The science of imagination - Andrey Vyshedskiy

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  • Опубликовано: 11 дек 2016
  • View full lesson: ed.ted.com/lessons/the-neurosc...
    Imagine, for a second, a duck teaching a French class. A ping-pong match in orbit around a black hole. A dolphin balancing a pineapple. You probably haven’t actually seen any of these things. But you could imagine them instantly. How does your brain produce an image of something you’ve never seen? Andrey Vyshedskiy details the neuroscience of imagination.
    Lesson by Andrey Vyshedskiy, animation by Tomás Pichardo-Espaillat.

Комментарии • 788

  • @Soooooooooooonicable
    @Soooooooooooonicable 7 лет назад +2205

    A video about brains, made by brains, and watched by brains.

    • @uratune8027
      @uratune8027 7 лет назад +54

      My Delicious Morsel our brains are learning about themselves

    • @uratune8027
      @uratune8027 7 лет назад +13

      My Delicious Morsel mind blown

    • @noah_lot2842
      @noah_lot2842 7 лет назад +13

      Neptus TV no, brain blown

    • @uratune8027
      @uratune8027 7 лет назад +2

      Nicole Barajas OhShitWaddap

    • @Synodalian
      @Synodalian 7 лет назад +20

      Welcome to the meta-brain.

  • @byronhart5028
    @byronhart5028 7 лет назад +2000

    I love brains. They're so complicated and we know so little about them. I'm excited to see what we'll discover about brains in the next 50 years that I'm alive. We're only just starting out on what I'm sure will be an incredible explosion of knowledge about the brain.

    • @josephfox9221
      @josephfox9221 7 лет назад +12

      the brain is egocentric. Stupid Brains

    • @samimas4343
      @samimas4343 7 лет назад +13

      Byron Hart
      and it is delicious

    • @khorps4756
      @khorps4756 7 лет назад +15

      +Sami Mas I can confirm, as a cannibal, brains are delicious

    • @TorquemadaTwist
      @TorquemadaTwist 7 лет назад +22

      +Khorps
      That is disgusting and wrong.
      Unless you are a zombie. Then I understand that is a part of your culture.

    • @khorps4756
      @khorps4756 7 лет назад +17

      Bruce Dunn stop oppressing me you bigot

  • @jquick85
    @jquick85 7 лет назад +336

    This is why I love neuroscience.

    • @25987489
      @25987489 6 лет назад +24

      Neuroscience loves you too.

    • @dreamerrp
      @dreamerrp 4 года назад +5

      Me too 😃

    • @Raccon_Detective.
      @Raccon_Detective. 2 года назад +2

      Same!

    • @charmaci
      @charmaci 10 месяцев назад +1

      Of course the brain loves the people who study it

    • @jquick85
      @jquick85 10 месяцев назад

      @@charmaci haha! The brain’s so biased to itself!

  • @faesmith3389
    @faesmith3389 7 лет назад +393

    I DID A PROJECT LAST YEAR FOR MY SCIENCE CLASS CALLED "THE SCIENCE BEHIND IMAGINATION AND CREATIVITY" AND MY TEACHER ACTUALLY ENDED UP CALLING MY MOM TO TELL HER HOW AWESOME IT WAS
    Edit: sorry bout the yelling, I was an eighth-grader with no self control. I’m graduated now lol

    • @Quon
      @Quon 3 года назад +28

      Pls dont yell at us

    • @wendysslave1965
      @wendysslave1965 3 года назад +14

      WHY ARE YOU TYPING LIKE THIS

    • @sushidrawssushi8338
      @sushidrawssushi8338 3 года назад +12

      don't yell... quq but I'm glad congrats!

