay attention to these six sentences because you're going to be asked some information about these sentences in a few moments the first sentence is real estate costs are going up the second sentence is the Atlantic Ocean is warm in summer
the third sentence is there's a lot of interest now in electric cars the fourth sentence is some reptiles eat only one once a year the fifth sentence is kids nowadays look at screens more than 60% of their Waking Life and the sixth and final sentence is football can mean different sports depending on the country okay so I read you six sentences they were moderately long I confess your job for the working memory task is now to recall as many of the final words of each of those sentences as you can I'll give you a few
moments to do that now before I tell you what the final word of each of those sentences actually is I want to remind everybody that working memory capacity follows a normal distribution so some of you will be able to remember the final word of perhaps five or even six of those sentences although I must say that is exceedingly rare some of you are going to be able to remember three to four of the final words of those sentences and that's more typical that actually represents the average or the mean as we call it and then
fewer people although still many of you will only be able to remember one or two of the final words of those sentences okay so now I'm assuming that most of you have tried to call to memory the final word of as many of those six sentences as you can and maybe you've written them down or you've typed them into your phone or you have some record of what you recall those six final words of those sentences are now I'm going to tell you the actual final word of each of those sentences the final word of
the first sentence was up because as you may recall the sentence was real estate costs are going up the final word of the second sentence was summer because the sentence was the Atlantic Ocean is warm in summer the final word of the third sentence was Cars because the sentence was there is a lot of interest in electric cars the final word of the fourth sentence was year because the sentence was some reptiles eat only once a year the final word of the fifth sentence was life because the sentence was kids nowadays look at screens more
than 60% of their Waking Life and the final word of the sixth sentence was country because the sentence was football can mean different sports depending on the country okay so be honest with yourself and tell yourself and you don't have to tell anyone else if you don't want to how many of the final words of those six sentences you could remember correctly it's important that you remember them correctly again the number of words that you can recall that is your working memory span is going to vary from person to person but we can take the
normal distribution of those scores and sort of draw a line down the middle and say that if you could remember three to six of the final words of those sentences correctly you're going to fall into the high working memory span group whereas if you could only remember one or two or maybe zero of the final words of those six sent then you're going to be in the low working memory span group again I don't want to alarm anybody this doesn't mean that you have any Global memory deficits or dopamine deficits but it is important especially
if you plan to apply any of the protocols to improve working memory that you Faithfully that is you accurately report your working memory performance at least to yourself now as you recall whether or not you have low or high and here we are just binning into low and high there's no medium we've divided right at that line we're saying if you can remember 3 to six we're calling that high working memory span at least for this discussion and if you can remember fewer than three even down to zero of the final words of those sentences
that's low working memory span we're dividing it in two we divided you into two groups and we do know when this has been done in large numbers of human subjects and some in some cases all of those subjects have their brains imaged for the amount of dopamine available for release in their prefrontal cortex that short workking memory span correlates with lower amounts of dopamine whereas higher working memory span or longer working memory span whatever you want to call it correlates with more dopamine available for release in the prefrontal cortex now this is where things get
really interesting and frankly really exciting for everybody especially the folks in the low working memory span group work from martus bazito and colleagues at UC Berkeley as well as other Laboratories have explored the consequences of increasing dopamine levels in the brain of typical populations of individuals so these are not people with Parkinson's or TBI but undergraduate students which we do realize is not completely representative of the quote unquote normal population outside the university but also people from the community so people who are not University students and so on and the ways that they've increased dopamine
in those individuals had tended to rely on pharmacology so these are prescription drugs that most often have been developed for theat treat M of Parkinson's in order to increase dopamine levels but for some other purposes as well drugs like bromocryptine which we know are so-called dopamine agonis and agonis is a drug that has the consequence of increasing the amount of a given neurochemical in this case dopamine whereas an antagonist is a drug that either blocks or prevents or somehow lowers the total available amount of a certain chemical such as dopamine or serotonin Etc so bromocryptine
is a drug that increases dopamine so when human subjects came into a laboratory didn't take any drug no bromocryptine yet and of course they were being evaluated for whether or not they were taking any meds for ADHD their caffeine consumption Etc there were certain rule-in and Rule outs for that study but certainly people that were taking any kind of prescription medication for ADHD were not included in the study or were eliminated from the study because those drugs can indeed increase dopamine as well as some other neuromodulators such as norepinephrine and epinephrine I covered all that
in two ADHD episodes that I did which again you can find at hubman lab.com just go to the search function put in ADHD in any event in these studies they took people that had not taken any drugs to increase dopamine had their working memory measured very similarly to the way that you measured your working memory a few minutes ago with the six sentence business that we did and then they took bromocryptine and they either took a low a moderate or high dose of bromocryptine and 90 minutes later they took a working memory task and what
