Sense of Mind
Sense of Mind
  • Видео 367
  • Просмотров 589 926
Human Evolution & Brain Development (Preview of The Social Brain - Patreon ep 4)
In this episode of The Social Brain, we discuss human brain evolution and development, and what we've learned from our research into these topics. The first half of this episode is available for everyone, but if you want to see the whole episode, sign up for The Social Brain's Patreon page at the Premium tier: www.patreon.com/thesocialbrain
(Please note that this is separate from Sense of Mind's Patreon page, because Taylor and I share the revenue from The Social Brain's page.)
--
Please support this channel by signing up for Sense of Mind's Patreon and get bonus content every month: www.patreon.com/senseofmind
You'll get:
- Exclusive videos
- Access to exclusive monthly livestreams
- Written ...
Просмотров: 232

Видео

The Neuroscience of Resilience: How to Bounce Back
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.21 час назад
Resilience is not just about how your brain withstands adversity, but also how it becomes stronger as a result. This video is a deep dive into the neuroscience of resilience and science-based strategies for how to build resilience. If you want to get exclusive videos, blog posts, and livestreams AND help me keep creating videos like this one, please sign up for Sense of Mind's Patreon: www.patr...
Adolescence: The Brain's Quest for Identity and Independence (The Social Brain ep 39)
Просмотров 315День назад
The adolescent brain is often characterized as an imbalanced, hormone-charged, and broken version of an adult brain. The reality, however, is much more nuanced and interesting. Adolescence is a critically important period of brain development that allows for rapid learning, social affiliation, and exploration. It's found in many species across the animal kingdom and it serves an extremely impor...
Got 5 minutes? Help me make this channel better!
Просмотров 12321 день назад
Thanks so much for watching! Here's the link to the survey: forms.gle/9AkvUTy1HuJqQzY9A By the way, it's completely anonymous!
How The Brain Evolved from Single Celled Organisms (The Social Brain ep 38)
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.Месяц назад
Right now, you are in possession of the most complex thing in the known universe: Your brain. The question is, how could this amazingly advanced biological computer have come about through natural forces? In this episode of The Social Brain, we’re traveling hundreds of millions of years into the past to answer that question. We’ll describe in broad strokes the evolution of single celled organis...
Serotonin, Psychedelics, SSRIs, and Happiness - The Social Brain Patreon-Only ep 3
Просмотров 805Месяц назад
In this episode, we discuss the serotonin system, its role in depression, psychedelic drugs, SSRIs, growth mindset, and what we've learned from our research on these topics. If you’re reading this, then you’re watching the public version of this video, so if you want to watch the second half, go to www.patreon.com/thesocialbrain and sign up for the “Premium” tier. You’ll get access to every exc...
3 Steps to Rewire Your Brain for Better Sleep
Просмотров 504Месяц назад
To form good habits and break bad ones, you have to rewire your brain’s dopamine system. In this video, I'll explain how to do that by talking about how you can create healthier habits around sleep. 00:00 Step 1 03:00 Step 2 04:26 Step 3 07:00 How to ACTUALLY change your habits Please support this channel by signing up for Sense of Mind's Patreon and get bonus content every month: www.patreon.c...
Deciphering Depression: The Role of Serotonin (The Social Brain ep 37)
Просмотров 654Месяц назад
