Cabbies’ brains

The BBC has a nice piece covering the continuing research of Prof. Eleanor Maguire (Wellcome Institute of Neurology, University College London) on the distinctive development of the hippocampus in the brains of London taxi drivers: Taxi drivers’ brains ‘grow’ on the job. Prof. Maguire’s research in this area is pretty extensive (see publication list). She’s found a great naturally occurring experiment in the brains of cabbies who have to navigate London’s notoriously byzantine downtown streets.

As the BBC report describes, driving a cab in London is difficult and demands a well-developed knowledge of urban geography:

In order to drive a traditional black cab in London drivers have to gain “the knowledge” – an intimate acquaintance with the myriad of streets in a six-mile radius of Charing Cross.

It can take around three years of hard training, and three-quarters of those who embark on the course drop out, according to Malcolm Linskey, manager of London taxi school Knowledge Point. “There are 400 prescribed runs which you can be examined on but in reality, you can be asked to join any two points,” he told BBC News Online.

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Slideshow on ‘Brain Rules’

Ian Boyle, a friend of mine here in Australia, just turned me onto SlideShare, a website where you can upload and share PowerPoint slide shows. I see myself losing more than a couple of hours into this as the downloading take some time, but there are some great neuroanthropology-related resources.

One of the slideshows that I came across immediately that may be relevant is one based on John Medina’s book, Brain Rules: The slideshow is titled, ‘Brain Rules for Presenters,’ and it was put together by Garr of Presentation Zen.