was observed was very interesting you can probably predict what it is based on everything I've set up until now individuals that initially had low Baseline levels of dopamine and therefore shorter working memory span so they only remembered zero to about three of the final words of that six sentence series their performance significantly improved they were able to remember four and in some cases up to six the final words of those sentences now that is in complete agreement with everything we set up until now simply says that dopamine is important for working memory if you start
off with lower dopamine stores or dopamine availability for releasing the prefrontal cortex lower working memory performance increase dopamine through ingestion of bromocryptine which is this dopamine Agonist all of the circuit changes that we want and would expect to improve working memory occur and indeed working memory improves okay very straightforward that's interesting but the even more interesting part of the study is that individuals that already had high working memory span when they took bromocryptine at a low or a moderate dose their working memory did not increase further now if somebody was already getting six of the
final words of those six sentences well then of course they couldn't improve their performance anymore but many of the people in the high working memory span group of course only remembered four in some cases three typically it'll be four five or six of the final words of those sentences when they took bromocryptine at low or moderate doses their working memory did not improve significantly there was either no change or a very modest change and here's where things get really interesting when individuals who already had a high working memory span took the highest dose of bromocryptine
and by the way studies verified that the amount of dopamine available indeed increased so that was important to do and they did that well their working memory performance actually decreased such that now they had a short or a low working memory span so what this tells us is that the relationship between dopamine and working memory follows an inverted u-shaped function so imagine a u and then just flip it over meaning if you have low dopamine availability in the prefrontal cortex working memory span is short as you increase that amount working memory becomes greater but if
you increase the amount of dopamine in the prefrontal cortex too much working memory span actually drops significantly below the Baseline that you started with now this is important for a number of reasons not the least of which is the known relationship between working memory and attention now this is very important to understand in the context of ADHD but also for people who don't have ADHD and are struggling to maintain focus and attention and carry out working memory tasks throughout their normal everyday life not in the laboratory but just moving through life because these days we
hear a lot a lot a lot about people struggling with focus and attention perhaps we don't know perhaps in part due to overuse of smartphone social media Etc although there's not yet a direct causal relationship that's been established the data that are emerging suggests that indeed overuse of those things can cause problems but regardless of the source there does seem to be more ADHD both in kids and in adults and subclinical challenges in focus and attention and here's where things get really interesting as it relates to the neural circuitry work from desposito and colleagues and
other Laboratories as well have shown using the similar Paradigm that I described before giving people drugs to increase their Baseline levels of dopamine above their initial starting point of short or long-term memory span capacity and then had people can perform different types of working memory tasks that tap into two different aspects of attention in working memory up until now we've been talking about working memory it's kind of just one thing but working memory actually involves two things or at least two things the first is that in order to carry out a working memory task into
to attend to something to really focus we need the ability to rule out distractors we need to be able to not pay attention to things that would otherwise distract Us in addition to that we need to be able to switch from one context to the next right making the cup of coffee to putting on one shoes and heading out the door and in some cases layering different contexts together talking on the phone while tying one shoes and so on and so forth what this work shows us is that the ability to task switch and context
switch that is to shift around what it is that we're paying attention to and interleave different things that we're paying attention to something that's so critical for moving through our daily lives is largely dependent on the dopamine projections to a structure in the brain called the basil ganglia which is a structure I've talked about before on this podcast but if you didn't hear about it we can just broadly Define this structure as being involved in movement generation and stopping movement generation in fact it's often discussed as the neural circuitry that generates go as in do
commands and noo don't do commands so the basil ganglia are involved in task switching and they involved in task switching in part by sending certain commands to go do certain things and no go to not do other things okay task switching stop doing this start doing that start doing that stop doing this and sometimes to varying extents right I mean we could take any real world scenario of tying one shoes while talking on the phone and we could micro analyze it in the context of this but I think uh if you think about it just
a little bit you understand that in order to perform daily task we need to be able to task switch and that's not always a start one task end start a new task end often times we're interleaving different tasks to varying degrees now the other aspect of working memory and attention is to eliminate distractions to not pay attention to the irrelevant stuff in one's environment or even the irrelevant stuff on your own body like you can't get distracted by you know a button that you know might be only partially buttoned or maybe some little something on