The dramatic increase in depression diagnoses has led millions to use antidepressants, based on the theory that a chemical imbalance in the brain is to blame. However, recent studies suggest the cause of depression is more complex, challenging the simplicity of this theory. While antidepressants are crucial for many, viewing depression solely as a chemical issue oversimplifies the diverse facto...
Revealing the Mind: The Neuroscience of Psychedelics (The Social Brain ep 36)
Просмотров 7512 месяца назад
Revealing the Mind: The Neuroscience of Psychedelics (The Social Brain ep 36)
ADHD and The Networks of The Brain - The Social Brain Patreon-Only ep 2
Просмотров 3132 месяца назад
ADHD and The Networks of The Brain - The Social Brain Patreon-Only ep 2
6 Ways to Stop Procrastinating with Neuroscience
Просмотров 5912 месяца назад
6 Ways to Stop Procrastinating with Neuroscience
The ADHD Brain - Beyond Distractions (The Social Brain ep 35)
Просмотров 7162 месяца назад
The ADHD Brain - Beyond Distractions (The Social Brain ep 35)
A Balanced Mind: The Default Mode & Other Networks
Просмотров 5973 месяца назад
A Balanced Mind: The Default Mode & Other Networks
Use THIS Brain Function to Level Up Your Life
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.3 месяца назад
Use THIS Brain Function to Level Up Your Life
Welcome to Sense of Mind!
Просмотров 7153 месяца назад
Welcome to Sense of Mind!
From Panic to Peace: The Brain's Stress Response (The Social Brain ep 33)
Просмотров 4473 месяца назад
From Panic to Peace: The Brain's Stress Response (The Social Brain ep 33)
Worry and Peace: Easing The Brain’s Anxiety (The Social Brain ep 32)
Просмотров 6624 месяца назад
Worry and Peace: Easing The Brain’s Anxiety (The Social Brain ep 32)
Use Neurobiology to Beat Anxiety and Find Confidence
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.6 месяцев назад
Use Neurobiology to Beat Anxiety and Find Confidence
The Secret to Deeper Conversations: Inter-Brain Synchrony
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.7 месяцев назад
The Secret to Deeper Conversations: Inter-Brain Synchrony
Resilience and great achievement
Просмотров 1299 месяцев назад
Resilience and great achievement
Harnessing The Neuroscience of Resilience: The Brain's Superpower (Sense of Mind)
Просмотров 2 тыс.9 месяцев назад
Harnessing The Neuroscience of Resilience: The Brain's Superpower (Sense of Mind)
Why do we enjoy horror movies
Просмотров 25310 месяцев назад
Why do we enjoy horror movies
Igniting Positive Emotions: The Prefrontal Cortex and Anterior Cingulate Cortex - Sense of Mind
Просмотров 3,5 тыс.11 месяцев назад
Igniting Positive Emotions: The Prefrontal Cortex and Anterior Cingulate Cortex - Sense of Mind
Happiness Secrets from Neuroscience: The Pleasure Cycle and the Path to Eudaimonia
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.Год назад
Happiness Secrets from Neuroscience: The Pleasure Cycle and the Path to Eudaimonia
Caffeine's Impact on the Brain: The Neuroscience Behind Your Morning Boost
Просмотров 1,8 тыс.Год назад
Caffeine's Impact on the Brain: The Neuroscience Behind Your Morning Boost
The 7 Emotion Circuits: RAGE, FEAR, GRIEF, LUST, CARE, SEEKING, and PLAY (Jaak Panksepp's theory)
Просмотров 5 тыс.Год назад
The 7 Emotion Circuits: RAGE, FEAR, GRIEF, LUST, CARE, SEEKING, and PLAY (Jaak Panksepp's theory)
Human Uniqueness: How Our Brains Set Us Apart in the Animal Kingdom
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.Год назад
Human Uniqueness: How Our Brains Set Us Apart in the Animal Kingdom
The Evolution of the Cerebral Cortex: How Primates Changed the Brain Game
Просмотров 8 тыс.Год назад
The Evolution of the Cerebral Cortex: How Primates Changed the Brain Game
Interoception: Why Emotions Feel the Way They Do
Просмотров 7 тыс.Год назад
Interoception: Why Emotions Feel the Way They Do
Horror Movies MANIPULATE YOUR BRAIN (the neuroscience of scary movies)
Просмотров 3,2 тыс.Год назад
Horror Movies MANIPULATE YOUR BRAIN (the neuroscience of scary movies)

