Thank you for sharing this lecture I love neuroscience. I began to study it on my own since I was young and now I finally decided at the age of 44 to study in the University. I've read so many books listen to so many lectures and even talked about it myself and seminars. I really love the function of the human brain. Thank you so much for sharing!
@24cf6483 жыл бұрын
Can I ask you from where you started?
@leif10752 жыл бұрын
HOW can we make it easier..FUCK NO U don't want it to be harder as an adult
@JamieHumeCreative2 жыл бұрын
This was fascinating. I really appreciate shared lectures from actual courses. I cannot afford to go back to school.Although I have an undergrad degree, which I did without full knowledge of my disabilities, of course, I didn't have the supports I needed. I am Dyslexic, have ADHD and am Autistic. I know I could have done more if I had understood what was happening in my brain that needed different approaches to excel consistently. My grades were up and down from fail to 4.0. So now, my joy is to flow through lectures at will as I find them stimulating and very interesting. I love knowledge as it connects with my interests. Now that I am officially diagnosed, I want to learn all I can about how the brain of ND people is different from NT people. I realize there is 'no such thing as average' which is even more intriguing. I would just love to audit in Neuroscience. But, unlikely to have that opportunity. AS a senior I might be able to score an opportunity in my area. I will look into it. Thank you. Please never stop making knowledge available It seems harder to do a search on these talks now as what comes up is just introductory classes.
@Seomon111 жыл бұрын
I really loved watching this, thank you Harvard, thank you Prof Lichtman and everyone else involved.
@MrSurferDoug10 жыл бұрын
Neurology still has a long way to go to understand mental illness and then treat. Hope this talk continues to inspire better understanding of the the brain and mind. It will be exciting to see what is learned in the next 20 years.
@anonviewerciv4 жыл бұрын
Probably time for an updated version of this talk.
@anastassiya85268 ай бұрын
thank you, the lecturer's skills of storytelling are perfect. the lecture is fascinating and very memorable!
@anniemoonmaid11 жыл бұрын
i realise my perception of my universe is through my brain, naturally i want to find out more about it...thank you for upload more fascinating revelations to come
@josephbrady676011 жыл бұрын
A very good lecture and v clear on a tough subject,,,great graphics....Joe
@cjstevens64059 жыл бұрын
There is a longer, slightly more detailed 3 part version of the talk Jeff is giving here that is available over on the iBiology channel.
@psychoctapus80694 жыл бұрын
This is an amazing lecture but I find myself having trouble with finding new data regarding these topics. He says that in as little as five years we'll be able to fully diagram a small mammalian brain, this lecture was posted in 2013, where could we find these diagrams, or updates on this type of research?
@jaydippatel84158 жыл бұрын
this is the very good lecture and thanks to put this video on u tube
@kumar1120naresh5 ай бұрын
Hi Jeff, My question is how can you view of cells of the eye
@naughteedesign10 жыл бұрын
toes amazeballs, love it! thanks for plopping this up for consumption
@NoMady688 Жыл бұрын
29:05 coordenação motora está ligado a todo exercicio que praticamos, pelo menos eu vejo dessa forma, ou seja mesmo que você não exercite um musculo sempre que faz algum movimento com essa parte do seu corpo o seu cerebro deve passar informações para outra parte do cérebro. E acho que apenas nesse caso existe o equilíbrio, entao sempre que você acorda e se levanta e se mantem em equilíbrio o seu cérebro deve de alguma forma acordar essas memorias antigas.
@NoMady688 Жыл бұрын
É assim que eu penso. Não quer dizer que eu esteja correto.
@kristinak21243 жыл бұрын
Love algorithm for this reason 👏👏👏
@KingOfThePanduz6 жыл бұрын
absolutely FASCINATING
@wilburjames359 Жыл бұрын
When did this happened?
@Neueregel11 жыл бұрын
Great upload !!
@leif10753 жыл бұрын
Is this a public lecture?
@slovakmath10 жыл бұрын
the 1st person who tells me the VERY basic elementary error he made somewhere between 15:30 - 16:30 will get a reward from me! Don't worry its not hard, try to see his mistake
@bjorgvinagnarsson897410 жыл бұрын
The cm to inch/feet conversion is incorrect
@AlphaNumeric12311 жыл бұрын
0:56:31 3D visualization (hand segmentation) 0:38:36 Brainbow glory
@lightcity79637 жыл бұрын
motif is a key word, yet neuro-plasticity is not mentioned yet
@victoriaghewlett10 жыл бұрын
damn that's some crazy shit
@subramaniambrothers74810 жыл бұрын
EVEN WITH THE PRESENT SCANNER OF ONE BILLION PIXELS PER SEC , TO COMPLETE THE SCAN OF ENTIRE HUMAN BRAIN IT WOULD TAKE APPROX 72367 YEARS assuming the AVERAGE SIZE OF HUMAN BRAIN IS 1260 CUBIC CENTIMETERS.