your sleeve if you're trying to do something else at that moment okay and people with ADHD and people who have subclin clinical challenges and focus really have a hard time with this right you know the the sort of stereotype is you know the oh look a squirrel that whole thing but really this typically exists as a more subtle and challenging phenomenon for people where they either can't remember what they were doing or they're simply drawn down different trajectories different thought trajectories or action trajectories and then they have a hard time making it back to the
original thing that they were trying to focus on and we know based on these studies of dopamine and neuroimaging that eliminating distractors is largely the consequence of dopamine neurons projecting to the prefrontal cortex okay now why am I telling you all this neural circuitry stuff well yes there are a bunch of studies showing that if you selectively activate the neurons that send dopamine into the basil ganglia you improve Tas switching ability without an improved ability to rule out distractors or if you selectively increase the amount of dopamine from neurons projecting the prefrontal cortex that you're
able to selectively improve the elimination of dist tractors without improving task switching ability for practical purposes in this discussion we want to pay careful attention to whether or not the data tell us that those particular protocols those particular approaches are globally increasing dopamine that is increasing the activity of dopamine neurons projecting to the basil ganglia and the prefrontal cortex or selectively to the basil ganglia or selectively to the prefrontal cortex and what I can tell you now is that fortunately there are several prot some of which are behavioral some of which involve specific over-the-counter supplements
and some of which involve prescription pharmacology that can tap into each of these systems independently as well as globally increased dopamine to improve focus and working memory at large I'd like to take a quick break to acknowledge our sponsor element element is an electrolyte drink that has everything you need and nothing you don't that means zero sugar and the appropriate ratios of the electrolytes sodium magnesium and potassium and that correct ratio of electrolytes is extremely important because every cell in your body but especially your nerve cells your neurons relies on electrolytes in order to function
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a free sample pack again that's drink element.com huberman okay so let's talk about protocols to improve working memory specifically by way of changing levels of dopamine in the brain now I've discussed dopamine many times before in this podcast in fact we have entire episodes devoted to optimizing and regulating dopamine and of course dopamine comes up within the context of the ADHD episodes and episodes as well and again if you have specific questions about dopamine or any other topic for that matter if you go to huberman lab.com that website has been engineered so that you can
put one word such as dopamine but also multiple keywords so perhaps dopamine exercise or dopamine cold plunge Etc into the search function and it will take you to the specific timestamps of multiple episodes where those topics were discussed as well as newsletters where some of that information has been condensed into short PDF form Etc so we certainly are going going to cover some material about improving dopamine for sake of improving working memory now but if you're generally interested in the science and pharmacology of dopamine and protocols to modulate dopamine levels all of that can be
found at huberman lab.com okay so let's say you have a short working memory span or a moderate working memory span and you want to experiment with increasing levels of dopamine for sake of improving working memory now there are a lot of different ways that one could imagine doing that let's start with the behavioral tools known to increase dopamine stores that is shown in peer-reviewed studies to increase dopamine stores within certain circuits of the brain that are relevant for working memory performance and the protocol that immediately leaps to mind is the use of certain non-sleep deep
rest protocols now non-sleep deep rest or nsdr is actually a term that I coined because there is a practice that's been established for many hundreds of years called Yoga Nidra which actually means yoga sleep whereby individuals potentially you if you decide to do them lie down listen to to a script that is listen to an audio script which generally instructs you to do long exhale breathing to deliberately relax your musculature of your face and of your body and Yoga Nidra typically also involves doing certain intentions and the instruction always given at the beginning of Yoga
Nidra is that you should try to not fall asleep now some people sometimes fall asleep some people don't fall asleep but the idea and there are data to support that Yoga Nidra puts people into kind of a shallow pattern of sleep um certainly not deep sleep s and not rapid eye movement sleep but it's a very interesting and unusual brain state for which we're starting to understand more and actually I have some plans in the not too distant future to collaborate with Matthew Walker the author of the book why we sleep and some other colleagues
to try and figure out what exact patterns of neural activity are taking place in the brain and rest of nervous system during Yoga Nidra and this similar protocol which I call nonsleep deep rest the difference between Yoga Nidra and non-sleep deep rest is that nonsleep deep rest doesn't include any of the intentions and removes a lot of the kind of opaque or sometimes called mystical language from the protocol now a great thing is that yoga needra scripts or protocols as well as nsdr scripts or Protocols are available totally zero cost you can find them certainly
on apps like waking up but also on YouTube for instance if you put nsdr and my last name there's a 10-minute nsdr script there there are a lot of yoga NRA scripts if you prefer a female voice there are a lot of different excellent female voices out there one in particular particular that I like very much is Kelly boy first name Kelly last name b y s she has both yoga NRA and ndr scripts of various durations of anywhere from 8 minutes all the way out to I believe 45 minutes why am I telling you