Комментарии

  • @guillermobrand8458
    @guillermobrand8458 3 часа назад

    What makes us Human drive.google.com/file/d/1akWFgFnqOTTJHZg5W9xniz-Dm8BN_Ylm/view?usp=sharing

  • @guillermobrand8458
    @guillermobrand8458 3 часа назад

    Conscious Action explained Based on the information they capture with their senses, living beings with brains manage a utilitarian mental representation of the conditions that currently take place in their relevant material environment. This Mental Correlate is a kind of “photograph” of what is happening in the Present in the relevant material environment of the Individual, a Mental Correlate that we will call “Reality of the Individual”. Life experience, stored in the brain, allows us to give meaning to what is perceived. At the same time, as Pavlov demonstrated, life experience allows us to project eventual future states of the individual's relevant environment, generating expectations of action. Information from the Past, the Present and an eventual Future is managed by the brain. It is evident that the brain makes a utilitarian distinction between the Past, the Present and the projection of an eventual future. Human language allows us to incorporate into the mental correlate events and entities that are not necessarily part of what happens in the world of matter, which gives an unprecedented “malleability” to the Reality of the Individual. For the unconscious, everything is happening in the Present. When a child, whom I will call Pedrito, listens to the story of Little Red Riding Hood, said entity is integrated into the Reality of the Individual. In turn, for the child, this entity is “very real”; he does not need his eyes to see it to incorporate it into his mental correlate of the relevant environment. Thanks to our particular language, authentic “immaterial and timeless worlds” have a place in the Mental Correlate of the relevant environment. In the first four years of life, the child is immersed in an ocean of words, a cascade of sounds and meanings. At this stage, a child hears between seven thousand and twenty-five thousand words a day, a barrage of information. Many of these words speak of events that occur in the present, in the material world, but others cross the boundaries of time and space. There is no impediment so that, when the words do not find their echo in what is happening at that moment in Pedrito's material environment, these words become threads that weave a segment of the tapestry of the Reality of the Individual. Just as the child's brain grants existence to the young Little Red Riding Hood when the story unfolds before him, similarly, when the voices around him talk about tomorrow and a beach with Pedro, as happens for example when his mother tells him says: -“Pedrito, tomorrow we will go for a walk to the beach”- the child's mind, still in the process of deciphering the mysteries of time, instantly conjures the entity Pedrito, with his feet on the golden sand, in the eternal present of childhood. Although over time a strong association between the entity Pedrito and his body is established in the child's brain, a total fusion between said entity and the child's body can never take place, since for the Unconscious the bodily actions of Pedrito They only take place in the Present, while the entity Pedrito is able to carry out actions in authentic timeless and immaterial worlds. The entity Pedrito is what we call the Being, and we know its action as Conscious Action.

  • @bussi7859
    @bussi7859 6 часов назад

    This does not apply for your brain, that’s still a heap of crap

  • @amelss3
    @amelss3 15 часов назад

    Thank you for sharing.

  • @saulbeiza7303
    @saulbeiza7303 23 часа назад

    Why do we even have to participate in this game. It’s so not fair. But who is making it not fair? Me? Or the guy in the mountain with all the gold?

  • @oscarjosefin1972
    @oscarjosefin1972 23 часа назад

    Thank you for the video! Im currently trying to write a thesis about Reading Fiction and you provide some explanation and references that i need. Thank you so much!

  • @NicholasWilliams-kd3eb
    @NicholasWilliams-kd3eb День назад

    You said some cool things. One thing though, you said something that doesn't make sense "there is no stimulus and response with respect to hippocampal memory storage". How does the retrieval of memory happen from the hippocampus if there is no (stimulus and response) between (hippocampus) and other brain regions through relay? I think you might be using terms wrong here. Place cells are in fact associative memory, just a different kind, it's all associative (Rather what is different is the parallel integration of dendritic additives/subtractive ContextOfFocus/ContextOfInhibition = Specific parsing pathway activation magnitude. (context windows). (dendritic filtering of competing sequential information Depolarization/HyperPolarization/Thresholds).

    • @senseofmindshow
      @senseofmindshow 23 часа назад

      Your right! I did make a mistake by saying “associative” memory. I meant to say that *procedural* memory doesn’t depend on the hippocampus. My apologies for that fumbling of words (this is one of the hazards of recording these episodes live).

    • @NicholasWilliams-kd3eb
      @NicholasWilliams-kd3eb 22 часа назад

      @@senseofmindshow That was really good content, Thank you for sharing.

  • @NicholasWilliams-kd3eb
    @NicholasWilliams-kd3eb День назад

    Great stuff, great content.

  • @anuullannur
    @anuullannur День назад

    Would you help me to find more information about 5-HT2A -2C receptor distribution in the mesolimbic and VMPFC, DLPFC, and Insula-amygdala pathways? And can you tell me the easiest sources, like books with illustrations, explanations, and diagrams (other than Stahl's essential or illustrated books), videos, etc., that help me know more about the different pathways of every neurotransmitter or modulator and their functions in depth?

  • @GeoffryGifari
    @GeoffryGifari День назад

    There have been times where I tried to remember things, couldn't, and when I moved on and let my mind rest, the memory emerged. Does this have basis in neuroscience?

  • @GeoffryGifari
    @GeoffryGifari День назад

    If we were to just sit still while thinking about moving our limbs, would regions like the motor cortex or cerebellum be activated?

    • @senseofmindshow
      @senseofmindshow 23 часа назад

      There is evidence that thinking about moving your body activates premotor and motor cortex (in not sure about the cerebellum). This has been suggested as the neurobiological basis of the observation that, in some cases, visualization of an actions seems to enhance performance of that action in the future.

