www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/conference.htm Sue Gerhardt has just
published her book, Why Love Matters: How Affection
Shapes a Baby's Brain. The book is a survey of recent research
into the development of the brain. For example, a group of researchers
studied the brains of Romanian orphans - children who had been left to
cry in their cots from birth and denied any chance of forming close bonds
with an adult. They discovered that these babies had a "virtual black
hole" where the orbitofrontal cortex should have been. This is the
part of the brain that enables us to manage our emotions, to relate sensitively
to other people, to experience pleasure and to appreciate beauty. In other
words, this early experience had left permanent brain damage. How do scientists
explain this? Well, according to Gerhardt, our earliest experiences are
not simply laid down as memories or influences, they are translated into
precise physiological patterns of response in the brain that then set
the neurological rules for how we deal with our feelings and those of
other people for the rest of our lives. If you have views on this subject,
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