Scientists Reveal How to Hack your Brain (Neuroplasticity)

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  • Опубликовано: 12 янв 2025

Комментарии • 444

  • @Sciencerely
    @Sciencerely  2 года назад +284

    Cells that fire together.. 🧠🧠🧠

    • @Theo0x89
      @Theo0x89 2 года назад +8

      ...🔌

    • @techma82
      @techma82 2 года назад +34

      Wire together!

    • @Dank_Engine
      @Dank_Engine 2 года назад +1

      🔥🔥🔥

    • @Anonymous-rj2lk
      @Anonymous-rj2lk 2 года назад +3

      Its not only new connections, it also boosts neurons creation in the brain.(yes new neurons do regenerate)

    • @ncedwards1234
      @ncedwards1234 2 года назад +4

      If you know the meme format, then here's this:
      So called "free thinkers" when someone says "neurons that fire together":
      Wire together!

  • @vl30.7
    @vl30.7 2 года назад +1043

    Shortly:
    - Learn new things (e.g. language, music)
    - Polyphenols (in fruits, veggies, tea)
    - Intermittent fasting
    - Exercise
    - Stress management (and meditation)

    • @alen-commentnazi8774
      @alen-commentnazi8774 2 года назад

      dont eat plants, they have defense chemicals

    • @elusive9240
      @elusive9240 2 года назад +11

      @user-to9qm4jm8w You’re a true homie.

    • @zzz9x
      @zzz9x 2 года назад +5

      cảm ơn bro nhé

    • @Mr.Pluviophile
      @Mr.Pluviophile 2 года назад +14

      But tea contains sugar which is fk-ing poision and without sugar tea tastes like poision.😭

    • @geneva4034
      @geneva4034 2 года назад +17

      @@Mr.Pluviophile uhh, that's how it's supposed to taste.

  • @karaokerebel8082
    @karaokerebel8082 2 года назад +639

    Karaoke is very effective against depression! I am now 80 and I began Karaoke about 6 years ago. I met people who are busy learning new songs constantly; we meet and sit together while we welcome new friends and encourage them along. I also enjoy dressing up and looking my best. the music gets my body moving. Practicing new songs improves my neuroplasticity...and my attitude !!! TRY IT FOLKS & THE SOONER, THE BETTER. ALLELUHIA

    • @AVAM..
      @AVAM.. 2 года назад +18

      Karaoke is very effective not because you learn song lyrics, but because the vibrations coming from the voice strings improves the neural activity of the brain.

    • @JII-ANNN
      @JII-ANNN 2 года назад +9

      I dont think ur 80 yrs old

    • @omarei
      @omarei 2 года назад +5

      Live long and prosper

    • @elinope4745
      @elinope4745 2 года назад +1

      I appreciate your advice, thank you.

    • @LetsPlayArcanium
      @LetsPlayArcanium 2 года назад +4

      @@JII-ANNN why?

  • @TypicallyUniqueOfficial
    @TypicallyUniqueOfficial 2 года назад +628

    I work in a lab that studies neuroplasticity and neurogenesis. It’s my most favorite research I’ve done and the things the brain is capable of is mind blowing.

    • @Sean-nr3ts
      @Sean-nr3ts 2 года назад +9

      Do you have a theory on how to make neuroplasticity provide new processes with permeance without gradual decrease?

    • @mem1701movies
      @mem1701movies 2 года назад +5

      LUMOSITY?

    • @GhostSal
      @GhostSal 2 года назад +3

      Any advice?

    • @paulbraunstein2290
      @paulbraunstein2290 2 года назад +20

      I’m so sick of testing my brain and then the depression coming back and then trying hard to test myself again. I have the ambition; the intention. I’ve been studying about neurogenesis/plasticity of dendritic spines (if I’m not mistaken.) Is this truly possible? I’ve seen with confidence and clear thought I can talk to new people and make friends. Keeping it consistent is very hard for me and I fall down a few pegs. If you have any advice, please help me. ADHD and bipolar 2 patient as well 🙂

    • @Tarotainment
      @Tarotainment 2 года назад +16

      @@paulbraunstein2290 diet corrections. Learn to be alone well. When you are 100 percent OK to be alone you can let people come and go and not cling to them. What is your issue when doing the things you have trouble with. Describe what happens in you.

  • @nick_jacob
    @nick_jacob 2 года назад +41

    I tried a 1 hour window to eat from 5pm to 6pm and then I didn't eat for 23 hours. After a week of this, I woke up one morning and I felt like I could remember anything I had learned that week instantly. I could feel my brain firing and thinking so clearly. I think the food we eat has a significant weight on our mental and physical health in our lifetime. I'm trying so hard to eat meat, raw veggies and fruit daily and nothing else. Sometimes I go off the wagon. Sugar definitely hinders my thought process. Really enjoyed your video by the way!

