Brains
in sentence
868 examples of Brains in a sentence
And to get that thing done, you need at least two monkeys to synchronize their brains, but the ideal is three.
A related myth that you've probably heard of is that we only use 10 percent of our
brains.
Nearly everything that we do, even the most mundane thing, uses nearly all of our
brains.
I'm going to show you how we use this key and a couple of other keys to see deep inside our bodies and
brains.
I need you to understand what scattering is, so I can show you how we get rid of it and see deep inside our bodies and
brains.
Holography enabling de-scattering is the second key to enable us to see deep inside of our bodies and
brains.
What's truly scary is not knowing about our bodies, our
brains
and our diseases so we can effectively treat them.
And even more interesting than that is that recent discoveries are telling us that insects and other little animals with smaller
brains
can use medication too.
They have tiny little brains, yet they can do this very sophisticated medication.
What I think is important, though, is to move beyond these large-brained mammals and give these guys more credit, these simple animals, these insects that we tend to think of as very, very simple with tiny little
brains.
So I began reading everything that I could get my hands on about how exposure to adversity affects the developing
brains
and bodies of children.
We now understand better than we ever have before how exposure to early adversity affects the developing
brains
and bodies of children.
Children are especially sensitive to this repeated stress activation, because their
brains
and bodies are just developing.
So this is fascinating, because one day, in addition to the effects that antibiotics have on antibiotic-resistant bacteria, which are very important, they may also be degrading our gut microbial ecosystems, and so one day we may come to regard antibiotics with the same horror that we currently reserve for those metal tools that the Egyptians used to use to mush up the
brains
before they drained them out for embalming.
We are built out of very small stuff, and we are embedded in a very large cosmos, and the fact is that we are not very good at understanding reality at either of those scales, and that's because our
brains
haven't evolved to understand the world at that scale.
Instead, our
brains
are sampling just a little bit of the world.
In fact, it took Mother Nature 540 million years of hard work to do this task, and much of that effort went into developing the visual processing apparatus of our brains, not the eyes themselves.
He cups a hand over his forehead to keep in the
brains
on which he'd gambled everything.
Those of you who use your
brains
to navigate these challenges, put your hands down.
But we all have
brains
that allow us, that activate to allow us to navigate the journey through these challenges.
We took it into the scanner to see how
brains
respond when you hear laughter.
Nonetheless, when you hear real laughter and when you hear posed laughter, the
brains
are responding completely differently, significantly differently.
CA: And so that being so, you're actually getting ready for this world by believing that we will soon be able to, what, actually take the contents of our
brains
and somehow preserve them forever?
And indeed, there have been staggering discoveries in neuroscience: localizing functionally specialized regions of cortex, turning mouse
brains
transparent, activating neurons with light.
And the final big idea you'll have heard is that maybe it's a good idea we're going to know so much about
brains
and have so much access to big data, because left to our own devices, humans are fallible, we take shortcuts, we err, we make mistakes, we're biased, and in innumerable ways, we get the world wrong.
It's a story about minds and not brains, and in particular, it's a story about the kinds of computations that uniquely human minds can perform, which involve rich, structured knowledge and the ability to learn from small amounts of data, the evidence of just a few examples.
And so our
brains
encode the everyday things we do into habits so we can free up space to learn new things.
So there's a good reason why our
brains
habituate things.
Brains
and neurons have no causal powers.
Brains
and neurons are a species-specific set of symbols, a hack.
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