Building Blocks of Memory in the Brain

  Рет қаралды 286,228

Artem Kirsanov

Artem Kirsanov

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 560
@ArtemKirsanov
@ArtemKirsanov Жыл бұрын
To try everything Brilliant has to offer-free-for a full 30 days, visit brilliant.org/ArtemKirsanov/. The first 200 of you will get 20% off Brilliant’s annual premium subscription.
@verlax8956
@verlax8956 Жыл бұрын
i cheated the system by pretending to be the administrator of a school and have brilliant for completely free, thanks for the offer tho
@andyvill8131
@andyvill8131 Жыл бұрын
@@verlax8956 You're a cheater
@suheilpinto6964
@suheilpinto6964 11 ай бұрын
hyperthymesia syndrome how it happens.
@mimimo6901
@mimimo6901 11 ай бұрын
I just want to ask you please can neuroscientist now erase traumatic and fear memories ?? When they're gonna start the clinical trials on humans please if you have any idea answer me please 🙏 thank you
@DhanushkaJayasinghe-ib1cd
@DhanushkaJayasinghe-ib1cd 28 күн бұрын
vorinostat for fear reduction!
@guilhermesantos7355
@guilhermesantos7355 Жыл бұрын
As a Technology and Neuroscience's undergraduate i can say your videos are not only a scientific work but also one hell of a art piece! Thanks man, greetings from Brazil
@ArtemKirsanov
@ArtemKirsanov Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@youcer
@youcer Жыл бұрын
agree
@AlintraxAika
@AlintraxAika Жыл бұрын
Which university are you studying neuroscience?
@BrunoSantos-bg8xz
@BrunoSantos-bg8xz Жыл бұрын
Olha só quem encontrei
@guilhermesantos7355
@guilhermesantos7355 Жыл бұрын
@@BrunoSantos-bg8xz AAAAAAAAAAAAAH NÃO É POSSÍVEL KKKKKKKKKKKKKK Acho que todos os alunos de neuro da UFABC veem o Artem
@hackerbrinelam5381
@hackerbrinelam5381 Жыл бұрын
This is very fansinating, I mean now I know how my brain literally physically learn things, and it makes sense some questions I have on some learning advice, "why do you should learn using most of your senses" "why do you need to focus, pay attention" "why repetition "why you should use your prior exprience to help you to learn" "why do you forget sometimes then remember other times or why you cant retrieve your memory anytime"
@subdynoman
@subdynoman Жыл бұрын
The brain is sensitive, especially to chemical changes...diet and health have the most influence in the physical make up of the body and brain.
@egor.okhterov
@egor.okhterov Жыл бұрын
Don't forget to try teaching someone after you learned something new
@iandanforth
@iandanforth Жыл бұрын
I had no idea that neuron excitability varied with a period of hours! Such an important piece of the puzzle, thanks for this video.
@joonaskuusisto2767
@joonaskuusisto2767 Жыл бұрын
I’m studying neuroscience in the context of phase transitions. I sometimes intellectually veer towards AI and general computer science but the brilliancy of your videos rekindles the fire for neuroscience. If only more people with your communication and multimedia skills were involved in neurosci, we’d be marching on towards something marvelous. Public exposure and interest control the funding both in academia and industry, this kind of content has the power to ignite mass movements of brilliant minds.
@tedarcher9120
@tedarcher9120 Жыл бұрын
Where are you studying? I'm a physicist that wants to move to neuroscience
@olavp.4019
@olavp.4019 Жыл бұрын
Wollen Wir das Wirklich? Ich denke Nein ! Behalte diese Worte ,für Dein Leben . Ciao
@MilanMilan0000
@MilanMilan0000 Жыл бұрын
as someone studying quantum physics, also specifically phase transitions, its interesting learning what phase transition means in other fields
@andyvill8131
@andyvill8131 Жыл бұрын
exactly
@sauravistheascended7161
@sauravistheascended7161 Жыл бұрын
Do you really believe there is a need and void to fill for this particular type of content? Genuinely curious to know if you really think this and why.
@Anatanomerodi
@Anatanomerodi Жыл бұрын
I recently discovered your videos, and being a Neuroscience PhD student myself, I want to thank you, your work has re-sparked the motivation to read about topics outside my PhD subject, something I was feeling to do for a long time but never found the energy in the day to day of working. The presentation of the topics is excellent, as well as the edition of the videos, thank you very much for these incredible contributions.
@john.8805
@john.8805 Жыл бұрын
May I ask what you do for work as a Neuroscience PhD? Is it medicine? Ive always wondered.
