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The Reticular Activating System
T he Reticular Activating System is the attention
center in the brain. It is the key to "turning on your
brain," and seems to be the center of
motivation.
The Reticular Activating System is connected at its base to the
spinal cord where it receives information projected directly
from the ascending sensory tracts. The brainstem reticular
formation runs all the way up to the mid-brain. As a result,
the Reticular Activating System is a very complex collection of
neurons that serve as a point of convergence for signals from
the external world and from interior
environment.
In other words, it is the part of your brain where the world
outside of you, and your thoughts and feelings from "inside" of
you, meet.
This Reticular Activating System is very capable of generating
dynamic effects on the activity of the cortex, including the
frontal lobes, and the motor activity centers of the
brain.
It plays a significant role in determining whether a person can
learn and remember things well or not, on whether or not a
person is impulsive or self-controlled, on whether or not a
person has high or low motor activity levels, and on whether or
not a person is highly motivated or bored
easily.
The Reticular Activating System is the center of balance for
the other systems involved in learning, self-control or
inhibition, and motivation.
When functioning normally, it provides the neural connections
that are needed for the processing and learning of information,
and the ability to pay attention to the correct
task.
If the Reticular Activating System doesn't excite the neurons
of the cortex as much as it ought to, then we see the results
of an under-aroused cortex, such as difficulty learning, poor
memory, little self-control, and so on. In fact, if the
Reticular Activating System failed to activate the cortex at
all one would see a lack of consciousness or even
coma.
What would happen if the Reticular Activating System was too
excited, and aroused the cortex or other systems of the brain
too much?
Then we would see individuals with excessive startle responses,
hyper-vigilance, touching everything, talking too much,
restless, and hyperactive.
So the Reticular Activating System must be activated to normal
levels for the rest of the brain to function as it should.
What factors could cause the Reticular Activating
System to be either over-activated or
under-activated?
According to Harvard Medical School, current research strongly
suggests that Attention Deficit Disorder - ADD ADHD is caused
in part by a deficiency of Norepinephrine in the ascending
reticular activating system, and it is thought that the
stimulant medications, such as Ritalin, increase the levels of
Norepinephrine in that part of the brain, as well as probably
increasing dopamine levels in the frontal lobes. This treatment
strategy works well for the inattentive under-aroused ADD kids,
and somewhat well for the over-aroused impulsive-hyperactive
ADHD kids.
However, for the kids who have an over-aroused Reticular
Activating System to begin with, the use of stimulants will
often exacerbate the problems with temper, sleep, and
hyper-vigilance or anxiety. For these individuals their
physicians will often prescribe a Norepinepherine antagonist
such as Clonadine, or an antidepressant such as Prozac, which
works to enhance the Serotonin driven inhibitory mechanisms of
the brain.
However, it is not just activation levels
of the Reticular Activating System that are a problem with
Attention Deficit Disordered individuals.
However, it is not just activation levels of
the Reticular Activating System that are a problem with
Attention Deficit Disordered individuals.
It seems that the same problems that cause the Reticular
Activating System to be under or over aroused also restricts
the development of neural connections and the required neural
density needed to process incoming information. In other words,
these are issues with the number of brain cells, the size of
the brain cells, and the number of connections between brain
cells. It is not uncommon for one brain cell to have as many as
5,000 connections with other brain cells.
Picture the incoming information to be
processed and learned as the volume of water coming out of your
shower head. And picture the brain's ability to process this
information as the drain and the drain pipe in the shower
floor. If the pipe is clogged up, your shower will have
problems draining. If the contractor originally installed a
drain pipe that is too small, again your shower will have
problems draining. In either case, you will either have to
reduce the amount of water coming out of the shower head, or
you will have to let the shower back up and wait a while for
the water to finally drain out. Here’s the connection…
If the brain does not have enough neural
connections, or lacks the neural density, to process the
incoming information, then it will be like a pipe that is too
small to handle a large volume of water. It will take in some,
but the rest will be stopped and won't go down the pipe
rapidly. Learning will take place, but the time that it takes
to process the information will be slowed significantly.
The impact of this with an Attention
Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder child is best seen when
the child is given a timed test, even with material that
the child understands pretty
well.
The "timed" aspect of the test requires that the child have a
“larger drain pipe,” as it were, to quickly process the
problems on the test and recall the answer. However, with
Attention Deficit Disorder - ADD ADHD - the “pipe” is often too
small, and the results of the timed test will probably be very
poor.
However, take away the timed element on the
same test, and “allow the water to drain a the slower rate,”
and the child will probably do well on the test.
So the Attention Deficit
Disorder - ADD ADHD child, or adult, needs a greater
degree of neural density, and a larger number of neural
connections to process information faster and more
efficiently.
Now, please do not think that this information to be processed
is only what takes place in the classroom.
The information to be processed includes information from the
outside world, including the touch of the clothes on his skin,
the buzz of the lights overhead, the sound of the kids playing
outside, and the new information that the teacher is lecturing
on at the front of the classroom.
It also includes the information from inside
the head, the thoughts and feelings of the ADHD person.
All of that must be sorted out and filtered, so
that only the important information is paid attention to, and
the unimportant information is ignored. Without proper
filtering by the Reticular Activating System, the individual
will be distracted by "noise," both from outside of him as well
as from inside of him.
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Source:
http://www.newideas.net/attention_deficit/neurology.htm
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