Excessive clutter and disorganization are often symptoms of a bigger health problem...At its most extreme, chronic disorganization is called hoarding...David F. Tolin, director of the anxiety disorders center at the Institute of Living in Hartford and an adjunct associate professor of psychiatry at Yale...recently studied compulsive hoarders using brain-scan technology. While in the scanner, hoarders looked at various possessions and made decisions about whether to keep them or throw them away. The items were shredded in front of them, so they knew the decision was irreversible. When a hoarder was making decisions about throwing away items, the researchers saw increased activity in the orbitofrontal cortex, a part of the brain involved in decision-making and planning...people who didn’t hoard showed no extra brain activity.The article continues with a discussion of holding on to excess 'stuff' and being overweight. In several cases therapists have noted a correlation between reducing clutter and weight loss.
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Friday, January 04, 2008
Clutter - more in the brain than in the house...
Parker-Pope offers a brief essay on the "clutter problem," suggesting that the problem in many cases is not a house problem but a person problem.
In what way does clutter effect the mind serenity and mental health of a spouse? (Here the victim of a brain seizure 4 years ago suffers under her husbands extreme cluttering, hoarding and not cleaning up. He does a wonderful job taking care of her and cooking etc. though. She sais the clutter in her house hinders her to think straight, it creates clutter in her brain and she has a harder time to train her brain) Is there scientific significant evidence that would prove that? That clutter around you creates clutter and malfunction in the brain?? Please help out. Thank you
ReplyDeleteHello...I'm afraid I'm totally unqualified to comment on your situation, but I wish you the best.
ReplyDelete