@Anatanomerodi
@Anatanomerodi Жыл бұрын
@@john.8805 Hello! Sorry, I didn't see your comment. I work on brain-computer interfaces, which are applications that decode brain signals and use them to send commands to a computer or to estimate cognitive processes and inform other applications about the user's mental state
@eismccc
@eismccc 2 ай бұрын
@@Anatanomerodi I am in AI and am very much on my way to incorporating brain-computer interfaces to create bio-feedback loops it'd be cool to bounce ideas, you have an email or something feel like chatting?
@Anatanomerodi
@Anatanomerodi 2 ай бұрын
@@eismccc That would be cool! I don't know how to DM here on youtube and I'd rather not post my email in the comments section tho
@VolodymyrRushchak-k6l
@VolodymyrRushchak-k6l Жыл бұрын
Man, this channel is a treasure for someone interested in biology and neuroscience. Thanks a lot for your efforts! ❤❤❤
@allanburns1190
@allanburns1190 Жыл бұрын
This is one of the best video essays I’ve ever watched on KZbin
@stefanvidenovic5095
@stefanvidenovic5095 28 күн бұрын
It actually makes perfect sense that memory will not be stored in just one part of the brain because memory recall is a recreation of an entire 6-sense experience (though in a somewhat faded and less vivid form in most of the cases). An experience is not limited to any one region of the brain, it activates many regions of the brain at the same time.
@VaradMahashabde
@VaradMahashabde Жыл бұрын
I am always surprised by how beginner friendly your videos are.
@chenmarkson7413
@chenmarkson7413 Жыл бұрын
Second-year uni student here (neuroscience major); I feel like I am watching a spoiler and can't stop myself. This is so interesting, learning about all the progress we have on the neuronal basis of learning and memory. Much much much more interesting than the various theoretical memory models I have to memorize in psychology classes!
@tinkeringtim7999
@tinkeringtim7999 Жыл бұрын
I would love to see you take a deep dive into cognative/behavioral relationships to engram learning. A lot of people struggling with trauma related memory issues (inc. PTSD) would likely benefit from understanding how their brains physically learned (and could un-learn). In fact, it seems to me many therapists could also do with knowing more about learning and plasticity.
@vachansj
@vachansj Жыл бұрын
Check out Johannes Graff's research. He talks about the critical window during which a memory can be reupdated to decrease aversion or fear - improving therapy for PTSD. And yes, therapists do know about those concepts, but research into how they can be implemented safely needs more data. For ex: if the reupdating of the memory is not done carefully, it might lead to increase in fear rather than decrease (because you are recalling the fearful memory and not reupdating it to a positive one)
@bermagot9238
@bermagot9238 3 ай бұрын
This is actually the basis of Scientology.
@tinkeringtim7999
@tinkeringtim7999 3 ай бұрын
@@bermagot9238 I think that's something you have projected into scientology, rather than it being inherently in the fabric of that framework.
@andrewhooper7603
@andrewhooper7603 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the new engram.
@cirecrux
@cirecrux Жыл бұрын
Massive respect for the brain guys who do the brain work
@v2ike6udik
@v2ike6udik Жыл бұрын
why? to lock you in hell in here? look what they did. most ppl i knew are now empty vessels. on frikking shot and soul is gone.
@v2ike6udik
@v2ike6udik Жыл бұрын
watch?v=Z4-VyHOQT-k cry your hard out, once you understand, what they did.
@v2ike6udik
@v2ike6udik Жыл бұрын
do you understand, ppl are masturbating to be robots. and most already have.
@Andrea-fd2bw
@Andrea-fd2bw Жыл бұрын
⁠@@v2ike6udikthe soul can’t be gone,the soul is eternal
@v2ike6udik
@v2ike6udik Жыл бұрын
@@Andrea-fd2bw disconected soul from spirit becomes basically a demon. soul is "gone".
@davidyang102
@davidyang102 Жыл бұрын
The temporary excitability remind me of dropout which is a technique to improve deep learning by turning off neurons randomly. That improves the robustness of the network
@ShpanMan
@ShpanMan Жыл бұрын
Current deep learning is a pale and weak version of biological neurons. We will look back and be amused that we thought this could actually be the right architecture when we have brains all around us and we took almost no inspiration or principle from them.
@Smonjirez
@Smonjirez Жыл бұрын
@@ShpanMan The power of current deep learning certainly does not lie in its architecture but in its scaling ability and ease of use. I doubt more architecturally accurate versions would currently be really useful as they would probably require orders of magnitude more computational resources using currently available technology/hardware.