    • @admin8784
      @admin8784 2 года назад

      Thanks Nick

    • @timixx2270
      @timixx2270 2 года назад +3

      Digesting food is a huge stress for the body, for the digestive system. Thats why its better to eat less times and not 5 times as they say. 5 times keep people damb enough.

    • @joshuaerny9642
      @joshuaerny9642 2 года назад +3

      Fasting raises stress hormones like cortisol and adrenaline. That is why you’re able to think clearly and recall things. Eating meals with carbohydrates raises insulin which then lowers adrenaline drastically. Your brain is not getting any actual improvements from fasting. You’re simply in a “fight or flight” hormonal state.

    • @joshuaerny9642
      @joshuaerny9642 2 года назад

      What you said is entirely bro science. Try eating 3 whole meals in one sitting. That’s highly uncomfortable and often puts too much demand on your body. I always feel comfortable and not in any distress from eating a 600-800 calorie meal 3 times a day. But if I ate 1800-2400 calories in one sitting I would feel like throwing up. I would also need lots more water to help me process that meal which would lead to me heavily diluting my stomach acid. It’s a recipe for heartburn, indigestion, diarrhea, or nausea. Try eating 1800-2400 calories on a high fat keto diet; your gallbladder wouldn’t stand a chance at processing that amount of dietary fat; you’d have liquid shits constantly. Try to eat 1800-2400 of carnivore diet food; all of that protein would put insane distress on your system in one sitting. If you were doing a high carb diet, eat all those carbs in one sitting would spike insulin insanely high- not a bright idea. Smaller meals are what your body is naturally better at processing. Now look at the downside: fasting. You are fighting nagging hunger much more often throughout the day. Lots of people feel sluggish once their liver glycogen gets low. Having a medium size meal as needed will keep serotonin levels higher so you don’t get “low carb cranky” like many people who do fasting experience. In summary: huge meals in one sitting stress you greater during the meal and then you are stressed for an excessively long time after the meal. Do you drink water like that? Do you down 2-4 quarts of water in one sitting too? Or does your common sense kick in only with water drinking? Clearly, spacing out water intake is far more comfortable and logical. Why overhydrate when you don’t need that much water in the moment and stress your kidneys, stomach, blood, and brain to the extreme? Then why suffer through effects of dehydration the rest of the day from not drinking at all!? Makes more sense to have a 24-32 oz with a medium size meal. The water gets absorbed better thanks to the meal, but it’s not so much water that you waterlog your entire system. Humans like things in moderate ranges. Extremes don’t usually work out for the majority

    • @nick_jacob
      @nick_jacob 2 года назад +2

      @@joshuaerny9642 Yeah, except my one meal was only about 1000 calories and not a full days worth. Not eating for 24 hours once a week should be fine. The rest of the week should be determined by the amount of activity you do. Counting calories hardly ever works for me. Actually, it's never worked. The only time i've been able to steadily lose weight was with intermittent fasting. A 6/18 split would be fine with 1600 calories worth of food would be fine.

  • @lyleneander2100
    @lyleneander2100 Год назад +10

    I'm 70 this year, do swing dancing, play guitar, do loads of cycling and lift weights, heavy-duty. I'm learning Japanese and I'm researching a book on social justice and the Bible. I'm not trying to avoid dementia but to live a full and rich life. This video was so encouraging and I just might resume ballroom dancing again. Thank you.

    • @judemorales4U
      @judemorales4U Год назад

      Way to go Lyle!

    • @paulbeahm3891
      @paulbeahm3891 10 месяцев назад

      The bible is pretty interesting, have you read Daniel chapter 9? If so what did you think of it?

  • @InsightEnigma
    @InsightEnigma 2 года назад +147

    I seriously love that the brain is capable of so many things, and what I find the most exciting is that you are not born with the same brain you are able to get. We can do so much to improve our brain structure, but yet people always find a way to complain. I doubt that genetics played a massive role in geniuses in the 20th century. I think that self improvement played as big role as their genetics did. Keep learning and you'll see benefits!

    • @Jhakaas_Jai
      @Jhakaas_Jai Год назад

      ​@@quantumspark343debatable.

    • @saisrisai9649
      @saisrisai9649 Год назад

      nurture vs nature

    • @slugface322
      @slugface322 4 месяца назад

      Absolutely 💯
      Question:
      which is the greater accomplishment?
      Someone who is born, due to genetic advantages with an IQ of 178 (my Son).
      In an enriched, enhancing and nurturing environment.
      v.s.
      A person born with a slightly below normal IQ in an environment of malnutrition abuse and poverty that succeeds in every area of life beyond the level of the average person?
      hah by what measure success?