    • @gslle65
      @gslle65 3 года назад +9

      the caps are cool, whatever

    • @Lina-dc2pi
      @Lina-dc2pi 3 года назад +5

      @@Quon omg really?? I have the same project tomorrow !😅

  • @boy638
    @boy638 7 лет назад +628

    i wonder what does a person born blind imagine about

    • @PortalStorm4000
      @PortalStorm4000 7 лет назад +60

      boy638 I would believe they would use descriptions from others along with their other senses. However, I am not blind (still need glasses to see three feet infront of me though :) )

    • @amaliaisepciuc5887
      @amaliaisepciuc5887 6 лет назад +39

      ruclips.net/video/XpUW9pm9wxs/видео.html You should check this out! It's a video with a blind man explaining what he dreams about.

    • @malihachowdhury7323
      @malihachowdhury7323 4 года назад +11

      What sight must sound like.

    • @TheTejender23
      @TheTejender23 4 года назад +22

      If someone who is blind from birth due to structural difference or damage in Primary Visual Cortex (V1, which is the visual sensory area of brain) then that person will not have any vision at all. They wouldn't even have visions in their dreams.

    • @Asmaa_311
      @Asmaa_311 4 года назад +10

      Or in which language does a person born deaf think

  • @glennasmith9382
    @glennasmith9382 7 лет назад +142

    This channel never fails to impress me.

  • @sursr2820
    @sursr2820 7 лет назад +326

    So that's what happened in Pen Pineapple Apple Pen.

  • @khorps4756
    @khorps4756 7 лет назад +247

    is that why it's hard to imagine an alien creature that doesn't have features like a terrestrial creature or doesn't look like a terrestrial creature?

    • @igb5551
      @igb5551 7 лет назад +46

      Good point.. If we've never seen anything like that before, we can't imagine it. The same happens when we try to imagine a 4th dimension, we're not able to create anything that we could not see with our eyes, right??

    • @benjaminwilde152
      @benjaminwilde152 7 лет назад +6

      @Hey Imagination - by definition - is the cognitive process that creates new images and projects based on previous experiences. So you're mostly right, but from what I know there are other factors as well that stop us from experiencing a 4th dimension.

    • @kaja9804
      @kaja9804 7 лет назад +31

      Hey, that's very interesting. As an artist I think I can agree, even the most "creative" pieces of art seem to be a complex collage of things you have seen before. It seems simply impossible to draw somethings you have never seen in the slightest. Even though I never have seen a dragon, I can draw one based of wing structures and reptiles I'm familiar with, but I'd never be able to draw a flower like a bee sees it, I may be able to recreate the viewing angle, but I could never draw the flower with acruate ultra violet.

    • @igb5551
      @igb5551 7 лет назад

      Oh thank you for the response, and what are those factors?? I have to search more information about this, it's so intriguing.

    • @igb5551
      @igb5551 7 лет назад +3

      Kameko Dai yeah, that was exactly what I meant! I've always loved drawing too and I love imagining things, but I kind of realized that they are never entirely new, they're just variations and combinations of things... I don't know.

  • @jeffryc.larson3952
    @jeffryc.larson3952 7 лет назад +41

    "Imagination is the most marvelous, miraculous, inconceivably powerful force the world has ever known." - Napoleon Hill

  • @toycorpukebayworldwideship5761
    @toycorpukebayworldwideship5761 4 года назад +53

    I have ADHD, so my imagination can go a little wild at times, but I've always pictured it as a third eye.

    • @btsarmy-cw2nc
      @btsarmy-cw2nc 3 года назад

      Adhd what?

    • @jvmeel7454
      @jvmeel7454 3 года назад +9

      And then there is me... with maladaptive daydreaming

    • @prxnceanime6335
      @prxnceanime6335 3 года назад +3

      @@jvmeel7454 yeah man😂
      It sucks
      Its like i cant even turn it off
      I have to be playing games and keep myself sometimes to shut it off

    • @nutanddash8552
      @nutanddash8552 2 года назад +1

      @@btsarmy-cw2nc google it

    • @btsarmy-cw2nc
      @btsarmy-cw2nc 2 года назад +1

      @@TrekkieTardis armiiiii

  • @cooldude56g
    @cooldude56g 7 лет назад +64

    It's so weird, I have a hard time retaining anything I learn about the brain or thought, because while the information keeps coming I'm thinking too much about my very process of thinking.