@ShpanMan
@ShpanMan Жыл бұрын
@@Smonjirez What are you talking about? Your brain runs on a McDonalds happy meal. You think current Neural networks are more efficient? 🤣
@Smonjirez
@Smonjirez Жыл бұрын
@@ShpanMan Ehm no? I think their current design is more efficient to run on computers.
@mattaku9430
@mattaku9430 Жыл бұрын
@@ShpanMan Yes, in specialised tasks artificial neurons are way more efficient.
@GeoffryGifari
@GeoffryGifari Жыл бұрын
nice job man... one of my top youtube sources for up-to-date neuroscience without dumbing down
@steelex44
@steelex44 Жыл бұрын
I'm in undergrad, exploring intersections of neuroscience + engineering + psychology, and your channel was/is my first exposure to computational neuroscience. very cool stuff. thank you for your videos and they're so well made!
@NeuroDescomplicada
@NeuroDescomplicada Жыл бұрын
You're one of my favorite educational/scientific youtubers!! Your work inspires me to do better videos in my own language as well as to understand more compreenhesively my work field as a phD student here in Brazil! Do you create your own animations or you have a team that do it?
@ArtemKirsanov
@ArtemKirsanov Жыл бұрын
Wow, thank you so much! I do everything myself :)
@_kantor_
@_kantor_ Жыл бұрын
What kind of editing program do you use?
@EMOTIBOTS
@EMOTIBOTS Жыл бұрын
Hi, really interesting to learn about the waxing and waning of neuron excitability. Makes sense why there's just some things that are easier to process depending on the time of day. There's one more thing you can add to the reason why only some neurons are selected for an engram, and that is that when one neuron fires, it raises the action potential of the area outside of its membrane, which in turn locally raises the threshold needed for other neurons to fire. If there are two neurons equal in excitability and one of them happens to fire first, the second one may not fire because of the heightened action potential required. Love watching your videos, very inspiring and well communicated!
@GeoffryGifari
@GeoffryGifari Жыл бұрын
wow... so many questions about this one... 1. Is memory encoded in the structure of neuron interconnections, or the pattern of action potentials buzzing through web of neurons? Given a network pattern of dendrites, axons, and synapses is the memory "still there" even when no signals are being passed? 2. How can repetition strenghten memory, when talking about the physical connections between neurons? 3. On gene activation when memory forms, what is the timescale of this process? remembering can be pretty fast.. can genes be expressed (and make lasting changes) just as fast? 4. How far can we "isolate parts of a memory": with mice fear conditioning, how can we be sure that the pain of shock is linked to the sound stimulus only, instead of sound stimulus + a given position in the lab + objects, shapes, and colors around the mouse at that time + ambient smell +.... , other things that might also be encoded in the engram? 5. If two different mice went through fear conditioning with the exact same setup, would we see a difference in the engrams of each mouse? 6. lets say we subject a mouse to fear conditioning, and observe the engram. We then wait for some time until the mouse forgets that experience (weeks? months?). If we do fear conditioning again on the same mouse, would the same engram be formed? 7. Can the idea of engrams be used to estimate the memory capacity of a brain? we know it can't be infinite because the brain is a physical substrate 8. Can we induce the growth of new linking neurons between two engrams chemically/biologically? so instead of the mouse retrieving two memories simultaneously and getting those memories linked, we "link" two memories artifically with those two memories have nothing to do with each other before 9. we know that the brain is not the only component of the central nervous system. Are memories (related to reflexes) encoded in the spinal cord in the same way as they are in the brain?
@cosmictreason2242
@cosmictreason2242 Жыл бұрын
7 is not guaranteed if mind body dualism is true. Then the combination of neuron activation acts as an indexing/lookup function. The combination of millions of neurons is fundamentally 10^1,000,000 and we have billions if not trillions. Even 10^80 would be a memory per atom in the universe
@cheapshotfishing9239
@cheapshotfishing9239 Жыл бұрын
Artem, your videos are the biggest help to me in my quest to create a digital consciousness.
@physiologic187
@physiologic187 Жыл бұрын
I'm curious on how you plan to implement it? Are you trying to engineer some kind of neural network which is structured & functionally organized similarly to the brain?
@bitterlemonboy
@bitterlemonboy Жыл бұрын
lol good luck
@nenadnen11111
@nenadnen11111 Жыл бұрын
@@bitterlemonboy indeed lol
@cheapshotfishing9239
@cheapshotfishing9239 Жыл бұрын
Idk lol I just think if we can create something really really close to how our brain works within a computer, we can understand how we work on a deeper level. Thankfully I've got until I die to figure it out.
@diadetediotedio6918
@diadetediotedio6918 Жыл бұрын
You will not succeed with that in digital computers.
