쉐도잉 연습: Change your mindset, change the game | Dr. Alia Crum | TEDxTraverseCity - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

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Rebekah Kelley Reviewer So today I'm going to talk about how our mindsets matter in virtually every facet of our lives.
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Rebekah Kelley Reviewer So today I'm going to talk about how our mindsets matter in virtually every facet of our lives.
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But I want to begin by telling a story about a group of researchers in Italy.
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Dr. Fabrizio Benedetti and his colleagues studied a group of patients undergoing thoracic surgery.
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Now what you should know about thoracic surgery is that it's a very invasive procedure.
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Patients are put under anesthesia,
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while the surgeons make major incisions into the muscles of the sides and the back
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in order to gain access to their heart and to their lungs.
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Now, about an hour after the anesthesia fades away,
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the pain starts to set in.
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Fortunately, patients are given strong doses of morphine sulfate, a powerful painkiller.
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This is routine treatment for thoracic surgery,
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but Dr. Benedetti and his colleagues made a few subtle tweaks.
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Half of the patients were given the dose of morphine by a doctor at their bedside.
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The other half was given the exact same dose of morphine,
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but it was administered into their IV by a pre-programmed pump.
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Now, you would think that both of these groups of patients would experience the same relief,
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but this was not the case.
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The group that received the morphine by the doctor reported significant reductions in their pain levels.
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The other group, the group who received the same exact amount of morphine but wasn't aware of it,
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They didn't seem to experience the same benefit.
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So Dr. Benedetti and his colleagues didn't stop there.
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They used the same procedure to test the effectiveness of other treatments,
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treatments for anxiety, treatments for Parkinson's disease, treatments for hypertension.
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And what they found was remarkable and consistent.
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When the patients were aware of the treatment and expected to receive the benefit,
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the treatment was highly effective.
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But when they weren't, that same drug,
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that same pill, and that same procedure was blunted,
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and in some cases, not even effective at all.
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So, I read about these studies when I was a student at Harvard University,
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and at the time, I was heavily immersed into the literature on the placebo effect.
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And the more I read,
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the more I started thinking about the true nature of placebos.
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So what is the placebo effect really?
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Well, most people discount the placebo effect as just some magical response to some fake pill or some faux procedure.
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But that's not what the placebo effect is.
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The placebo effect is not about the faux pill or the sugar pill or the fake procedure.
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What the placebo effect really is,
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is a powerful, robust, and consistent demonstration of the ability of our mindsets,
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in this case, the expectation to heal,
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to recruit healing properties in the body.
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So what is a mindset?
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A mindset is quite literally a setting of the mind.
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It's a lens or a frame of mind through which we view the world,
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we simplify the infinite number of potential interpretations at any given moment.
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Now, the ability to simplify our world through our mindsets is a natural part of being human.
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But what I want to suggest to you today is that these mindsets are not inconsequential,
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and instead they play a dramatic role in determining our health and our well-being.
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So, while I was at Harvard,
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I had the opportunity to work with Professor Ellen Langer.
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She's a professor of psychologists,
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and when she heard that I was also a Division I athlete, laughed at me.
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She said, you know, exercise is just a placebo, right?
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Now, I was kind of offended because at the time,
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I had been spending up to four hours a day training my body to be in optimal shape.
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But she did get me thinking about mindsets and how they might matter outside of medical walls.
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Was I getting fitter and stronger because of the time and the energy that I was putting into my training?
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Or was I getting fitter and stronger because I believed that I would?
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What about the other extreme?
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What if people were getting an extraordinary amount of exercise but weren't aware of it?
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would they not receive the same benefit?
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We decided to test this,
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and to test this we found a really unique group of women,
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a group of 84 hotel housekeepers working in seven different hotels across the US.
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So these women are on their feet all day long.
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They're using a variety of muscles,
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and they're burning an extraordinary amount of calories just doing their job.
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But what's interesting is that these women don't seem to view their work in this light.
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We asked them, we said, do you exercise regularly?
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And two thirds said no. So we said,
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okay, well, so on a scale of zero to 10,
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how much exercise do you get?
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And a third of them said zero.
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I get no exercise at all.
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So we wondered what would happen if we could change their mindset.
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So we took these women,
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we split them into two groups,
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we measured them in a variety of things,
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including their weight, their blood pressure,
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their body fat, their satisfaction with their job.
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And then we took half of them and we gave them a simple 15-minute presentation.
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We gave them this poster and we said,
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you know, your work is good exercise.
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It satisfies the Surgeon General's requirements,
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which are quite simply to accumulate about 30 minutes of moderate physical activity.
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You should expect to receive those benefits.
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15 minutes.
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We came back four weeks later,
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and we measured them again.
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Not surprisingly, the group that didn't receive this information didn't change.
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But those that did looked different.
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They dropped weight.
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they had a significant reduction in systolic blood pressure,
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they dropped body fat, and they reported liking their job more.
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So what does this tell us?
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Well, to me, it was fascinating that just as a result of a simple 15-minute presentation,
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the whole game changed, producing a cascade of effects on both their health and their well-being,
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presumably without even changing behavior.
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Now, some of you might be thinking,
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well, how do you know they didn't change their behavior, right?
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Because that must have been what produced the effects.
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Well, we know they didn't work anymore,
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and the room attendants themselves assured us that they didn't join the sports club down the street.
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But of course, we can't know for sure if they weren't,
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you know, putting a little more oomph into their making the beds.
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So this question really plagued me.
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Is there a direct, immediate connection between our mindsets and our bodies?
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So to test this, I worked with my colleagues at Yale,
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Kelly Brownell, Will Corbin, and Peter Salovey,
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and we did so by making a big batch of milkshakes.
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So we made this big batch of milkshakes,
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and then we invited people to come to our lab to try the milkshakes,
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and in exchange, we would give them $75.
