Can adults still grow new neurons in their brains? You’d think we might know the answer to the question of adult “neurogenesis” after more than half a century of neuroscience research. But it turns out we don’t.
In this episode of The Studies Show, Tom and Stuart look into the suprisingly controversial question of adult neurogenesis. Are you “stuck with” the number of brain cells you had as a child, or can you add to that number by making the right choices as an adult? And does it even matter?
This podcast is brought to you by Works in Progress magazine, which this week has a new article explaining why nuclear power is so expensive (spoiler: it relies on an incorrect scientific model that we’ve discussed in previous podcast episodes: the “linear no threshold” model. For a full explanation, along with articles on a dizzying array of other progress-related topics, take a look at www.worksinprogress.co.
Show notes
Summary post on the debate by Scott Alexander from 2018
2000 PNAS study on the brains of London taxi drivers
2021 retrospective review of taxi driver studies
Study comparing passed vs. failed cabbies on “The Knowledge”
Study putting together neuroimaging research on when the brain peaks in volume and other measures
1999 BrdU study in macaque monkeys
Famous 1998 study on neurogenesis in the human hippocampus
2006 PNAS sudy on testing neocortical neurogenesis using Carbon-14 dating
2013 study using similar methods on the hippocampus
2018 Nature paper claiming no adult neurogenesis
Atlantic article describing the controversy by Ed Yong
2018 paper finding neurogenesis occuring up to age 79
2019 Nature Medicine paper claiming “abundant” adult neurogenesis
Fair-minded 2019 review paper
Somewhat angrier 2021 review paper
Credits
The Studies Show is produced by Julian Mayers at Yada Yada Productions. We’re grateful to Claire Wang for her help with researching this episode.
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