@deschia_
@deschia_ Жыл бұрын
It's absolutely mind blowing to realize that our brain is basically a highly evolved computer and storage system, and that ultimately computers are starting to evolve like a biological brain
@michaelt1775
@michaelt1775 Жыл бұрын
😂
@narcissesmith9466
@narcissesmith9466 11 ай бұрын
Its almost like computers operate like our thinking tendancies...
@Anonymous-fr2op
@Anonymous-fr2op 7 ай бұрын
As a NN engineer, i could sense similarities and realized just how much we copy the functionality of the brain without even knowing it😂😂 these are some tricks we do to train our models to catch patterns from seemingly unrelated piles of data
@TripImmigration
@TripImmigration Жыл бұрын
As a scientist and entrepreneur in education field I only can say thank you for this amazing video. Now I have more papers to dive in. Subscribe
@mdtanvirahmedsagor6146
@mdtanvirahmedsagor6146 Жыл бұрын
Literally this channel is a treasure and this video is just a masterpiece ❤
@icandreamstream
@icandreamstream Жыл бұрын
What an achievement this video is, thanks for taking the time to create this.
@israels9842
@israels9842 Жыл бұрын
Never end this series please!
@subendhusarkar2870
@subendhusarkar2870 Жыл бұрын
I was really missing your videos. Thanks for uploading ❤
@ArtemKirsanov
@ArtemKirsanov Жыл бұрын
Thank you! Yeah, sorry about that. I was quite busy with finishing my degree and moving countries
@ronaldronald8819
@ronaldronald8819 Жыл бұрын
This is so interesting. Cheers to you brilliant researchers that figured this stuff out. Thanks for sharing.
@cheapshotfishing9239
@cheapshotfishing9239 Жыл бұрын
New Artem kirsanov vid just dropped, shits gonna be a banger
@GUINTHERKOVALSKI
@GUINTHERKOVALSKI Жыл бұрын
I would like to see you talk about one topic: biological neurons are capable of making XOR operations. Not only a single neuron is capable, but even the dentrines are. While an artificial neuron is not. Take a look on the paper: “Dendritic action potentials and computation in human layer 2/3 cortical neurons”
@ArtemKirsanov
@ArtemKirsanov Жыл бұрын
Hi! I actually already have a video on this very topic :) kzbin.info/www/bejne/np7XgoOofZKaeZY
@mimimo6901
@mimimo6901 11 ай бұрын
​@@ArtemKirsanov so when can neuroscientists erase our fear and painful memories -??
@jonnyschindler3684
@jonnyschindler3684 Жыл бұрын
Probably the best neuroscience youtuber
@MarkosDrakos
@MarkosDrakos Жыл бұрын
Such an amazing video on such an interesting field, thank you for this! I've recently studied a module on engrams and one paper I found really interesting - claiming to have satisfied the engram mimicry criterion - was Vetere et al. (2019) - "Memory formation in the absence of experience". I found this to be the most groundbreaking stuff so far, and the only evidence so far to suggest that mimicry may be possible. I'd love to know your thoughts! I'd also love to see a video on the clinically translatable parts of engrams - and the utilisation of the tag and manipulate/erase tools as treatments for OCD and addiction. I also thought this area had some really cool research, and seeing it in video format with your animations and explanations would be really useful!
@ArtemKirsanov
@ArtemKirsanov Жыл бұрын
Thank you! I’m happy to know you enjoyed it :) Hmm, I haven’t encountered this particular paper. Thanks for pointing it out! I’ll take a look
@forthehomies7043
@forthehomies7043 Жыл бұрын
I can’t wrap my head around memory. Wild stuff.
@marcoramonet1123
@marcoramonet1123 8 ай бұрын
I absolutely adore this. I have asked myself this very question. And the way this is answered is done beautifully. Thank you so much sir!
@alexharvey9721
@alexharvey9721 Жыл бұрын
So good! honestly my favourite channel on KZbin and the only one I check regularly to see if I've missed any videos. Just keeps getting better! Optogenetics really is a field living up to the hype. Incredible tech. It would also be interesting to see whether manually setting the engram comes with some cost.
@jobbimaster
@jobbimaster Жыл бұрын
This whole video brings to mind the nature of trauma, how it is ingrained, and ultimately how it can be untangled.
@ksalarang
@ksalarang Жыл бұрын
Finally a video on this channel that I could follow the entire time
@aphinion
@aphinion Жыл бұрын
Holy fuck, what an amazingly high quality video and explanation. And entirely without useless stock footage but instead graphics that actually enhance what's said. This deserves a lot more followers!
@JandCanO
@JandCanO Жыл бұрын
We know so much yet so little about the brain. This is a very exciting topic to follow, thanks for the video!