    • @Mizraab2912
      @Mizraab2912 3 года назад +1

      Metacognition interfering with cognition....not a drawback man...thats highly cool!

    • @seeexy
      @seeexy 2 года назад +1

      yeah i does that all the time. which is like, some1 is accessing another tab while im in the midst of fhe 1st tab in front of me. and it hinders my.. engagement of the current reality. in other words, ADHD like.

    • @melparadise7378
      @melparadise7378 2 года назад

      @@seeexy It's like having a super power. Diversifying ourselves is probably an evolutionary adaptation for survival. that's, like, entropy, right? We're IT.

  • @luckyyuri
    @luckyyuri 7 лет назад +23

    I absolutely loved the animation. It's strange but it has character, simplicity and it does a perfect job illustrating the narrative.

  • @lulaklaw4101
    @lulaklaw4101 4 года назад +44

    Sometimes I feel like other people can see vivid, clear pictures when they imagine things.. is it just me who only 'sees' abstract thoughts and kind-of exsisting images??

    • @ashfaqahmed9372
      @ashfaqahmed9372 4 года назад +1

      Same here. I can’t see vivid images

    • @KangKush
      @KangKush 3 года назад +1

      It’s probably because you don’t do it often, if you are a chronic daydreamer you’re imagination imagery is more clear and vivid and not all over the place

    • @cicatrixnictophilii
      @cicatrixnictophilii 3 года назад +10

      I cannot see anything at all... In the beginning of the video he started creating sceens and say it's so easy to imagine them.. And I'm like, no it is not. I have afantasia or some bulshit like that. I would really like to know whats wrong with my brain, because I try so hard to imagine things and fail.

    • @Elizabeth-nn7mt
      @Elizabeth-nn7mt 2 года назад +4

      Yeah I get what you're saying. I can *think* images in my mind, like I know how this thing looks but I can't *see* it. I can *think* of a pineapple being balanced on a dolphin's nose but I can't *see* it (in minds supposed eye??)

    • @fashionbecomesher1665
      @fashionbecomesher1665 2 года назад +2

      Thats called aphantasia. It means not being able to visualize. There are a lot of videos on aphantasia.

  • @dejureclaims8214
    @dejureclaims8214 7 лет назад +59

    The music for this was gorgeous.

    • @informationparadox387
      @informationparadox387 4 года назад +1

      Yeah , really!...it was amazing!

    • @larissakwok4439
      @larissakwok4439 4 года назад +1

      Omggg i was getting coraline circus vibes from the music

    • @m3ronnn
      @m3ronnn 3 года назад

      @@larissakwok4439 righttt

  • @michaelampm
    @michaelampm 7 лет назад +31

    Is this why I can imagine love even though I'm lonely

  • @quietkid47
    @quietkid47 Год назад +7

    I’ve lived in my head most of the time for a long time and over time I’ve been able to make an entire fictional world. It functions exactly like this one but with different people (people I’ve created in my head). This way I can escape from life. Problem is I’m unable to use my senses while I’m fully focused on that world… it takes a lot to snap me out of it before my mind lets me out on its own. My mind releases me back into reality once the trigger or stressor is gone. I started this as a kid to numb the pain of physical abuse. It worked. It took a lot of pain for me to notice it.

    • @user-xz8jz9kb9b
      @user-xz8jz9kb9b 10 месяцев назад

      Oh, I understand you. I was alone when I was a child and my brain created that imaginary friends, with whom I had conversations inside of my head. I talked with them about everything and this became a habit that ruined my life. Even now, when I spend time with real friends I still have conversations with imaginary friends. And realizing this hurts so much

  • @bittercereal2439
    @bittercereal2439 4 года назад +12

    I don't even have to close my eyes to imagine. I can see them without seeing them?

  • @arshad887
    @arshad887 7 лет назад +6

    The brain is truly amazing. Everything about it truly leaves me in awe.

