Lisa Barrett

  • Kristina Mustafinahar citeretfor 2 år siden
    Faces are constantly moving, and your brain relies on many different factors at once—body posture, voice, the overall situation, your lifetime of experience—to figure out which movements are meaningful and what they mean.14
  • Kristina Mustafinahar citeretfor 2 år siden
    you must show that no other explanations can account for your results.
  • Jackhar citeretfor 9 måneder siden
    ll of it nonstop for seventy-two years

    I hope I live longer than this

  • Jackhar citeretfor 9 måneder siden
    primary somatosensory cortex.

    Allows us to sense body’s movements and sense of touch

  • Jackhar citeretfor 9 måneder siden
    The biological building blocks are the same; what differs is the timing.
  • Jackhar citeretfor 9 måneder siden
    Hub damage is associated with depression, schizophrenia, dyslexia, chronic pain, dementia, Parkinson’s disease, and other disorders.
  • Jackhar citeretfor 9 måneder siden
    Similarly, when babies are born with dense cataracts, meaning the brain receives no visual input, neurons in the visual cortex become repurposed for other senses.

    That’s so cool how neurons can just change their inputs

  • Jackhar citeretfor 9 måneder siden
    Degeneracy in the brain means that your actions and experiences can be created in multiple ways.
  • Jackhar citeretfor 9 måneder siden
    complexity. It is a brain’s ability to configure itself into an enormous number of distinct neural patterns.
  • Jackhar citeretfor 9 måneder siden
    complexity is a critical ingredient for these capabilities, and the human brain has it in abundance.
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