@cozmic82882 ай бұрын
use 72367 scanners
@CarterColeisInfamous11 жыл бұрын
thats freaking crazy 0:39:00
@Brahim21km8 ай бұрын
ما جدوى ان تعجت و اندهشت ان لم تجد الجواب المصيري لوجودك و حياتك و هو ماذا تفعل في هذا الوجود ان لم تستطع معرفة و ادراك خالقك . هل ستنتظر ان تحصي عدد الخلايا العصبية الى ما نهاية ؟ انا دخلت لارى هذا الفيديو لا تعرف على خالقي . و هذا قربني فعلا الى خالقي و جعلني اعطي معنى لحياتي . و لم اعد خائف من المستقبل و ما يحصل معي . لا تنتظر ان ترى خالقك بالعين المجردة و يكون غباء منك . و لكن فقط من خلال نفسك تعرف على خالقك . و شيء طبيعي لا حظ للصدفة امام روعة ما نسمع في هذا الفيديو من معلومات . اما ان خرجت من هذا الفيديو كما دخلت فاعلم انك لن تتغير .
@cozmic82882 ай бұрын
💀
@Brahim21km2 ай бұрын
@@cozmic8288 كنت انتظر تعليق صريح منك .
@timtae93693 жыл бұрын
this reminds me of derek shepherd .
@briseboy8 ай бұрын
Any question with which you disagree, yet consider important, is an excellent opportunity for you to advance from speculation nto formulating an hypothesis, an answerable question or many. Most questioned occurring to brains not having learned to bicycle (as analogy!) may be underdetermined - that is the question itself contains unexamined, unlearned errors. This, by the way, is the root cause of too many youtube comments; too many omissions and errors are contained in the brain of the commenter. Aggression does not replace either openness to novel stimuli, nor the most important impulse - to learn enough to even formulate the question or criticism into coherence, and thus usefulness. Literacy, numeracy, and perception of dynamical structural change are all higher-order concepts. Whether brain or object, nothing is static; to imagine anything at all as static on all scales is the fundamental error leading to sessile dogmatic stultification. Some scales are unimportant to us due to our lifespans. Entire new significant synaptic connections, though, can be generated within very few minutes. We learn best through eager focus upon real or imagined coherence/competence. Scientists present rationale for learning as ameliorating diseases. This is to gain funding. Optimality in complex dynamical systems differs from definitions of optimality in simple or static structure. The latter are largely imaginary. The term for rote-learned information has been called "fixed" intelligence. Crystallized intelligence is in contrast to fluid intelligence. This should indicate to you that the noun has two different, opposed meanings. Such conflation indicates that a vocabulary may contain cognitive errors; insufficiently defined terms or factors create concepts and brains struggling , like a failed bicyclist or drowning swimmer, in underdetermined situations - from THEIR point of view. Aggression does not resolve such cognitive difficulties, but does diminish any social interaction, and therefore, culture, community, function. Education is corrupted, when individuals or coalitions attempt to suppress openness to novel experience or research. Though my own interest and research is involved in basic questions rather than the ubiquitously popular applied questions appealing to psychosocial aberrations, this comment is an attempt to encourage questing in "what works" and adaptation rather than funded and focused upon nonadaptiveand maladaptive errors.
@SerikPoliasc3 ай бұрын
Lee William Johnson Jason White Gary
@leif10752 жыл бұрын
NO PLEASE HOW CAN WE MAKENIT AS EASY TO LEARN AS AN ADUKT AS ITNIS AS A CBILD..I need to learn how to ride a bike.why the fuck did I have trouble...indont want to have more trouble as an adult than as a child..
@ClarissaSigrid-u9f3 ай бұрын
Harris Deborah Wilson Patricia Lee Sharon
@HelenBrown-s1j3 ай бұрын
Young Eric Williams Frank Walker Donna
@ДмитрийВербицкий-у7д3 ай бұрын
Walker Kenneth Martinez Jeffrey Jones Steven
@kailashsingh97372 ай бұрын
Very beautiful sweet mam
@nicktheo149711 жыл бұрын
hahaha
@NetaAlkan7 ай бұрын
You are not everyone, what an overstatement about adults, if you are static and can't learn anything that's your problem
@cozmic82882 ай бұрын
lollllll cope
@pizzapizza80176 жыл бұрын
this is italian jerry pull hack scream off u could see it va unqualified student life at Harvard eye exam Asian guy left eye make a medical appointment