all this well there have been several studies but in particular one and I do realize we're talking about only one study but the results are really intriguing as it relates to what we're talking about today in this study they had individuals do effectively an nsdr protocol they call it yoganidra and the protocol they used was essentially a yoga Nedra script they had people lie down and listen to a yoga Nedra script and to perform yoga Nedra and they evaluated the amount of dopamine available within the brain both prior to and after performing this yoga NRA
script and what they discovered was that after performing a Yoga Nidra protocol the Baseline levels of dopamine that is the amount of dopamine available in the basil ganglia and a few other structures of the human brain of course these are humans was increased by as much as 60% as compared to individuals that did a different protocol not yoganidra not nsdr now did that study evaluate lots of different durations of yoga Nedra AKA nstr no they looked at fairly long hour plus Yoga Nidra sessions however there's some other data that have explored Yoga Nidra AKA nstr
in the context of cognitive performance and a few other circumstances all of which point to the fact that cognitive performance and in particular cognitive performance tasks that have a working memory element to them so they weren't the exact working memory task that you did earlier but they have a working memory element to them that is subjects had to keep certain small batches of information in mind and then discard that information in order to be able to perform the task well all of those show significant improvements in task performance so while something like nsdr or Yoga
Nidra might sound kind of mystical or kind of you know wishy-washy or I guess as the kids say weak sauce uh to some of you it is anything but weak sauce it is really powerful stuff and it's powerful stuff as it relates to the very neurochemicals and neuros circuits that are involved in working memory so if I were to take a step back and just say okay what are some zeroc cost very low if any risk protocols that one could perform in order to improve dopamine levels without having to ingest anything take anything and really
do much of anything at all except lie there do this progressive muscle relaxation there are a few other things involved in nsdr as well which you'll learn if you decide to try them and improve or increase the levels of dopamine availability in the brain significantly well then nsdr and Yoga Nidra really are the first line tools if one wants to do that I think it's reasonable to say that and as I mentioned before there's no reason to think that there's any risk of doing nstr yoga NRA you know provide that you're lying down in a
safe place as opposed to like in the middle of the road or something but assuming you do it in a safe location I would encourage you to try it for really for 20 to 30 minutes when you first explore it perhaps you do longer although I personally have a hard time doing long yoga needer scripts regularly a full hour is a big commitment I don't generally have that much time I often will do a 10-minute nsdr have there been brain Imaging experiments done for each and all of these yoga needra scripts to determine the amount
or if there's any dopamine increase within the brain no but I think that we can safely extrapolate from that wonderful study out of Scandinavia that showed that when human subjects do this yoga NRA protocol that there's a significant increase in Baseline dopamine levels within key neural structures that relate to working memory now many of you have perhaps heard that getting in a cold plunge or taking a cold shower or provided you can do it safely getting into a cold ocean or a cold lake can significantly maybe even double or even triple your circulating dopamine levels
and indeed that is true it has been shown that when people get into cold water typically up to their neck and that cold water by the way can range in temperature anywhere from low 40s to low 60s depending on how long you stay in that there is a significant increase in the so-called circulating catac colomines what are the catac colomines the catamin are dopamine norepinephrine and epinephrine now the evidence for the catac colomine increase in response to cold water mainly stems from two studies and in particular one and in that particular study they had people
get into I wouldn't say super cold water it was in the low 60° and by the way I'm speaking in Fahrenheit here and they had those human subjects submerged in water up to their neck I think they actually had them sitting in lawn chairs on the bottom of a pool uh but again their heads were above water so they could breathe and they stayed in for quite a long while you know 45 minutes or longer and it was observed that there was a big big statistically significant increase in epinephrine norepinephrine in dopamine that lasted several
hours or more this is one of the reasons why if you've ever done deliberate cold exposure as it's called it often is uncomfortable when you get in but then when you get out you feel different you feel really good in most cases provided if you're me you take a warm shower afterwards yes I like to do that I realize if you want to increase your metabolism perhaps it's better to not warm up afterwards I like a nice warm shower or to get in the sauna afterwards that's just me but nonetheless deliberate cold exposure clearly induces
a state shift of mind and body that most people provided they do it correctly and they don't go into water that's far too cold for them for too long they report as pleasant and I think it's reasonable to assume that some of that is the consequence of these increases in catac colomines which is why many people opt for a cold shower which if you're me cold shower followed by a warmer or hot shower or a cold Plunge in the morning or maybe even just once or twice a week many people like them typically people like
getting out of them and the feeling that they have after they do them although some of you sickos really like the feeling of getting in and being it but not me the point here is that if we were to take a look at the landscape of zeroc cost behavioral Tools in fact behavioral tools that could potentially save you money meaning reduce your heating bill that are known to increase the very neurochemicals AKA dopamine that are involved and improving working memory I think it's reasonable to assume that a cold shower about 30 to 60 minutes prior
