By Frank Mulligan - Recruit China
According to a study released on the internet, the commonly held belief that adults do not grow new brain cells is not true. The neurons in our brain continue to grow, and more importantly, throughout our adult life.
This comes from a study led by Wei-Chung Allen Lee of MIT and cited in the Public Library of Science (PLoS) Biology. Lisa Gross of PLoS Biology wrote a good synopsis which is worth checking out.
At one level you could say that all of this doesnít mean very much but the fact that new brain cells can be formed means that old ideas can be reshaped and new ideas can be laid down, like the tracks on a computerís hard-disk. This must have profound but subtle effects for HR and training.
According to the research the scale of the growth is not as high as it is for, say children, who resemble sponges when it comes to retention of information, but the capability is there nevertheless.
Neuroscientists have known for a long time that adult neurons can change their firing pattern and responses when faced with new experiences. But no one knew that they could change their structures.
Good News for HR
The figures look good, to a non-medical person like myself. The researchers estimate that on average, about 14 percent of the interneurons they observed showed structural modifications. The figure of 14 percent seems like a lot to me and indicative of an opportunity for HR and training people.
If your bossís assumption is that no new neurons can be grown throughout a personís life, and this is what most people believe, he will act according to the old adage ëyou canít teach an old dog new tricksí.
But he would be wrong, according to this study. We were all wrong. Not just China, but everywhere in the world.
If you are in HR or training you now have the evidence to back up your belief that training really does have a strong effect. Itís not a belief anymore, itís a fact. This could be very important to you if you are trying to introduce an Elearning program in your company or starting your first training audit.
The underpinning element for this is that if neurons can be grown back you must look at staff in the same way that you would look at a child ie. someone who, with effort and support, can learn anything.
This changes the nature of the game. The training department is a driver of change, not a passive delivery boy for training content. But we already knew this, right?.
The bad news is that we can still lose brain cells... Now, whereís my pen?. No, thatís not it...
Email frank.mulligan@recruit-china.com
Frank Mulliganís blog - english.talent-software.com
Passive Delivery Boy?

By Frank Mulligan - Recruit China