  • @GeoffryGifari
    @GeoffryGifari День назад

    I've read about people who have no inner voice or incapable of mental visualization. Wonder how "thought" takes form in these cases

    • @senseofmindshow
      @senseofmindshow 23 часа назад

      That’s a very interesting question 🤔 I’ll have to think about that ;)

  • @locustphysalis3300
    @locustphysalis3300 День назад

    there could be an interesting connection between neuroscience research in free will and the evolution of wakefulness

  • @bernardcanders
    @bernardcanders День назад

    Timestamps!

  • @PoohInTiggerDisguise
    @PoohInTiggerDisguise День назад

    Where can I ask questions?

  • @christopherchilton-smith6482
    @christopherchilton-smith6482 День назад

    Such a shame the pfc is the last part to fully develop.

  • @mohibquadri4053
    @mohibquadri4053 2 дня назад

    Too Good 💎 What would be some best books to read for tackling Hopelessness in chaos or ambiguity and creating self belief again after setbacks in career or job search..

  • @DrApocalyptus
    @DrApocalyptus 2 дня назад

    I wonder why the DRN causes that response in the PAG and amygdala. I'm also guessing that these areas are excited rather than inhibited, because I recall most serotonin receptors are actually inhibitory. I don't really know about the nuances of why an area has more excitatory response to a neurotransmitter or a more inhibitory response, but I'd assume it has something to do with receptor concentrations?

    • @senseofmindshow
      @senseofmindshow 2 дня назад

      According to research by Stephen Maier, during uncontrollable stress the DRN seems to inhibit the PAG and excite the amygdala. Serotonin receptors can be excitatory (for example the 2A receptor) or inhibitory (e.g. the 1A receptor), but the real question is what kinds of neurons these receptors are expressed on. For example, if it's an inhibitory GABA-releasing neuron expressing an inhibitory 1A serotonin receptor, then when serotonin binds to it the net effect in that neural circuit might be excitation (because the serotonin is inhibiting an inhibitory neuron).

  • @MaeveNightmare
    @MaeveNightmare 3 дня назад

    Heh apparently one of the few women who love horror 😅. Any other ladies

  • @DanielBro42
    @DanielBro42 3 дня назад

    thank you guys, Enjoyed watching this one!

  • @Slugger2900
    @Slugger2900 4 дня назад

    Before realizing the amygdala’s role I would always put myself in fight or flight all the time great video

  • @Gurokku19
    @Gurokku19 4 дня назад

    play in x1.75 speed ur welcome

  • @fatherburning358
    @fatherburning358 5 дней назад

    New subscriber. Great content. Ill be going back through your catalogue 👍

  • @jeremyatkinson4633
    @jeremyatkinson4633 6 дней назад

    Bedankt

  • @twentyeight4220
    @twentyeight4220 6 дней назад

    Great video, thanks for all the good information.

  • @DisciplinedLion
    @DisciplinedLion 7 дней назад

    Andre Huberman’s explanation of this to David Goggins, made me come here. Thanks to your elaboration!

  • @watchful4087
    @watchful4087 7 дней назад

    This is an amazingly informative video. Do you have any videos on cbd used for aura headaches.

  • @bdebs6796
    @bdebs6796 7 дней назад

    Great presentation, thanks.

  • @Turoskin
    @Turoskin 8 дней назад

    Interesting video. I’m curious how the technique you talk about works in relation to trauma and CPTSD.

    • @Turoskin
      @Turoskin 8 дней назад

      Also, include autism.

  • @Mathematiksimplified
    @Mathematiksimplified 8 дней назад

    Hey I have a request Could you record video about reticular activating system I cant find any video regarding this comprehensive and fascinating topic Thank you

  • @ozguromak
    @ozguromak 8 дней назад

    Sir first of all thanks for the video all again! I have been thinking of ways to get into neuroscience and combine it with my MD license in the future. But I actually don’t know how to and all I can do rn is to keep my enthusiasm in neuroscience by reading books such as Behave by Sapolsky. Any advice on what I can do for the future? I don’t know if I made myself clear but I really want to do science and maybe explore something about brain. Should I seek an internship abroad or something? I’m watching from Turkey btw😊

  • @acupunctureclinic
    @acupunctureclinic 8 дней назад

    Really good presentation Andrew, Thanks for the work you put into it. I am going to put the link into my newsletter I send out to my patients. The "Looking Forward" and "Three Good Things" will be such good therapy for people to take up.

