Tadanobu Tsunoda Explained

is a physician and a Japanese author, most known for his ideas regarding the "Japanese brain".

Theory

According to Tsunoda's theory, the Japanese people use their brains in a unique way, different from "western" brains. The Japanese brain, argues Tsunoda, hears or processes music using the left hemisphere, where western brains use the opposite or right hemisphere to process music.[1] Tsunoda further argues that brains use languages as operating systems, thus the user "giving meaning to vowels." Tsunoda has had one essay, "An approach to an integrated sensorimotor system in the human central brain and a subconscious computer", included in a prestigious British publication, Sociocultural Studies of Mind (1995), edited by James V. Wertsch, Pablo del Rio, and Amelia Alvarez.[2]

Criticism

Journalist Karel van Wolferen has written of Tsunoda that "his testing methods are highly suspect. My impression, based on an account by one of his foreign guinea-pigs, is that auto-suggestion plays an important role. Yet his books sell well in Japan, and his views have been officially credited to the extent of being introduced abroad by the semi-governmental Japan Foundation".[3]

In a 1991 paper in JALT journal, linguist Thomas Scovel writes:

See also

Notes and References

  1. Karel van Wolferen, The Enigma of Japanese Power: People and Politics in a Stateless Nation (New York: Vintage, 1990), p. 265.
  2. James V. Wertsch, Pablo del Rio and Amelia Alvarez (eds), Sociocultural Studies of Mind (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995).
  3. Wolferen, p. 265.