@ryiv1848
@ryiv1848 Жыл бұрын
This (the linking memory part) is the best explanation I've heard about the brain's principle of contiguity
@TheLazyBot
@TheLazyBot Жыл бұрын
I am baffled by how simple you’re making this sound. I’ve always been curious how brains work, and binging your videos has totally made it made sense
@nicholas_obert
@nicholas_obert Жыл бұрын
This video is gold. Clean animations and calm voice. It deserves many more views
@ShpanMan
@ShpanMan Жыл бұрын
This is a ton of help for me, I am trying to figure out what we know about how the brain works and come up with as many principles that can be converted into artificial neural networks. It's incredible how this graph of nodes and edges can do so much.
@reeb3687
@reeb3687 Жыл бұрын
Do we currently know how brains "check for overlapping" in separate engrams? Also, is it possible for completely unrelated memory clusters to randomly have similar engrams/engram positions, causing them to be intrinsically linked, and, if so, how often/how likely is this to occur?
@nigtendos
@nigtendos 9 ай бұрын
As a Biotech, at work I have to design experiments with this kind of train of thought and I see it as part of the routine. This video totally awakens the passion and awe that led me to follow this career, thank you for posting!!
@MegaNightdude
@MegaNightdude Жыл бұрын
Artem, great job. Your presentation is off the charts. I've been doing modeling research on engrams for a couple of years now, but your video was still super informative for me. Thanks!
@GabrielCarvv
@GabrielCarvv Жыл бұрын
Absolutely fabulous video, as always. Maximally interesting content with maximally intuitive animations. Unmatched!
@timothytyree5211
@timothytyree5211 Жыл бұрын
Great video! Thanks for making it, Artem!
@fahedriachi
@fahedriachi Ай бұрын
I am speechless and amazed with the content and presentation, and the insight... Somewhere in my brain, a school of engrams are recruted for this awesome youtube channel❤
@Bit-while_going
@Bit-while_going Жыл бұрын
Amygdala: emotion Hippocampus: measurement Cortex: sensation But i first need to reminisce to appreciate each one, so I have thalamus and hypothalamus left over. Which one do I choose?
@cosmictreason2242
@cosmictreason2242 Жыл бұрын
Hypothalamus is your hormone control center that governs your endocrine system
@hugocome123
@hugocome123 Жыл бұрын
Thanks you for this video, I am not usely writing comments but I have to say that you really did an incredible job of pedagogy in this video. Usely I need to see your videos sevral time to understand all and in this one it was so clear that only one is enough.
@ArtemKirsanov
@ArtemKirsanov Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@emm5468
@emm5468 Жыл бұрын
If the brain codes parts of a memory in different areas of the brain this might explain why some sounds and smells would bring you back to something like a childhood memory. If differant areas are responsable for different portions of memory then a small triggering of one of those stimuli might cause a cascade of associated brain regions to in response
@En1Gm4A
@En1Gm4A Жыл бұрын
Thanks. Not shure what AI designers might do with this information. I think adding the dimension of time and powerlaw activation patterns might boost the capabilities of neural nets
@HeduAI
@HeduAI Жыл бұрын
This has got to be the coolest video on memories! Thank you.
@smilefaxxe2557
@smilefaxxe2557 Жыл бұрын
The Brain is such an amazingly interesting organ 🧠❤ And you do a great job at explaining concepts regarding the brain, thank you! 🔥👍
@nateshrager512
@nateshrager512 Жыл бұрын
Yea, it's the most amazing. But then again, look who is telling you that. Might be some bias 😂
@smilefaxxe2557
@smilefaxxe2557 Жыл бұрын
@@nateshrager512 Well, it might be 😅 But its always cool to listen to someone who is passionate about his topic 👍
@haronsantos2456
@haronsantos2456 3 ай бұрын
Thank You, it was a pieace of Art
@vicentefigueroa4758
@vicentefigueroa4758 Жыл бұрын
Brilliant video, very informative, inspiring, and entertaining! Greetings from a neuroscientist who loves your channel!
@ArtemKirsanov
@ArtemKirsanov Жыл бұрын
Thank you! I’m glad you enjoyed this :)
@qualia765
@qualia765 Жыл бұрын
19:44 does this mean that trying to learn some big topic at the *same time* everyday is more effective then at *random times* everyday?
@inteligenciaartificiuau
@inteligenciaartificiuau Жыл бұрын
Impressive content! Thanks!