to doing any kind of working memory task or any kind of activity that would require increased Focus could be okay we don't know this specific Studies have not been done but could be in theory it makes sense mechanistically it's logically sound could be done after deliberate cold exposure and indeed many people report not just feeling a bit of you know mild Euphoria or feeling good after deliberate cold exposure but also an increased capacity to focus in fact so much so that a lot of people who do deliberate cold exposure say that they don't require as
much caffeine in order to maintain their alertness and energy which shouldn't be surprising to us at all right I mean it's increasing cacola means we know this so that's another protocol that you could explore as well is there an important difference or not between deliberate cold exposure done by cold shower or deliberate cold exposure in a cold plunge or the ocean frankly there haven't been a lot of studies comparing those but I think it stands to reason that if you have access to a cold plunge or a cold body of water that you can safely
get into up to your neck for 30 seconds to a minute if it's 50° or less right if you get in colder water we know for instance if you get into say 45 Dee water and you only get in for 30 seconds you're going to get a big increase in the catacol amines perhaps as big as the catacol amine increase that you would get from being in 60° water for 45 minutes most people don't have 45 minutes to sit around in water up to their neck so most people opt for 30 seconds to as much
as 3 minutes deliberate cold exposure in a shower or cold plunge or other body of water again only do this if you can do it safely never ever please for the love of God please never ever do any kind of hyperventilation breathing or breath holding while doing deliberate cold exposure because you can pass out you can die don't combine breath work and deliberate cold exposure just don't separate those two things completely okay but deliberate coal exposure we know is a very reliable way to increase the catacol amines which includes dopamine so if you want to
explore deliberate cold exposure protocols get into the Nuance of temperature and duration Etc you can find that completely zero cost go to hubman lab.com go to the menu tab scroll down to newsletter and go to the cold exposure news letter where it details all of that in short PDF form now some of you are probably asking hey what if I was in the high or long working memory span group I ought to have high Baseline levels of dopamine should I not do Yoga Nidra or nsdr should I not do deliberate cold exposure well there you're
just going to have to experiment again there's essentially zero risk to doing yoganidra nsdr as I mentioned before deliberate cold exposure there's always some risk getting into water cold water people always want to know how cold well the newsletter gets to this but I'll just tell you right now as well the ideal temperature is the temperature that you can safely get into and stay in for a duration of 30 seconds to 3 minutes before getting out some people op to go longer but I think 30 seconds to 3 minutes is a good duration to work
with for most people especially if you're going to do it frequently so the temperature should be safe for you to stay in for that duration but uncomfortable enough that there's some impulse to want to get out that you have to of work to stay in there that you have to kind of overcome that adrenaline release and the impulse to get out okay so for some people that's going to be 45° for some people be 40° depends on how cold adapted you are depends on how rested you are there is no specific temperature you have to
really gauge for yourself and so airor on the side of caution and you can experiment provided you experiment within the margins of safety so if you found during the working memory task that you took today that you have a very good working memory I don't think there's any reason to avoid yoganidra nsdr and deliberate cold exposure in fact there may be reasons to increase your dopamine and other catacol amines by way of nsdr Yoga Nidra deliberate cold exposure perhaps for working memory performance maybe it could increase further perhaps it would decrease performance in which case
there you got your answer you don't have to do those protocols again and you certainly wouldn't want to do them before anything that involves a lot of working memory and attention but of course those protocols have other benefits as well so there's no reason to avoid them entirely just perhaps avoid them within the context of trying to improve working memory however if you're somebody that has challenges with working memory challenges with attention challenges with Focus well then I think that the protocols I've been talking about up until now would be an excellent first foray into
the sorts of things that you could do to increase dopamine and of course those other catacol amines as a way to see whether or not it augments your focus and attention and working memory capacity now some of you are probably shouting shouting shouting what about exercise does an exercise increase dopamine it does yes there are other things that increase dopamine it's not just exercise there are activities that increase dopamine some people are saying wait doesn't playing video games increase dopamine sex increases dopamine chocolate increases dopamine yes yes indeed those things can increase dopamine what's interesting
and important about the protocols I've been talking about however nsdr yoga Nedra deliberate cold exposure is not just that they increase dopamine but the duration over which they increase dopamine okay this is very important if you want to understand more about the relationship between dopamine spikes as they're called and dopamine Baseline and why I'm emphasizing these tools that cause large longlasting increases in Baseline dopamine check out the episodes I did on optimizing dopamine we've got a link to them in the show note captions now before I talk about other ways to increase dopamine for sake
of improving working memory things like over-the-counter supplements like El tyrosine makuna pururin things like that I do briefly want to mention and I promise briefly I know sometimes I say briefly and then I spend 20 minutes telling you about something but very briefly I just want to spend two minutes telling you about protocols that we do not yet know whether or not they increase dopamine levels but we do know that they improve working memory because after all this episode is about working memory not just about dopamine in working memory it has been shown that the