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Sounds great, right?
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Well, the less appealing aspect of the agreement was that while they were drinking the shakes,
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we had them hooked up to an IV so we could get their blood samples.
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We were out to measure ghrelin.
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Ghrelin is a peptide that's secreted in the gut.
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The medical experts call this the hunger hormone.
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So when we haven't eaten in a while,
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our ghrelin levels start to rise,
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signaling to the brain it's time to seek out food,
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and slowing our metabolism just in case we don't find that food.
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Now, say we go out,
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we find and we devour a milkshake,
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a hamburger, some french fries,
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our ghrelin levels drop, signaling to our brain,
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time to stop eating, and revving up the metabolism so we can burn the food that was just consumed.
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So the participants came in,
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we hooked them up to an IV,
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and then we gave them a milkshake, a Sensa shake.
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This is 0% fat, 140 calories, zero added sugar.
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This is guilt-free satisfaction.
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So they drank this shake,
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and in response, their ghrelin levels dropped,
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but only very slightly, signaling to the brain that some food had been consumed,
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but not a whole lot.
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So a week later, they came back to our lab,
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we hooked them up to an IV again,
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and we gave them this shake.
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620 calories, 30 grams of fat, 56 grams of sugar.
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Now this, this is decadence you deserve.
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And in response to this shake,
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their ghrelin levels dropped again,
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but this time at a significantly steeper rate,
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about three times more than the shake they had before.
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Now, this would make good sense to any metabolic nutritionist who understands
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that the drop in ghrelin is proportional to the amount of calories consumed.
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But there was a catch.
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In this study, even though the participants thought they had consumed the sensible shake and the indulgent shake,
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in reality, we gave them the exact same shake at both time points.
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So what does this tell us?
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Well, just as in the case when the same amount of morphine
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produced more or less of an effect depending on our awareness,
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and just as in the case when the same amount of exercise
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produced more or less of a benefit depending on how it was construed,
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here again our mindsets proved to matter.
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In this case, suggesting it might not be just calories in and calories out,
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or the precise makeup of fats,
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nutrients, but what we believe,
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what we expect, what we think about the foods we eat that determines our body's response.
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So in light of this,
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it behooves us to consider our own lives.
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What are our mindsets?
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and how might we begin to shift them,
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to alter them, to have them be more beneficial?
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So take stress, for example.
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What's your mindset about stress?
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If you're like most people,
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you have the mindset that stress is bad.
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Bad, bad, bad.
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Bad stress.
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Now, this is not surprising,
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considering that everywhere we look,
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there's warnings, labels, yelling at us,
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reminding us about the negative effects of stress.
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But the truth of stress is not so clear-cut,
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and in fact, there's a robust and growing body of research showing that stress can have positive effects,
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enhancing effects on our health,
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our well-being, and our performance.
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Now, I'm not here to try to persuade you that the effects of stress are enhancing,
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but rather to point out that the truth of stress is like most things in life,
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and that is, it's uncertain.
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And therefore, to raise the question,
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do our mindsets about stress determine our response?
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So to test this question,
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I worked with Sean Aker and Peter Salovey,
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and we worked with a group of 300 employees.
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This was after the 2008 financial collapse,
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And we decided, they were stressed.
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They had just heard that 10% of their workforce was going to be laid off,
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and they were overworked.
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So we decided to see if we could change their mindset.
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And we did so by having them watch simple video clips.
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So I'm going to show them to you here simultaneously,
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but half of the participants saw the one on the left,
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half saw the one on the right.
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Thank you.
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I'm sorry.
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We'll be right back.
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So you get the point, yes? So here we are. In the dark. So here we are.
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They're watching facts, research, anecdotes,
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all true but oriented towards one view or the other.
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What we found was interesting.
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Those who watched these simple three-minute video clips before the bell rang,
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before their job began, over the course of the next few weeks reported fewer negative health symptoms,
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symptoms, fewer backaches, less muscle tension, less insomnia.
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And they also reported a higher level of engagement and performance at work.
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So at this point, I've presented four studies,
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four studies that demonstrate the power of mindset in in medicine,
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in exercise, in diet, and in stress.
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There are many other very talented scholars tackling this phenomena as we speak.
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Carol Dweck's research demonstrates us that if we can shift our mindset about intelligence
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and talent as something that's fixed to something that's changeable over time,
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it can dramatically alter our academic and professional success.
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Yale epidemiologist Becca Levy's research shows us that if we can change our mindsets about aging,
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from viewing aging as an inevitable process of deterioration to a process of gaining wisdom,
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gaining growth, not only shapes the course of how we grow old,
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but even extends longevity.
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Ted Kaptchuk and his group at Harvard's program for placebo studies is doing cutting-edge work,
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understanding how we can begin to harness and ethically utilize the placebo effect in clinical practice.
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So though the context is different,
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the message is the same.
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Our mindsets matter.
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Now, don't get me wrong,
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I'm not saying that medicine doesn't work,
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or that there are no benefits of exercise,
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or that what we eat doesn't matter.
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It does.
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But the psychological and physiological effect of anything in our lives can and is influenced by our mindset.
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So is the power of mindset limitless?
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Probably not.
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But what I hope I've done for you today is inspired you to reconsider where those limits really are.
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Because the true task ahead is to begin reclaiming this power for ourselves,
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to acknowledge the power of mindset,
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and know that just like this,
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in just the blink of an eye,
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we can change the game of any facet of our life,
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quite simply by changing our mindset.
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Thank you.