@fallenangel8785
@fallenangel8785 Жыл бұрын
Best channel on KZbin ❤
@mpanganiban
@mpanganiban Жыл бұрын
Great video! There are also fast-degarding GFP variants to improve the temporal correspondence between gfp signal and gene expression
@titusfx
@titusfx Жыл бұрын
In 7:45, could we just induce a comma so it can form new memories? In any case the tag approach is awesome
@richardrobertson1331
@richardrobertson1331 10 ай бұрын
I have difficulty remaining focused on each specific new thought you present and the direction you chose to adequately cover your message. Too frequently I needed to pause the video and reflect, then I seem to be taken in another direction when I get back to the video. Your visuals and text open too many avenues for my limited thought processes to remain on tract. It reminds me of trying to follow a city map while visiting a foreign country. Getting from point A to point B eliminates exploring all the interesting sights that the side streets may have. Your visuals are superb, text is inspiring, but voice inflection is somewhat unfamiliar. Thank you, Artem, for all your considerable work that this video has displayed.
@Diego_Cabrera
@Diego_Cabrera Жыл бұрын
Truly an amazing video. From the content, explanation, and visuals. Keep it up!
@egwars3
@egwars3 Жыл бұрын
easily the hardest thing ive forced myself to comprehend even as simple as you made it
@priyanshugoel3030
@priyanshugoel3030 Жыл бұрын
What i took from this was,brain stores info into multiple sparsely populated graph like structures, which on co-allocation or co-retrieval are connected by adding some nodes. Also neutrons of an experience are well spread apart in the brain, maybe so that, in eventual co-retrieval some neurons can be left to facilitate connections. Also since sparse graphs and planar graphs are easier to traverse, maybe some processes also handle some form of garbage collection aiming at those neurons.
@eplv3432
@eplv3432 Жыл бұрын
Amazing video! I have never seen such a comprehensive explanation of memory mechanisms. Any suggestions of how to do a PhD in this specific area? Which authors/institutions to look for?
@johnmandreik4887
@johnmandreik4887 Жыл бұрын
hy^^ i wanted to say that i realy like the amount of Information per slide^^ its clean, need and visibl, esay to follow and therefore perfect for lerning! Keep it up :)
@VictorHugoVale
@VictorHugoVale 4 ай бұрын
Thanks a lot, this is so usefull to understand !!
@richardrobertson1331
@richardrobertson1331 10 ай бұрын
I have difficulty remaining focused on each specific new thought you present and the direction you chose to adequately cover your message. Too frequently I needed to pause the video and reflect, then I seem to be taken in another direction when I get back to the video. Your visuals and text open too many avenues for my limited thought processes to remain on tract. It reminds me of trying to follow a city map while visiting a foreign country. Getting from point A to point B eliminates exploring all the interesting sights that the side streets may have. Your visuals are superb, text is inspiring, but voice inflection is somewhat unfamiliar. Thanks for all your considerable work that this video has displayed.
@crimsonghoul8983
@crimsonghoul8983 4 ай бұрын
Well, now I know how Trauma works. So, dealing with it as early as possible helps in the person not being able to develop it over time.
@brunomorini2296
@brunomorini2296 Жыл бұрын
@ArtemKirsanov Your videos are amazing. Congratulations, how do you make your animations?
@repairstudio4940
@repairstudio4940 Жыл бұрын
This is a top quality production and the information in the field of neuroscience is well explained. Liked. Subbed.
@eismccc
@eismccc 2 ай бұрын
You're awesome man great video, I'm in AI and this is right in my wheelhouse. Looking forward to more great content like this!
@squishyushi
@squishyushi Жыл бұрын
Last night I was literally googling what memories are physically and like how neurons work, I really would love to learn more about this stuff
@anyalind4722
@anyalind4722 Жыл бұрын
Okay, folks. Here's the first comment. I've done (Edit): Most of the information in the video is familiar to me. But the visualization works great, updating and complementing my knowledge. It’s real piece of art in the popularization genre. Or even like a Disney film for scientists ;)
@cheapshotfishing9239
@cheapshotfishing9239 Жыл бұрын
Nice work champ
@anyalind4722
@anyalind4722 Жыл бұрын
​@@cheapshotfishing9239always alert 🫡
@Corgifunni
@Corgifunni Жыл бұрын
Brilliant video, very comprehensible and straight to the point, and minimalistic enough to keep my attention. Definitely worth a sub!
@qualia765
@qualia765 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for making these really great videos about a field i would otherwise never be able to learn about.(I have a very strong aversion to anything gory or needles or pictures (or thoughts of pictures) of organs and similar).
@mikeg1368
@mikeg1368 Жыл бұрын
It would be interesting to know how much data an engram needs in terms of bytes. And how much memory is available in theory to an average person?