    • @senseofmindshow
      @senseofmindshow 2 дня назад

      That's really wonderful to hear. thank you!

  • @karlhalvorson4172
    @karlhalvorson4172 8 дней назад

    I think there was a slight error when talking about the great apes and PFCs, at least it sounded like it. Humans are actually also part of the great ape category. It sounded like you were saying that the chimpanzee, bonobo, gorillas, and orangutan are our cousins, but they are in a different category called The Great Apes, which would be incorrect. The Great Apes is also known as the hominids (Family Hominidae) of which humans are also part of. Believe it or not, we all have ape brains.

  • @Innercirclefc
    @Innercirclefc 8 дней назад

    i love it

  • @skit555
    @skit555 8 дней назад

    Really interesting, thank you! 😊

  • @dustygatrell-ru7tg
    @dustygatrell-ru7tg 9 дней назад

    You deffently do your homework brother. Thanks for the info.

  • @fatemebaghdadi3305
    @fatemebaghdadi3305 9 дней назад

    👌👌👌👌

  • @fatemebaghdadi3305
    @fatemebaghdadi3305 9 дней назад

    Very Helpful👌👌👌👌

  • @ozguromak
    @ozguromak 11 дней назад

    as a third year medical student following you guys for a while now, i have been thinking about going into neurology combined with neuroscience phd or something like that.

    • @senseofmindshow
      @senseofmindshow 11 дней назад

      Wow that sounds like a fascinating combination. I wish you the best of luck whatever you choose!

    • @ozguromak
      @ozguromak 10 дней назад

      @@senseofmindshow yeah thank YOU, luck is what ill be needing for sure haha

  • @rafatlatif544
    @rafatlatif544 12 дней назад

    Genius

  • @trudyandgeorge
    @trudyandgeorge 13 дней назад

    For any nerdy onlookers at 7:51, you can calculate the number in the right column by taking the number next to it, then multiply it by one less, then cut that in half. To be explicit, it's (n)×(n-1)÷2. Commonly called the handshake theorem, it was used to prove how many total handshakes could happen between n people. And the logic is fun to think through. Focussing on a single individual for a moment, they would shake hands with n-1 people, the minus one is because they don't shake hands with themselves. Now we apply this to everyone (all n of them). Thats (n)(n-1). Now we need to divide by two because we've double counted. If the single individual we focussed on a moment ago was me, and you were one of the other n-1 people, then we counted me shaking your hand, and your shaking my hand. We've doubled up so must slash the total in half.

  • @patrickryan1515
    @patrickryan1515 13 дней назад

    You have a very pleasant personality and therein much beauty as expressed through your intelligence. Your the type of instructor who can do the most good. Thanks for sharing and thus enhancing my understanding of the subject matter.

  • @patrickryan1515
    @patrickryan1515 13 дней назад

    Two things: Would you say the prefrontal cortex is that FILTER to which people refer when they say one is lacking a filter? And in music, is it that break in which the music momentarily pauses before continuing that serves as a hook to draw up atavistic emotions stored in the limbic region of the brain -- e.g., the Supremes' "You Can't Hurry Love" -- that break in the music which the listener comes to anticipate (perhaps with relish) after hearing the song more than a couple times, because it elicits an emotion embedded deep inside with which you are subconsciously very much in tune (no un intended)?

  • @88tongued
    @88tongued 14 дней назад

    You and Dr. Maika Steinborn should get married!

  • @NATmusic27
    @NATmusic27 15 дней назад

    Dude this should be discussed in the mainstream so much more. It’s how we work and how we can fix some behaviors and achieving good and great things buy being aware of how our brain works

  • @joshuastanfill1757
    @joshuastanfill1757 16 дней назад

    What happens when you take methylene blue, a lot of electrolytes and ketamine? Do you become an extremely quick ketamine metabolizer?

  • @darkkrafter
    @darkkrafter 16 дней назад

    this was incredably interesting

  • @darkkrafter
    @darkkrafter 16 дней назад

    has someone thought of unwrinkeling the brain for study

  • @Marcos10PT
    @Marcos10PT 16 дней назад

    When does the presenter start talking about dopamine?

  • @mistycloud4455
    @mistycloud4455 17 дней назад

    AGI Will help augment the brain

    • @emjakos3548
      @emjakos3548 5 часов назад

      Not to be a luddite, but AGI might be the most unstable thing we've ever invented