Brains
in sentence
868 examples of Brains in a sentence
A lot of this myelination happens in childhood, so from an early age, our vibrant imaginations may have a lot to do with building up
brains
whose carefully myelinated connections can craft creative symphonies throughout our lives.
So what does practice do in our
brains
to make us better at things?
Our
brains
have two kinds of neural tissue: grey matter and white matter.
So how does practice or repetition affect the inner workings of our
brains?
As scientists get closer to unraveling the secrets of our brains, our understanding of effective practice will only improve.
Some people may be particularly logical or creative, but that has nothing to do with the sides of their
brains.
Our
brains
aren't invincible.
Now, I had a hypothesis that the
brains
of procrastinators were actually different than the
brains
of other people.
Both
brains
have a Rational Decision-Maker in them, but the procrastinator's brain also has an Instant Gratification Monkey.
Presenter: Haley Van Dyck! (Applause) Over the course of 18 minutes, 1,200 people, many of whom have never seen each other before, are finding that their
brains
are starting to sync with Haley's brain and with each other.
To understand how this device works, we have to look into our
brains.
Now we have to ask how these neuron patterns in my brain that are associated with my memories and ideas are transmitted into your
brains.
In my lab in Princeton, we bring people to the fMRI scanner and we scan their
brains
while they are either telling or listening to real-life stories.
And we start to scan their
brains
before the story starts, when they're simply lying in the dark and waiting for the story to begin.
And in fact, this is exactly what is happening now in your
brains
when you listen to my sound speaking.
Think of these five metronomes as five
brains.
JO: (Unintelligible) And we flashed colors in the two
brains
to indicate brain areas that respond very similarly across people.
And as you can see, this incoming sound induced entrainment or alignment in all of the
brains
in auditory cortices that process the sounds, but it didn't spread deeper into the brain.
Now, let's take all this information together and ask: How can we use it to transmit a memory that I have from my brain to your
brains?
We let people watch, for the first time in their life, a TV episode from the BBC series "Sherlock," while we scanned their
brains.
And when I'm transmitting these words to your
brains
now, you have to reconstruct it in your mind.
In fact, we see that pattern emerging now in your
brains.
And we were really surprised to see that the pattern you have now in your
brains
when I'm describing to you these scenes would be very similar to the pattern I had when I watched this movie a few months ago in the scanner.
If everything worked as planned tonight, I used my ability to vocalize sound to be coupled to your
brains.
And I used this coupling to transmit my brain patterns associated with my memories and ideas into your
brains.
Now in the nature area, we look at whether or not we are innately equipped with something, perhaps in our brains, some abnormal chromosome that causes this muse-like effect.
And Peggy Phelan reminded me that maybe my
brains
could be more important than my boobs.
The accuracy of these apparitions suggests that we have a map of the body in our
brains.
A deeper understanding of these apparitions will give us insight into the work our
brains
do every day to build the world as we perceive it.
Let's engage our
brains.
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