@antonystringfellow5152
@antonystringfellow5152 Жыл бұрын
No bytes at all. A byte is a series of eight bits (ones and zeros). Neurons don't function with ones and zeros. Neurons are not digital, they're analogue. Synapses are analogue. This gives them a much greater capacity than a transistor in a processor, which is only used as a switch and as such only processes two values (ones and zeros). Today's neural networks merely simulate neurons and synapses, digitally. They're a far cry from the real thing. Neuromorphic processors that are analogue are being developed by several companies. These emulate rather than simulate neurons and synapses. Very promising technology, which offers such advantages as more computing power for less energy and an inherent ability to continuously learn rather than requiring a resource-hungry training process. Unfortunately, though, the size and density of the components are currently nowhere near a match for the latest GPUs, such as those produced by Nvidia. This is probably why Nvidia is showing no interest in developing its own yet - it's doing a great job with GPUs.
@casey-gt8nl
@casey-gt8nl Жыл бұрын
@@antonystringfellow5152ANALOG IS SWINGING BACK BABY!!!!!!!
@TheRyulord
@TheRyulord Жыл бұрын
@@antonystringfellow5152 Bits are a unit of measurement for information/uncertainty, not just some detail of how computers work. You can quantify the amount of information needed to describe any physical system as being some number of bits.
@AkiraKurai
@AkiraKurai Жыл бұрын
​@TheRyulord bits are by definition binary, you can not encode analog data unless you are fine with losing raw information and then creating an interpreter to guess what was the actual raw information, take any analog wave and transform it into a digital wave.
@TheRyulord
@TheRyulord Жыл бұрын
​@@AkiraKurai You don't lose any information. Look up "Bekenstein bound". All physical systems, including analog electronics, can be losslessly described by a string of bits.
@muhammadasadhaider6893
@muhammadasadhaider6893 Жыл бұрын
Amazing content, thank you!
@christianlagareslinares3958
@christianlagareslinares3958 Жыл бұрын
Artem, great work behind this video. Thanks for breaking down complex information and making it more accessible. I'm looking forward to bumping into you at some Neuro meeting in the US!
@DimitriMaslov
@DimitriMaslov Ай бұрын
...ahhh, rediscovering Artem Kirsanov, once again, once again, once again, once...
@borisdorofeev5602
@borisdorofeev5602 Ай бұрын
The way I'm interpretting this information is that doing things like listening to music or an off-topic audiobook while studying is not optimal. Your brain is trying to overlap memories without a sinusoidal property. So rather than the earlier examples it's better to try studying two related topics, with a build up and cool down of interesity. After some time, its actually optimal to take a break and force that sine wave to baseline encoding intensity. Then after a break build back slowly into learning and don't just dive in. Like work through a simple math problem or think of a good way to put a logical circuit together. I will try this route.
@Earthshine256
@Earthshine256 Жыл бұрын
В этом видео множество удивительного, но больше всего меня поразила мыша, дрожащая в ожидании шока (нарисую такую где-нибудь - посмотрим, поможет ли она memory retrieval)
@weylin6
@weylin6 Жыл бұрын
I wonder causes issues like difficulty forming or recalling memories, or why some things are more easily learned? If you find something interesting, it seems to make you more likely to remember it?
@KFC15326
@KFC15326 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for your effort to share the neuroscience knowledge. greeting from south korea
@pauljones9150
@pauljones9150 Жыл бұрын
Great video as always 🎉
@nervous711
@nervous711 Жыл бұрын
23:32 I have a question regarding to the size of engrams. Isn't the size set of engrams for a specific memory fixed? But it seems that the co-retrieval of 2 distinct engrams increases the engrams on both sets.Or because the new linking engrams only contain the linking information, so that doesn't count the original size of the 2 engrams?
@ArtemKirsanov
@ArtemKirsanov Жыл бұрын
Amazing point, thank you! I also had this very question while I was creating the video, but I'm afraid I don't have a great answer. The source paper for this finding ( pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28126819/ ) just reports an "increased overlap" but doesn't compare overall sizes (or I just missed it). My intuition is that the "reorganization" would mean that some non-overlapping neurons become excluded from the engram to keep the density constant, while increasing the overlap. But your interpretation with "linking information" is equally plausible 🤔 If you find the answer, please let me know!
@tommylakindasorta3068
@tommylakindasorta3068 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating. I love learning about how the brain works.
@DmitryRomanov
@DmitryRomanov 8 ай бұрын
Мы скучаем по вам, Артём ❤️ Вдохновения вам, и удачи в поиске и творчестве и жизни!
