Cover image for Lifting depression : a neuroscientist's hands-on approach to activating your brain's healing power
Title:
Lifting depression : a neuroscientist's hands-on approach to activating your brain's healing power
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
New York, NY : Basic Books, 2008
Physical Description:
289 p. : ill. ; 25 cm.
ISBN:
9780465037728

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30000010172306 RC537 L53 2008 Open Access Book Book
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30000010177542 RC537 L53 2008 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

Today's young adults are up to ten times more likely to experience depression than their grandparents were. Could it be that in our increasingly automated world, the reduced physical effort needed to accomplish anything may somehow interfere with our level of happiness and subsequent responses to stress? Neuroscientist Kelly Lambert finds compelling evidence that having to work hard for rewards significantly improves mood and prevents depression. Beginning with her innovative researchon rats-she compared "trust-fund rats" (whose rewards came with no effort on their part) to hard-working "trained-to-succeed" rodents-Lambert offers hope of treatment for people without debilitating (and often ineffective) drugs. Drawing on a wealth of information from the fields of anthropology, neuroscience, and evolutionary psychology, Lambert develops a unique theory suggesting that physical effort directed toward tangible outcomes activates particular regions of the brain and builds resilience against the emotional emptiness and negative thinking associated with depression. Whereas most therapies emphasize the importance of mental activity, Lambert reminds us of the importance of physical activity in establishing control in a fast-paced culture that is focused more on the prospect of immediate gratification than savoring the fruits of our labor.


Author Notes

Kelly Lambert, Ph.D., is Chair of Psychology at Randolph-Macon College and has published widely in the neuroscientific literature. Her smart-rats research, which is described in The Mommy Brain , was most recently presented on ABC's "World News Tonight." She lives in Mechanicsville, Virginia.


Table of Contents

1 Depression Strikes Deepp. 1
2 Why Are We So Depressed? The Lifestyle Paradoxp. 25
3 Building the Effort-Driven Rewards Brain Circuit: Use It or Lose Itp. 47
4 Giving the Brain a Handp. 69
5 Coping Effectively with Stressp. 91
6 Our Social Brainsp. 119
7 The Building Blocks of Resiliencep. 143
8 Nonpharmacological Treatments for Depression: A Little Less Talk and a Lot More Actionp. 173
9 Effort-Driven Rewards and Our Evolving Brainsp. 201
10 The New Rx for Preventing and Lifting Depressionp. 227
Acknowledgmentsp. 245
Notesp. 249
Referencesp. 261
Indexp. 281