use of binaural beats okay binaural beats being the presentation or the listening to sounds of different frequencies in the two ears typically by headphones I think that's been shown to work best and there's a subtraction between the two frequencies such that the brain tends to entrain or start to follow a particular frequency within not the entire brain but certain neural circuits so if you've heard of say 15 Hertz binaural beats or 40 Herz binural beats that doesn't mean that you listen to a 15 Hertz sound or a 40 HZ sound you listen to two different
frequencies of sound right Hertz is just a measurement of sound frequency in each of the two ears and then the difference between them is 40 Herz or 15 Hertz and there are several studies that show not enormous okay I want to be clear small to moderate improvements in working memory performance but in some cases significant Improvement and I'll provide a link to these two papers in the show note captions but I'll just briefly describe them by way of their title and their major conclusions the first is a study entitled the effects of binaural and monoral
beat stimulation on cognitive functioning in subjects with different levels of emotionality a really interesting study published in 2019 it was a relatively small number of subjects only 24 participants 16 males eight males between 19 and 31 years old listen to these 40 Herz binaural beats and by the way it's very easy easy to find apps and other sources of 40 HZ binaural beats at zero cost or nominal cost out there um you would simply look for 40 HZ binormal beats and looked at performance on working memory tasks as well as some other cognitive tasks and
found in some cases a small to moderate but significant Improvement in cognitive performance on working memory tasks the aspect of the study looking at emotionality did not find a significant effect so it doesn't seem that emotionality uh impacts things there but nonetheless that study plus the other one entitled the effect of binaural beats on visual spatial working memory and cortical connectivity this was a study published in 2016 found generally something similar in this case they were using 15 Herz binaural beats and here I'm I'm paraphrasing produced network activity characteristic of high information transfer with consistent
connection strengths what they're really talking about is changes in neural activity patterns within the brain that led to or at least were correlated with with improvements on visual spatial working memory visual spatial working memory tasks are different than the working memory tasks that you performed earlier visual spatial working memory tasks involve the cognitive generation that is within your head of the so-called Visos spatial sketch pad so it's this idea that you see something and then you got of sketch it out in your mind you have to know the relationships between things in space pay attention
to what they are keep those in mind again because it's working memory just as long as it's necessary to perform a task that's what viso spatial working memory is as you can imagine it translates to an enormous number of everyday activities required for focus and attention and learning and performance and indeed 15 Herz binaural beats was able to produce a small but significant Improvement in that sort of working memory task so I want to emphasize again we don't know the relationship between binaural beats and dopamine at least not from these studies but I felt I'd
be remiss if I didn't mention these two studies that show that 40 Herz binaural beats 15 Herz binaural beats can indeed improve working memory performance and in these sorts of scenarios individuals are listening to the binaural beats while they are doing the working memory task and in some cases before they are doing the working memory task either seems to work it depends on the study there a bunch of other studies but I thought I'd mention binaural beats because I know a number of people are interested in them again non-pharmacologic zero cost because you can find
tools for bormal Beat Generation zero cost out there approaches to improving working memory okay what about over-the-counter compounds that are known to increase circulating dopamine that can potentially improve working memory and that indeed have been shown in peer-reviewed studies to improve working memory by way of increasing circulating presumably brain levels of dopamine well I can think of two specific categories of supplements that is over-the-counter compounds that at least at this point in time are legal in the United States that can increase dopamine levels those two are El tyrosine which is an amino acid precursor to
dopamine and Muna purines which is a believe it or not it's the uh a velvety Bean or the outer component of this velvety Bean that contains or is equivalent to 99% lopa L Doopa is a key component in the biochemical Cascade leading to the production of dopamine in fact lopa is often prescribed for Parkinson patients as a means to increase their dopamine levels there are at least three studies that I am aware of of the use of Muna purines to increase dopamine for the treatment of Parkinson's in other words Muna purines increases dopamine levels and
yes it has been shown to improve some of those symptoms of Parkinson's patients we're not talking about treatment of Parkinson's today I want to caution people against any sort of use of supplements to treat Parkinson's or other conditions without consulting your doctor all right that's very very critical to point out if we're talking about ways to increase dopamine for sake of improving working memory by way of supplementation I think we should start with El tyos because El tyrosine unlike Muna Pines is a bit further up actually it's way further up the biochemical Cascade leading to
dopamine production however it has been shown in several studies that El tyrosine supplementation can indeed increase dopamine and moreover and here I'm quoting the title of a study published in 1999 which I realized is a few years back but of course there's some excellent studies from a few years back or more tyrosine improves working memory in a multitasking environment now this particular study from Thomas at all has some interesting aspects and some aspects that made me go a little bit wide-eyed but not necessarily wide-eyed because the results are so dramatic in fact when one looks
at all of the data in this paper what you find is that supplementing with El tyrosine as they did in this study did indeed lead to improvements in working memory under multitask conditions as the title suggests those improvements were significant but they weren't enormous okay they were statistically significant but they were not enormous increases now what was enormous and the reason I got wide-eyed and still get wide-eyed is that the dosages of of tyrosine used in the study are really big they had subjects take 150 milligrams per kilogram of el crystalline tyrosine I had them