  • @VAISHH
    @VAISHH 3 года назад +4

    I love these videos! They take me to a new world altogether. I have never learned about this in such vibrant colors!

  • @snowcold5932
    @snowcold5932 7 лет назад +288

    This animation style hurts my eyes, but I can sacrifice them if its for Ted-Ed :)

    • @joelburleson2449
      @joelburleson2449 7 лет назад +6

      Snowcold ikr

    • @lian_boo
      @lian_boo 7 лет назад

      Snowcold me2

    • @sursr2820
      @sursr2820 7 лет назад +8

      True. The headache was worth it.

    • @RagerQueen
      @RagerQueen 7 лет назад +4

      i'm migraine prone but I didn't have any problems with this video. is it the constant flashing?

    • @davidbrick1260
      @davidbrick1260 7 лет назад +1

      I need to know where this music is!!!

  • @jonasdepreindlsperg7676
    @jonasdepreindlsperg7676 7 лет назад +47

    All ping pong tables are in orbit around a black hole

  • @Chopperdragon39
    @Chopperdragon39 7 лет назад +90

    So next time you dream in class you could just tell 'em about this?

    • @rpsyco
      @rpsyco 7 лет назад +1

      I don't think that would work too well in a History class.

    • @simba8926
      @simba8926 7 лет назад

      Chopperdragon39 Or in any other class, for that matter :)

    • @halloooo1duuuuu
      @halloooo1duuuuu 6 лет назад

      Your teacher would be pretty impressed if you explained to him why your brain is able to dream in class :D

    • @galaxy9310
      @galaxy9310 4 года назад

      Probably will work better in a psychology class.

  • @vinyltracks3641
    @vinyltracks3641 7 лет назад +10

    I'm so baffled when ever I force my self to imagine it doesn't really work.

    • @linbb602
      @linbb602 3 года назад +1

      you might have aphantasia! that means that you cant see thing/imagine things in your head

  • @erinbrady9444
    @erinbrady9444 3 года назад +9

    had to pause “i may destroy you” to see if this was a real video. i’ll check the rest of this video out later

  • @NKDpiano
    @NKDpiano 7 лет назад +92

    I had an imagination that Ted-Ed released a new video, went to check and voila:

    • @tanxzero
      @tanxzero 7 лет назад +5

      NKD Piano Sheets hey I've seen u before. Ya know, ur youtube channel is so good. ur transcriptions and arrangements are very simple and cool.

    • @NKDpiano
      @NKDpiano 7 лет назад

      Wow thank you so much ((:

  • @deebo2345
    @deebo2345 6 лет назад +1

    Love me some Ted Ed! All of your videos are so intriguing and unique. They are works of art and masterpieces of knowledge. Thank you for creating such amazing videos.

  • @snowwonder9814
    @snowwonder9814 6 лет назад +7

    Interesting! I get the neuron ensembles with more than objects... when I read a book, I'll remember the scene my brain conjured months, years after reading it. In fact, I was reminded of such an image the other day, and was trying to remember where I'd seen it... then I remembered, it was of my own invention, from a book I'd read a year ago.

  • @ewafabian5521
    @ewafabian5521 7 лет назад +16

    BEAUTIFUL animation! What a blast!

    • @blankwyry9725
      @blankwyry9725 7 лет назад +1

      Ewa Fabian (Sarcasam intensefies)

    • @ewafabian5521
      @ewafabian5521 7 лет назад +4

      BlankWyry I LOVE it! Truly. It fits a modern art gallery more than the video but it is great art, if you ask me.

    • @blankwyry9725
      @blankwyry9725 7 лет назад +4

      Ewa Fabian I guess everybody has a different taste or style(however u gonna call it)

    • @ewafabian5521
      @ewafabian5521 7 лет назад +5

      BlankWyry U never know what the huge audience will like, in times of the Internet. I think the artist put a lot of effort into it, it is clearly visible :)

    • @blankwyry9725
      @blankwyry9725 7 лет назад +1

      I agree with you,although it is not my preffered style :)

  • @Yo28487
    @Yo28487 4 года назад

    I'm working on a project for school, this got me ahead. Thank you very much!