@icescreamkung276
@icescreamkung276 Жыл бұрын
this is feel like new world to me
@Dream4rc
@Dream4rc Жыл бұрын
I wonder if the gathering the results only through fear responses is a practical way of describing something as multifaceted as memory.
@1milionlives
@1milionlives Жыл бұрын
the brain makes machine learning looks like a child toy
@Gorulabro
@Gorulabro Жыл бұрын
And yet. There are so many parallels that pop up in modern ML to concepts in neuroscience. In most cases it's "convergent evolution" -- something that "just worked" for the ML groups -- rather than something copied from nature. Different things are hard / easy for biological / artificial neural networks, but the essence seems to be in the process of being captured.
@diadetediotedio6918
@diadetediotedio6918 Жыл бұрын
@@Gorulabro Distant parallels For the most part, most modern neural network architectures are not even really based on how the brain works, and the few that are (such as spiking neural networks) are also relatively distant approximations of how our brains produce the effects we see in reality. The truth is that we are simply far from even coming close to simulating something like this.
@Gorulabro
@Gorulabro Жыл бұрын
@@diadetediotedio6918 My point is exactly that. We don't have to mimic nature to develop similar functionality. Latent representation, sparsified encoding, sequence positional encoding in transformer architectures, all those are high level concepts discussed on this channel that have representations in modern ML. Not one-to-one, because that would be as wastefull as trying to build planes with flapping wings instead of propellors.
@diadetediotedio6918
@diadetediotedio6918 Жыл бұрын
@@Gorulabro I don't disagree with you that it's not necessary for us to copy the nature of 1-1 to have similar "functionality". Now I would say that you need to be very careful with your definition of "functionality". Because then, there is no functionality similar to the brain in artificial neural networks if we consider functionality as the set of qualitative experiences that imply a certain general behavior in the system, for example, ANN's are terrible for having several things that would require them to have a qualitative representation of the world and whose functionality in fact cannot be simulated by a computer. On the other hand, we can make excellent mimics of "functionality" in the external sense, something that merely reproduces a desired external behavior, as ChatGPT does with producing texts that appear "intelligent" and aware. There are reasons why we don't make planes with flapping wings as well that go way beyond that, and some birds actually just glide most of the time and just use their wings as a way to lift themselves up, but nobody says planes are simulations of birds and nor that we are functioning like birds. The general similarity of a bird and an airplane is the same as that of a bird and a firearm projectile or a ballistic missile, both are "flying" in some sense, but it doesn't seem to me that it makes sense to say that having this "functionality" similarly let us translate this knowledge into terms of what goes on in birds, as many people try to do by saying that AI's somehow have an inner workings close to what goes on in human consciousness. It takes a lot of care to do these analyses, but in terms I don't disagree with you that these are efficient means of approaching something that refers to the intelligent external behavior that we seek to automate.
@1milionlives
@1milionlives Жыл бұрын
machine learning is about interpolation on a dataset, it can only learn statistically. statistical learning is the lowest form of intelligence and is very different from interaction and survival in a real world environment. the best state of the art ml model is much stupider than the simplest of bacteria
@SuperKirby_Gaming
@SuperKirby_Gaming Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video!
@graph-gear500
@graph-gear500 Жыл бұрын
Never change your mouse 3D model. it's the best 3D model I've ever seen
@ArtemKirsanov
@ArtemKirsanov Жыл бұрын
Haha, thanks! :D
@walteralter1686
@walteralter1686 Жыл бұрын
Really good, gradient pedagogy, emphasis on clarity. I'll check out the rest of your channel. Smarter-faster.
@Sonicdude3
@Sonicdude3 Жыл бұрын
This is the REAL NEWS I subscribed for!
@DerekLoveland
@DerekLoveland Жыл бұрын
Wow! This video was packed with “aha moments”! This video is amazing!
@jaxonreynolds2528
@jaxonreynolds2528 Ай бұрын
This was a very interesting video, also the visuals were perfect they helped me build some more neuron connections lol. I loved this video
@captainjj7184
@captainjj7184 Жыл бұрын
New vocab unlocked: _"Let's unpack what this means"_ Thank you Artem, I'll be adopting this from now on!😂 Btw, I have a feeling the sparse number of these lit up roadways means that they're an efficient form of myelinated "traffic gates" to deal with similarly categorized course of events or thoughts venturing through the same pathways, to direct information recall...? In which case will correspond directly to ease of indexing functions based on reason of percentage where these babies exist in each region. Forgive my rambling I'm typing halfway thru the video😅 Anyways will continue in the office and thank you for always being inspirational!
@federicomunozcorrea1635
@federicomunozcorrea1635 Жыл бұрын
Los engramas son muy interesantes, buen video!
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