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Baboon-Human Study on Effects of Stress

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Home › Forum Online Discussion › Practice › Baboon-Human Study on Effects of Stress

  • This topic has 1 reply, 2 voices, and was last updated 17 years, 4 months ago by Dog.
Viewing 2 posts - 1 through 2 (of 2 total)
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  • September 26, 2008 at 3:32 am #29208

    Michael Winn

    note: This is a fascinating study, the message here for Tao practitioners: Don’t be an ape, relax and practice more, you’ll live to enjoy your life.
    michael

    IT’S A STRESSFUL LIFE FOR BABOONS, HUMANS
    By Thea Trachtenberg and Raina Gitlin
    ABC News
    September 22, 2008

    http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/OnCall/story?id=5851269&page=1

    Baboons are aggressive, mean-spirited and wild. And when it comes to stress,
    apparently they are just like humans.

    Stanford University neurobiologist Robert Sapolsky has been decoding the
    mysteries of stress by studying baboons from Kenya’s plains, and he
    discovered that the animal’s rank as a leader or a follower had a direct
    link to the level of stress hormones in its system.

    “You’re a baboon and you only have to spend about three hours a day getting
    your calories,” Sapolsky said. “You’ve got nine hours of free time every day
    to devote to making somebody else just miserable.”

    The Truth About Baboons and People

    Sapolsky’s research uncovered that dominant males had the lowest stress
    levels, while submissive baboons were in worse health with increased heart
    rates and higher blood pressure.

    “Basically if you’re a stressed unhealthy baboon in a typical troop,”
    Sapolsky said, “you have an immune system that doesn’t work as well. Your
    brain chemistry is one that bears some similarity to what you see in
    clinically depressed humans.”

    And for the baboons, the stress isn’t just coming from the daily trials and
    tribulations of living in the wild.

    “They’re not being stressed by lions chasing them all the time. They are
    being stressed by each other.” Sapolsky said. “They’re a perfect model for
    westernized stress related disease.”

    British professor Sir Michael Marmot, who studied the health of civil
    servants, said the similarities between the baboon troop and humans are
    startling.

    “It showed that the lower you were in the hierarchy, the higher your risk of
    heart disease and other disease,” Marmot said.

    In his research Marmot studied Kevin Brooks, a man low on the totem pole and
    whose work stress literally has made him sick.

    “Out of the last three years at work, I’ve been off sick for probably half
    that time,” Brooks said.

    What It All Means

    Just as Sapolsky found out more about stress from baboons, he again turned
    to the animal kingdom to find a solution.

    “The Keekerok troop is the one I started with 30 years ago,” he said.
    “[Then] something horrific and scientifically very interesting happened to
    that troop.”

    The troop of baboons had taken to foraging for food in the garbage dump of a
    tourist lodge and ate meat that was tainted with tuberculosis. Nearly half
    the males died. But exactly who had died was surprising.

    “In that troop, if you were aggressive and if you were not particularly
    socially connected,” Sapolsky said. “You died.”

    “What you were left with was twice as many females as males and the males
    who were remaining were, you know, just to use the scientific jargon, they
    were good guys,” he added.

    The troop was transformed on the inside as well.

    “Do these guys have the same problems with high blood pressure? Nope. Do
    these guys have the same problems with brain chemistry related to anxiety,
    stress hormone levels? Not at all,” Sapolsky said.

    It all boils down to one point.

    “Give people more involvement in their work, give them more say in what
    they’re doing, give them more reward for the amount of effort they put out
    and it might well be that you’ll have not just a healthier workplace, but a
    more productive one as well,” Marmot said.

    October 1, 2008 at 11:02 pm #29209

    Dog

    http://blip.tv/file/526690

    I think some should find this interesting. You meet allot of memory monkeys pretending to be major minds.

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