  • @fberb
    @fberb 4 года назад +2

    Very interesting to learn how creativity and thickness of myelin is some how connected, even though it’s a theory, and much more to learn..

  • @Zetsuke4
    @Zetsuke4 7 лет назад +1

    Very informative and interesting video! I've wanted to know about the neuroscience of imagination for a long time!

  • @Laindal
    @Laindal 4 года назад +3

    What a great era are we living, where you have almost ALL mankind knowledge easily displayed and explained in free platforms at any time. This could be the years of the "second discovery of fire".

  • @mcpaws5923
    @mcpaws5923 7 лет назад +2

    Your accent is SOOOO relaxing and so calm

  • @filkaa
    @filkaa 7 лет назад +227

    i have a dolphin, i have pineapple uuuh imagination

  • @mr.scienc3433
    @mr.scienc3433 7 лет назад +20

    Hey Ted Ed, I really love the Videos you guys produce :)
    I've got one question:
    How do you explain the imagination hypothesis when dreaming? It is known that the prefrontal cortex is not active during dreaming, but there sure are imaginations or at least visual things u 'see' when you are dreaming. But when the prefrontal cortex is not active there should not be a connection between neurons and it...
    thanks in advance and greetings from germany :)

  • @FutileGrief
    @FutileGrief 7 лет назад +5

    This reminds me of a song by Amy Lee from Evanescence she just released called "dream too much", which is filled with ramblings of his two year old son, revealing the most vivid and fun imagination of a child ♥

  • @Gaaraloverr1
    @Gaaraloverr1 7 лет назад +2

    Oh! I'd love to see a video on Misophonia or sound sensitivity!

  • @auruourua
    @auruourua 7 лет назад +16

    the animation is beautiful

  • @drchalquist
    @drchalquist Год назад

    Thanks for posting this. I'm putting together a livestream on research showing the importance of imagination (and play) and will mention this video.

  • @sanjaykumarsingh5685
    @sanjaykumarsingh5685 4 года назад

    Too good. Very informative.

  • @jain.ayushee
    @jain.ayushee 4 года назад

    I got a new perspective and learnt something new😁
    Thanks🙌

  • @briganja
    @briganja 6 лет назад +3

    Omg the french duck saying "cuac" killed me XD

  • @ameliayong5377
    @ameliayong5377 5 лет назад

    this helped me so much!

  • @KISMETT.Kitten
    @KISMETT.Kitten 5 лет назад +15

    did you know some people can't imagine like can't see what they imagine

    • @rentok8195
      @rentok8195 4 года назад +2

      My imagination is close to useless to be honest

    • @lotus9138
      @lotus9138 3 года назад +3

      yeah is called aphantasia i have it

    • @kannakye9359
      @kannakye9359 3 года назад +3

      I have aphantasia! I was looking for a comment like this

  • @ebziem453
    @ebziem453 7 лет назад

    Yay I love watching videos that have just been posted!! 😄😄

  • @ionkinberg
    @ionkinberg 3 года назад

    ПОТРЯСАЮЩЕ! СПАСИБО! Сложнейший перевод увивительно полезного материала) Развивайте мозги и воображение В ДЕТСТВЕ! )

  • @spookyandsmokey
    @spookyandsmokey 7 лет назад

    this is such a cute video
    love the music and the flickering pictures

  • @worrywirt
    @worrywirt 6 лет назад

    I really liked the music in this!

  • @QuirkyGirlCorner
    @QuirkyGirlCorner Год назад +1

    What’s interesting is people who have smaller prefrontal cortexes as a result of neurology have amazing imaginations!

  • @krissdevalnor5844
    @krissdevalnor5844 7 лет назад +47

    We can criticize humans about a lot of subject but not about our brain. He is quite amazing

    • @michalullemann1938
      @michalullemann1938 7 лет назад +2

      An Del your brain is a guy?

