On September 19–20th, 2013, over 30+ speakers at the frontier of Brain, Health and Innovation will engage with over 200 professionals in North America and abroad. You can check out the quite amazing Speaker Bios and Summit Agenda. Also, as part of SharpBrains’ new interview series, here’s what several Summit Speakers and Participants have to say about the opportunities and challenges at hand:
Cori Lathan: It’s time for an annual brain check-up, a “brain thermometer”
Q: Where do you see clear “low-hanging fruit” to enhance behavioral and brain health based on neuroscience and innovation?
A: An annual brain check-up or “brain thermometer” that tracks cognitive health the way we currently track many other health indications like weight and blood pressure.
Robert Bilder: We are embarking on the next stage of human evolution
Q: Please tell us about your interest in applied brain science. What areas are you most interested in? What motivated you to pursue work in your field?
A: I’m a clinical neuropsychologist interested in understanding how we can deploy new neuroscience knowledge to change our brains. I believe we are embarking on the next stage of human evolution!
Dharma Singh Khalsa: Why are yoga and meditation often overlooked for healthy brain aging?
Q: What are 1–2 key things you’d like every person to understand regarding his/ her own brain and mind, that you think is commonly misrepresented or not addressed in the popular media?
A: …Yoga and Meditation are underappreciated as a way to keep your brain sharp with age. They belong in the conversation with diet, exercise and so on. It has been revealed that meditation not only has multiple positive effects on your brain and help reverse memory loss but is also the fastest and deepest way to create psychological and spiritual well-being, a critically important feature of healthy brain aging. It’s easy and more people must seek it out.
Stephanie Korszen: Let’s improve mental self-awareness, starting with the role of fatigue
Q: Where do you see clear “low-hanging fruit” to enhance behavioral and brain health based on neuroscience and innovation?
A: I’d say that the “low-hanging fruit” is more self-awareness regarding personal brain health and mental acuity. I see future potential for more objective measures and useful, unobtrusive neurofeedback.
Sherrie All: A neuropsychologist shaping the future of cognitive wellness
Q: What would you like the 2013 SharpBrains Virtual Summit to accomplish?
A: Continue to inspire and help connect like-minded people with one another in a fun and time-efficient way to help advance the field of brain fitness and cognitive wellness.
John Todor: To reach brain potential, we need less individual “improv”
Q: Please tell us about your interest in applied brain science. What areas are you most interested in? What motivated you to pursue work in your field?
A: …my experience with middle-aged and older executives indicate that new discoveries are not enough. We need to develop effective methodologies for widespread adoption of positive lifestyles. We are now in a state of “improv” mostly at an individual level. This is a huge problem in a world with an aging population and fast-changing dynamics where well-being depends on enhanced adaptive potential.
—These conversations are part of a new interview series with Speakers and Participants in the upcoming 2013 SharpBrains Virtual Summit (September 19–20th). Please join us! You can register with a 20% discount using promotional code: sharp2020
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