How training the brain could boost economic growth - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
观点 全球经济

How training the brain could boost economic growth

In a world where solutions are harder to come by, we must maximise the power of the human mind
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":null,"text":"

"}],[{"start":6.58,"text":"In the German school system, fate reaches out for children at around the age of 10. Kids start their secondary education at institutions ranging from an academic Gymnasium, with a high probability of ultimate university entry, to a more vocationally focused Realschule, where the education is famously excellent but unlikely to provide access to the most sought after and high-paying careers. Many German parents would like the Gymnasium for their children. They try hard to get them in."}],[{"start":37.61,"text":"That makes a set of results published earlier this year in the Journal of Political Economy all the more remarkable. They report on a study in which a group of seven-year-olds were given 12 hours of “working memory” training in place of their normal school lessons. Working memory is the capacity to hold in mind and manipulate multiple pieces of information: the lengths of the sides of a rectangle, for example, while calculating its area. It is a basic cognitive skill thought to be valuable for many areas of academic success, particularly in solving maths problems but also reading and paying attention in general."}],[{"start":78.1,"text":"The study was carefully conducted, randomising both schools and classes within schools to create a treatment group and a control group, with years of follow-up afterwards to examine how this fairly modest intervention affected the children. The central result? Children who received the training in working memory at age seven were 16 percentage points more likely to end up in the Gymnasium, 46 per cent to 30 per cent, than those who did not — an enormous difference, as these things go, in a critical measure of life outcomes. The training appeared to benefit all children, advantaged and disadvantaged, those who did well on initial tests and those who did not, about the same."}],[{"start":124.55,"text":"One obvious conclusion is that children may benefit from training in working memory. (For tiger parents who don’t want to wait for education authorities to ponder the research, a version of the training protocol is available in a commercial app called Nuroe.) It adds to the evidence that a child’s early years are formative and interventions at this stage have particularly high returns because the benefits compound over time."}],[{"start":153.65,"text":"But it also points to something even more profound: that cognition is malleable, at least somewhat, and can be affected both for good and for bad by training, by environment and by behaviour. At a time when many advanced economies struggle to generate economic growth; when artificial intelligence is displacing ever more routine jobs and raising, yet again, the cognitive bar for access to the most desirable careers; and when declining cognition at the end of life is creating suffering and cost for people with dementia and their families, it makes sense to pay the closest attention to how we might improve the functioning of our minds."}],[{"start":199.89000000000001,"text":"Industrial strategy is currently back in fashion but improvements in cognition are, potentially, a lower-cost and higher-impact way to raise productivity. We need a cognitive strategy for economic growth."}],[{"start":216.69000000000003,"text":"Brain training would be part of such an effort but only part. Another issue to tackle is air pollution. There is considerable evidence that particulates, especially fine and ultrafine particles below 2.5 micrometres in diameter, not only cause a host of long-term health problems such as dementia, stroke, lung cancer and heart disease, but also stunt child development and make you dumber, right here and right now. A study of Israeli high school students, for example, showed significantly lower exam results, leading to lower rates of university education, for students who took their exams on a day with dirtier air."}],[{"start":262.69000000000005,"text":"It would also require a reckoning with the recession in human cognition brought by modern technology. The search engines at our fingertips erode our incentive to remember word definitions or calculate; immersion in video content harms our capacity to read or write; and constant exposure to addictive, attention-demanding social media swamps our cognitive capacity and undermines our ability to concentrate."}],[{"start":291.19000000000005,"text":"AI threatens to make it worse. Researchers warn of “cognitive offloading” as humans pass the basic tasks of problem solving to AI chatbots. It is a curious contrast that people are ever more likely to exercise their physical muscles in a gym even as they let their mental muscles grow flabby. AI tools pose a nasty dilemma. Failing to master them may make you irrelevant in the workplace; relying on them may destroy the very skills that make you useful. In his 1957 story Profession, the science fiction writer Isaac Asimov wrote a parable about technology that could instantly imprint humans with specialist knowledge, at the cost of making them unable to learn or innovate. He often was prescient."}],[{"start":342.13000000000005,"text":"Cognitive power matters obviously to individuals. It matters also to society. Our human capital is part of what makes us productive and until such time as AI is actually able to make discoveries, rather than regurgitate its training data, it is only human invention that will create new knowledge and push humanity forward. Modern technology provides ways both to train our minds, as the researchers in Germany were able to do, and to erode them: a contest between cognition and uncognition. It is a contest of the highest importance for our future — one we need to win."}],[{"start":392.86000000000007,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftmailbox.cn/album/a_1754444814_6089.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

科技巨头该拿起电话,我们其他人也该如此

从埃隆•马斯克起诉OpenAI一案中得到的教训是:把话写下来可能会让人难堪。

我与斯蒂芬•金共度的恐惧之年

从翻检这位恐怖大师个人档案中得到的启示。

按揭经纪人的终结?AI如何重塑英国地产市场

住房贷款和购房流程亟待由科技颠覆变革。

淘汰化石燃料的混乱努力终究是螳臂挡车吗?

一场前所未有的气候峰会幕后内幕。

滞留在波斯湾船舶上的生活是什么样的

在各国领导人就如何重新开放霍尔木兹海峡展开辩论之际,海员们的声音却几乎缺席。FT报道了这场全球危机背后隐秘的世界。

美国联邦检察官调查贝莱德私募信贷基金

华尔街的最高执法官员正在审查贝莱德TCP资本公司的估值做法。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×