    • @khorps4756
      @khorps4756 7 лет назад +9

      WOAH WOAH WOAH, ARE YOU ASSUMING MY BRAIN'S GENDER?

    • @krissdevalnor5844
      @krissdevalnor5844 7 лет назад +3

      Khorps hahaha I thought my sentence in French and we put gender on object, I guess my brain needs more training

    • @khorps4756
      @khorps4756 7 лет назад

      An Del I hope you aren't from quebec otherwise fuck you, quebec can fuck itself

    • @krissdevalnor5844
      @krissdevalnor5844 7 лет назад +4

      Khorps Omg you must have a hurtful backstory with Quebec's people, I hope you will not become a Super villain
      Anyway I'm from Switzerland so I'm kinda in peace with everybody, Canadian or not

  • @lizsmith247
    @lizsmith247 7 лет назад +25

    can you physically see the pictures in your head ? because I can't , I see to blurrily , I'm afraid I can't imagine things visually😣😣😣

    • @wandasykes6636
      @wandasykes6636 7 лет назад +3

      Liz smith Don't worry, you'll get it, just keep practicing. Btw drawing helps with this process.

    • @PartyTimeBitches
      @PartyTimeBitches 7 лет назад +7

      You might have Aphantasia. A small percentage of people have it.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aphantasia

    • @snapsnapdik
      @snapsnapdik 7 лет назад +2

      It's called being a woman.

    • @ashikkallan9534
      @ashikkallan9534 7 лет назад

      Yes I can relate. I have a very bad imagination. It's always blurry.

    • @yey862
      @yey862 7 лет назад +2

      Liz smith
      i got the same thing too
      my brain sometimes can imagine things perfectly and sometimes not
      but i guess those kind of persons are not creative in real life because you need so much imainations to be creative right?
      but when it comes on dreaming
      im like watching a movie in HD while things are happening

  • @GRA00071
    @GRA00071 7 лет назад +10

    So how does it work/not work if you have aphantasia? This is super interesting, but I want to know why it doesn't work in my brain.

  • @moiquiregardevideo
    @moiquiregardevideo 6 лет назад

    This is the first time I heard about multiple layers of myeline. Then, learn that the speed of chemical domino effect of "action potential" would increase with the thickness. My understanding was that the pulse was jumping between the node of xavier. The speed of transmission would be an exact multiple of these nodes. If a very long neuron body would be wrapped by just a few myeline/node of xavier length wise, it would transmit faster than any shorter one with more nodes.
    The other doubt about that hypothesis is that memory is assumed to build "locally" by the precise connection of neurons in relatively close proximity. The myelinated bundles would be high speed communication path between distant brain region. It is surprising that they would contribute to memory/learning by increasing the thickness of myeline layers.

  • @meve3501
    @meve3501 7 лет назад +2

    I like the animation :3

  • @LostSoulAscension
    @LostSoulAscension 7 лет назад +6

    I wonder if we can increase the thickness of thinner myelins, so we can have faster thought processing.
    Like say, do neuro games in crease myelin strength or simply just widen our neural connections?
    Very fascinating subject!

    • @thenextshenanigantownandth4393
      @thenextshenanigantownandth4393 5 лет назад

      Iate reply, but I think they just increase are ability to put things together in a stronger way. meaning just are ability to imagine to different levels because the Merylin strength allows for more sync firings between ideas. So it would seem are imagination is determined partly by genetics, Childhood, and just brain chemistry. like intelligence is.

  • @Munhuu923
    @Munhuu923 7 лет назад +14

    “Imagination will often carry us to worlds that never were. But without it we go nowhere.”
    -Carl Sagan

    • @ImanAliHussein
      @ImanAliHussein 7 лет назад

      So people with aphantasia (can't visualize) can't go nowhere?

    • @SquareWaveHeaven
      @SquareWaveHeaven 7 лет назад

      They work with abstract representations instead of images. Our culture is predominantly visual, but other ways of synthesizing thought, and thus imagination, exist. Infinitely many probably.