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이번 수업에 대하여

이번 수업에서는 Dr. Alia Crum의 TEDx 강연을 통해 마인드셋이 우리 삶에 미치는 영향을 배웁니다. 특히, 마인드셋 변화가 우리의 건강과 웰빙에 얼마나 깊은 영향을 미칠 수 있는지를 탐구하게 됩니다. 여기서 제공하는 영어 쉐도잉 연습을 통해 여러분은 듣기 능력을 향상시키고, 발음 및 억양을 개선할 수 있습니다.

핵심 Vocabulary & Phrases

  • mindset - 사고방식
  • placebo effect - 플라시보 효과
  • expectation - 기대
  • exercise - 운동
  • satisfaction - 만족
  • weight - 체중
  • blood pressure - 혈압
  • body fat - 체지방

연습 팁

이번 강연은 다소 빠른 속도로 진행되므로, 영어 쉐도잉을 통해 발음과 억양을 따라하는 연습이 효과적입니다. 아래의 방법을 따라서 연습해 보세요:

  • 초기에는 영상 속 발음을 정확히 듣고, 반복해서 따라해 보세요.
  • 천천히 말하는 부분부터 시작하여, 점차 속도를 높여가면서 실력을 쌓아갑니다.
  • 지속적으로 듣고 따라하는 것을 통해 강연자가 사용하는 단어와 표현을 친숙하게 만들어 보세요.
  • 강연의 감정을 표현하기 위해 억양과 감정을 넣어 말하는 것이 중요합니다. 효과적인 shadowspeak 연습으로 이어질 것입니다.

이런 방법을 통해 IELTS 스피킹에도 더욱 유리한 준비가 될 것입니다. 마인드셋의 변화를 반영하여 자신감 있게 영어로 소통할 수 있는 능력을 기르는 데 도움을 줄 수 있습니다.

쉐도잉이란? 영어 실력을 빠르게 키우는 과학적 방법

쉐도잉(Shadowing)은 원래 전문 통역사 훈련을 위해 개발된 언어 학습 기법으로, 다언어 학자인 Dr. Alexander Arguelles에 의해 대중화된 방법입니다. 핵심 원리는 간단하지만 매우 강력합니다: 원어민의 영어를 들으면서 1~2초의 짧은 지연으로 즉시 소리 내어 따라 말하는 것——마치 '그림자(shadow)'처럼 화자를 따라가는 것입니다. 문법 공부나 수동적인 청취와 달리, 쉐도잉은 뇌와 입 근육이 동시에 실시간으로 영어를 처리하고 재현하도록 훈련합니다. 연구에 따르면 이 방법은 발음 정확도, 억양, 리듬, 연음, 청취력, 말하기 유창성을 크게 향상시킵니다. IELTS 스피킹 준비와 자연스러운 영어 소통을 원하는 분들에게 특히 효과적입니다.

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