take it in applesauce for whatever reason or Placebo and they did a number of different control conditions to make sure that whatever effects of el tyrosine they observed were in fact due to El tyrosine supplementation why am I going wide-eyed When I See This 150 milligrams per Kil of tyrosine well I weigh 220 lb that's about 100 kg so if I weigh 100 kilg and it's 150 milligram for every kilogram that means that if I were a subject in the study that they would give me 15,000 milligram that is 15 gram of el tyrosine prior
to doing these cognitive tasks now 15 grams of tyrosine to me seems like a very very high dose and I frankly can't in good conscience recommend that why well maybe I'm just hypers sensitive to El tyroine but I've taken 1,000 or500 milligrams of el tyrosine and I've definitely experienced an increase in alertness from taking 1.5 gram not 15 1.5 grams of el tyrosine and in fact at a subjective level I can feel a meaningful increase in alertness and focus from 500 milligrams of el tyrosine so I can't in good conscience suest that people replicate the
exact do protocols within the study nonetheless the study as the title suggests shows that supplementing with El tyrosine can indeed increase working memory capacity especially in a multitasking environment which in many ways carries over to the sorts of requirements for working memory and attention capacity to get through life in a very focused for lack of a better word way in a very regimented do this do that task switch multiple things inter Lea that's what moving through one's day or at least work day or anything that requires cognition and focus entails so first of all I'll
just say what I always say when discussing any kind of compound or prescription drug never add or remove any supplement from your supplement regimen if you have one without consulting with your health provider first to make sure that you are safe to take that particular supplement now many Physicians MDS are not familiar with most supplements so you'll probably need to bring some literature um to the phone call or to the visit but of course there are many Healthcare Providers including some MDS that are open to supplementation especially these days um as supplements have become uh
I would say generally more accepted I mean there are certain ones like vitamin D3 that and fish oils and things like that that are more common than El tyrosine but there are many Physicians who are open to discussions about supplements such as El tyrosine if you know that you can supplement with El tyrosine safely and you opt to do so what dosages would you potentially take well here we have to look at the dosages used in these studies I think it's only fair it's only safe that we acknowledge that these dose just are really really
high and I think the logical the safe thing to do would be to start with the minimal effective dose so if you weigh 50 kilograms rather than start right off with you know the equivalent dosage to this study maybe you start with 250 milligrams of el tyrosine if you weigh a bit more like me or 100 kgrs or 75 kilg maybe you take 500 milligrams of el tyrosine and see whether or not you experience a significant effect on working memory attention and performance so the idea here is to establish the minimal effective dose I should
also point out that some people not all but some people experience a bit of a crash after El tyrosine supplementation such that they feel more alert more focused better ability to perform working memory tasks move about their day but then three or four hours later experience kind of a drop so you need to be mindful of that in fact you need to be mindful of any kind of pharmacology where you're increasing dopamine this is one of the reasons why I like the behavioral protocols that we talked about earlier because they're known to create big but
long lasting and slowly tapering off increases in dopamine and other catacol amines now for those who are curious about and perhaps even want to try Muna purines please absolutely talk to your doctor first Muna perin is essentially the equivalent of lopa lopa is a prescription drug as I mentioned before and Muna perin potently increases dopamine what dosages of Muna Pines can increase dopamine well typically in studies of Parkinson's patients but also studies exploring typical people who don't have Parkinson's in tasks or in sports performance have explored anywhere from 1 to 5 gr of Muna purins
Muna purin again is a very potent way to increase dopamine and here if your healthc care provider approves it and you decide to try it I would suggest starting with a very very low dose again to to find the minimal effective dose so maybe even just 500 milligrams not even going to the one gram dose maybe even 250 milligrams and really evaluating how much Muna pance can produce a meaningful impact on working memory and attention for you so Muna pan is kind of a bridge between over-the-counter supplements and prescription drugs I say it's a bridge
because it is Oho similar to that prescription drug L Doopa and of course there is a long list of prescription drugs that are known to be dopamine Agonist several of which many of which in fact have been shown to improve working memory you already learned about one of those before which is bromocryptine now you need a prescription from a physician to get bromocryptine but bromocryptine we know based on that work from desposito colleagues that I talked about earlier increases dopamine it does so in about 90 minutes it achieves Peak levels of dopamine about 90 minutes
and improves working memory in individuals that start off with a low working memory span and we know from neuroimaging those are the individuals with lower Baseline levels of dopamine so should you run out and ask your doctor for bromocryptine maybe most doctors won't prescribe bromocryptine for that reason I should mention that work from desposito lab and other Laboratories has shown that one of the Hallmark features of traumatic brain injury especially frontal lobe injury as well as certain neurod degenerative conditions like Parkinson's but other forms of dementia as well as ADHD involve deficits in working memory