  • @Garfield7410
    @Garfield7410 5 лет назад

    Neuroscience is by far my favourite branch of science

  • @otogulbani9570
    @otogulbani9570 7 лет назад

    the animation is very good

  • @miyu6212
    @miyu6212 7 лет назад

    I love this channel

  • @KZNer_Drag0n
    @KZNer_Drag0n 2 года назад

    Informative!

  • @rpsyco
    @rpsyco 7 лет назад

    That's the most amazing thing I won't ever understand.

  • @Farsiratorius
    @Farsiratorius 7 лет назад

    soundtrack fits really well

  • @proudsonofalgeria8837
    @proudsonofalgeria8837 7 лет назад

    as if I am dreaming while watching this video.... just amazing

  • @BoykoDev
    @BoykoDev 6 лет назад +1

    Heard the word "ensemble" in this video more times, than I heard in my whole life before that.

  • @fatimahalturki5335
    @fatimahalturki5335 6 лет назад

    The background music is really good

  • @kristofermccormack6
    @kristofermccormack6 7 лет назад

    This is mental!

  •  7 лет назад

    Myelin sheaths are very important, there are actually diseases called Demyelinating diseases such as Multiple Sclerosis, which is characterized by destruction of myelin, some clinical manifestations include sensory symptoms, like paresthesias, hypesthesia, etc, reduced sensation, numbness, etc.

  • @agape_99
    @agape_99 3 года назад +4

    This is gold. Ive found this too late thats the only negative about it

  • @AlexCio
    @AlexCio 3 года назад +1

    awesome movie!
    we all have to practice our imagination every day some more! 🙂🤘🏿

  • @vincentgao9912
    @vincentgao9912 7 лет назад +5

    "Pineapple"... Now I am imagining that Japanese guy dancing with a pineapple.

  • @mintypetsAJ
    @mintypetsAJ 7 лет назад

    this was interesting thank you

  • @TheKosssss
    @TheKosssss 6 лет назад

    Amazing video
    The animation, the music, I can't, really great job, phenomenal!

  • @tomas6379
    @tomas6379 5 лет назад +1

    I absolutely love the art style

  • @jessewallace12able
    @jessewallace12able 4 года назад

    I like how we say perceive like we know what that is.

  • @pappi8338
    @pappi8338 7 лет назад

    Very informative

  • @sandrawong6787
    @sandrawong6787 4 года назад

    The synapses connect different ideas in the brain to form a statement or a image

  • @sarmadhabibkhan3036
    @sarmadhabibkhan3036 3 года назад

    Well that explains why I was more creative as a kid (when I had access to TV shows) than as a teen (when I reduced TV time just to learn that the mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell).

  • @aayushkarn6198
    @aayushkarn6198 7 лет назад +1

    I've got a question, does imagination of different sounds also works out the same way?

  • @Vaibhavsingh-yc5ln
    @Vaibhavsingh-yc5ln 3 года назад

    the flute sound, its hard to hear, but its so good.

  • @emmagao8642
    @emmagao8642 2 года назад

    Imagining a dolpin next to a pineapple is different from imagining a pineapple on a dolphins nose. Is there a place in the brain where the 2 images are positioned in the right place? If so, what is it called? Loved this video :)

  • @paolabarrera-zevallos3756
    @paolabarrera-zevallos3756 4 года назад

    thats my professor at BU!!!! he's brilliant

  • @Ceu.Noturno
    @Ceu.Noturno 7 лет назад +20

    This theory that, to imagine things we never seen like the dolphin holding a pineapple, we fire both the neurons for the dolphin and for the pineapple, does not explain how we can imagine things that we *actually* have not seen, like if you try to make up an extraterrestrial creature in your mind.

    • @paoloricciuti
      @paoloricciuti 7 лет назад +10

      I think it's the same, we simply use different feature. We fir together Eyes+Green+Human+Baloon+ecc ecc

    • @5dashes
      @5dashes 7 лет назад +3

      Nietez Dionísio It probably started with humans realizing the concept of self, and soon wondering about extraterrestrial beings, which then evolved bit by bit. The image that pops up in *your* mind is most definitely shaped by contemporary media, which portrays "aliens" as beings with green skin, black eyes etc.