and attention which makes sense given what we know about the symptoms of those conditions and that bromocryptine has been prescribed off Lael for the treatment of those conditions to some degree of success however those are off Lael circumstances right now as far as I know bromocryptine is not prescribed specifically for those conditions at a kind of whole population level it's not one of the drugs on the lookup table for ADHD or TBI but certain well-informed neurologists and Physicians do prescribe it for that reason there are other dopamine agonists that are relevant in this context the
ones that I think most of you will be familiar with are the drugs that increase dopamine and norepinephrine for the treatment of ADHD and I did an entire episode of The hubman Lab podcast about those compounds things like adderal things like rellin which by by the way is quite different than Aderall in terms of how much dopamine relative to norepinephrine it causes the increase of I cover all that in those episodes again you can simply go to hubman lab.com put ADHD Aderall or ADHD riddlin and I talk about other things as well I also took
a little bit about modafanil which is a entirely different category of drug known to improve cognitive performance in some cases in ADHD but in everybody so there are a lot of different drugs that can improve working memory most of those do so by increasing transmission of dopamine or availability of dopamine somehow changing dopamine levels in the brain by increasing them so if you're somebody that has challenges with working memory focus and attention please see those episodes and please talk to your doctor about potentially using pharmacology to increase dopamine however and this is very important many
people who have challenges with Focus attention and working memory and fall under the category of subclinical levels of ADHD and even some individuals with 88 she young and old manage their symptoms and in some cases improve their focus through the use of Behavioral tools nutritional tools supplement based Tools in ways that either allow them to reduce their total prescription drug dosages and in some cases come off them entirely now I am definitely not saying that people should come off those drugs entirely and in fact I want to take a really firm stand here because I
know this is a bit controversial but I'm just going to tell you having evaluated the whole literature several times over now I do think I personally believe that there is a strong case for certain children and adults to take these compounds that increase dopamine and epinephrine yes those compounds are different forms of amphetamine but those compounds we know can increase neuroplasticity the rewiring ltp LTD Etc within the neural circuits that control Focus attention and working memory and so they do have their place for certain individuals we don't want to rule those out are they over
prescribed my feeling is that yes they are probably overprescribed however there are a number of individuals that strongly benefit from them as well so if you are going to explore the use of those compounds for sake of improving working memory certainly if you're going to explore them for sake of improving working memory and focus in young kids please please please talk to your physician because they're prescription drugs you would need to talk to a physician anyway but regardless of whether or not you're trying to improve focus and working memory in a child in an adult
someone with TBI someone with Parkinson's I think it stands to reason that you would arrive to that conversation with some knowledge of not just the prescription drugs that are potentially available but also some of the supplement based tools some of the behavioral tools because as we know and as a good friend of mine who's an excellent physician says Better Living Through Chemistry still requires Better Living meaning yes prescription drugs can have a positive impact on these aspects of brain function in a way that can really improve lives but that behavioral tools also work in fact
they can collaborate in a very synergistic way to increase the amount of neuroplasticity in the relevant circuits so I'm of the mind and I think more and more people out there I like to think are of the mind that behaviors nutrition supplement based tools and prescription drugs all can have their place to varying degrees depending on the circumstances and the individual okay so today we talked about working memory this incredible capacity of our brain in fact a specific set of brain circuits designed for us to absorb absorb information that is perceived in our environment use
the relevant parts and then Chuck it just get rid of it forget it so very different than short and long-term memory which we also discussed and we talked about a few of the mechanisms as well I think you'll agree that working memory is one of the more incredible aspects to brain function I mean if you think about this is a set of neural circuits that engage the same algorithm over and over in different context in order for us to be able to navigate new environments familiar environments to interleave different activities these different strategies to task
switch to rule out distractors it's oh so critical to every aspect of our Waking Life and fortunately there are also zeroc cost and lowcost behavioral supplement based and prescription drug approaches to improving this incredible thing we call working memory so it was a pleasure to share some of those with you today as well if you're learning from and or enjoying this podcast please subscribe to our YouTube channel that's a terrific zeroc cost way to support us in addition please subscribe to the podcast on both Spotify and apple please also check out the sponsors mentioned at
the beginning and throughout today's episode that's the best way to support this podcast if you have questions for me or comments about the podcast or guests or topics that you'd like me to host on the hubman Lab podcast please put those in the comments section on YouTube I do read all the comments during today's episode and on many previous episodes of The hubman Lab podcast we discuss supplements while supplements aren't necessary for everybody many people derive tremendous benefit from them for things like improving sleep for hormone support and for focus us to learn more about
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sign up by providing your email and I want to emphasize that we do not share your email with anybody thank you once again for joining me for today's discussion about working memory and ways to improve your working memory and last but certainly not least thank you for your interest in [Music] science