    • @anniibunni
      @anniibunni 7 лет назад +4

      Actually it seems like the same principle. If you imagine an extraterrestial creature you will still use features known to your brain, just much smaller and a lot more parts. You will imagine its skin maybe snake-like, its eyes maybe like those of a bird or a fly, its feet like those of an alligator. It will still be things you have seen before. It's just like not being able to imagine a new colour. You will always use things familiar to your brain.

    • @Ceu.Noturno
      @Ceu.Noturno 7 лет назад +1

      You are missing the point. Humans have the capability of imagining things they have never seen or even had the slightest contact with, this is how we manage to think about abstract concepts for example, which many times can be very distant from reality and could not be explained by the firing of combinations of already existing connections of neurons in the brain.

    • @Ceu.Noturno
      @Ceu.Noturno 7 лет назад +1

      You ignored the "abstract concepts" part. Many are fruit of a lot of philosophical thinking and can be very distant from the physical reality.

  • @Daniazco
    @Daniazco 6 лет назад +4

    Dreaming is in relation with imagination. Comes from the same realm.

  • @ThatsWhenItkickedin
    @ThatsWhenItkickedin 7 лет назад

    I graduated pharmacy school in 1991. I learned where parts of the brain are and what a few of them do. Other than that, there is still little we know

  • @ultralaggerREV1
    @ultralaggerREV1 Год назад +3

    I like how the brain can create its own simulations…
    Like computers, they can simulate events but they can’t see it in the real world.
    Like recently scientists have managed to make a quantum computer simulate an actual wormhole and proved that wormholes DO exist in real life.

  • @ashutoshpatnaik
    @ashutoshpatnaik 5 лет назад +1

    All your videos are excellent . Just a suggestion this video could have been better animated and put a little better music pls

  • @devanshkaushik6091
    @devanshkaushik6091 4 года назад

    Someone suggest me more channels like ted ed !! Btw ted ed is amazing

  • @drshivraj5273
    @drshivraj5273 7 лет назад

    This topic of imagination, animation color and metronome music reminds me of Purple Haze.

  • @tubes-lut
    @tubes-lut 10 месяцев назад

    Hard to imagine seeing the dolphin balance a pineapple from the left of its body.

  • @the5tigers
    @the5tigers 7 лет назад

    rest in peace animation department.. salute

  • @jrgranados6769
    @jrgranados6769 7 лет назад

    Awesome

  • @mymyrrah
    @mymyrrah 7 лет назад

    Boy, I love imagination. I can think of stuff that doesn't, and will not ever exist. This is good for books.

  • @selmaaf5411
    @selmaaf5411 4 года назад

    did anyone have another videos about imagination like this ?

  • @katherineozbirn6426
    @katherineozbirn6426 3 месяца назад

    Is actual seeing in real-time, real-life and doing physical action more informative to the neuronal building or is just watching tV the same? Hands-on building Vs. passive intake?

  • @durpddurke4633
    @durpddurke4633 6 лет назад +1

    I would imagine rocket launchers with faces and anime hair playing ping pong underwater but they use a pineapple instead of a ping pong ball.

  • @linusyootasteisking
    @linusyootasteisking 7 лет назад

    interesting conclusion

  • @fabihasaddat2719
    @fabihasaddat2719 4 года назад +1

    Brains named itself, studies itself, watches itself ..... BRAIN BLOWNNN

  • @drowningvlogs1682
    @drowningvlogs1682 2 года назад

    when he said " thousands of neurons in your posterior cortex fire." at 1:00 in the video
    when saying fire what does he mean by that?
    does the neurons rise up? move like molecules? or something else?
    sorry i'm not completely good at english

  • @sarabills4890
    @sarabills4890 7 лет назад

    Are neuronal ensembles for something different in every person, and if so, is there a pattern to how they differ? What about our memories?