  • @JCG0001
    @JCG0001 2 года назад +22

    "Brain Building" by Marilyn Savant is my favorite book on learning how to think, 150+ tips and habits.

  • @redhidinghood9337
    @redhidinghood9337 2 года назад +115

    I was expecting more detailed information/some concrete ways of improving neuroplasticity. Like you didn't mention that trying to do something new and failing triggers neuroplasticity while doing that thing, and that the consolidation of that newly learned skill/knowledge happens at sleep, which is why sleep is so important for neuroplasticity and learning.

    • @GhostSal
      @GhostSal 2 года назад +8

      Me too, some good basic information but more specific info would have been much better. Also, I’ve heard that Lion’s mane is a good supplement to help with neuroplasticity.

    • @newt2120
      @newt2120 2 года назад +1

      damn im screwed cuz sleep is my weakest point

    • @pauldodd2120
      @pauldodd2120 2 года назад +1

      Neuroplasticity is inherent; the discussion here is not about improvement of neuroplasticity, but the evidence of neuroplasticity. Improvement of neuroplasticity would be like learning another language made it easier to learn a new sport.

  • @Ashtarot77
    @Ashtarot77 2 года назад +59

    She achieved amazing things with half a brain while most normal people can't even perform simple tasks with a whole one.

    • @errebusaether
      @errebusaether 2 года назад +5

      That’s because half the brain is forced to double the effort which develops more neurons and stronger cognition. But there are downsides to this as it can affect your ability to adapt and be versatile in many ways. It practically limits you but in exchange you gain a massive boost in neuron activities. It’s like a savant syndrome. But let me observe this video first to clarify whether what I am saying isn’t wrong.

    • @ufairuzman2621
      @ufairuzman2621 Год назад

      Kinda real .

  • @johnholme783
    @johnholme783 2 года назад +29

    I’m a life long learner, I learn something new everyday. I am particularly interested in mathematics and physics and consequently my visual spatial ability as improved considerably! I also like to keep abreast with modern technology. I’m 54 years old and still has curious has I was when I was 18! Probably more so! The more you learn, the more you realise what you don’t know! It’s not something I force myself to do, it’s something I have to do. I’ve always been very curious.

    • @sijenkai3928
      @sijenkai3928 2 года назад

      Tragedy ive always had certain things that most people get as benefits .. yet i dont like learning too many things unless i like it

    • @tims7686
      @tims7686 2 года назад

      The reasons that stop me from learning new things:
      1) there is too much to learn. You could spend all your life learning things and then at old age realising you don't know anything and how this world works
      2) you waste so much time learning just to die in the end with all your learnings, therefore why not just try to have fun while you are alive? But if learning is fun to you, then it's fine

    • @dsaikon
      @dsaikon 2 года назад +1

      @@tims7686 learning things can also improve your life in the long term by making you capable of things you wouldn't be capable of otherwise. Learning isn't limited to physics, maths and stuff, but encompasses pretty much everything

  • @mikahist4155
    @mikahist4155 Год назад +1

    I have its, live in Isolation.. and i lost so much possibilty to learn or better to say to be excited-"happy" to learn something new!

  • @Thepinkxx
    @Thepinkxx 2 года назад +17

    I can attest that before learning a second language I was pretty average but very creative. After learning a new language I definitely feel a change in the way I learn and see things. I had a good memory before but right now I have a very good memory. Also reading books helped me.

    • @h3llboyyy407
      @h3llboyyy407 Год назад

      i have a friend who has been reading everyday since middleschool , he literally goes through an entire book in a day now , and I'm pretty sure he has photographic memory now lol. Dude always asks me about things from 10 years ago that are too detailed for me to even remember fully. Like for instance he still remembers each tech name we had and which classes we had and everything.

  • @yourlocaltoad5102
    @yourlocaltoad5102 2 года назад +111

    I have adhd and often experience hyperfocus where I will spend days researching a new interest of mine nearly non-stop and I usually also retain most of that information long term, so my pathways for focusing, learning and memorising are somewhat well trained, but I still can’t bring myself to do all that for university or work.
    Of course that’s also influenced by adhd influencing the pathways that determine how easy it is to focus on something, but it’s still quite interesting.
    I have been trying to find a way to teach my brain to focus on such things for quite some time now, but so far I haven’t found anything.

    • @fairwind8676
      @fairwind8676 2 года назад +10

      Same here, didn't know that was ADHD.

    • @yourlocaltoad5102
      @yourlocaltoad5102 2 года назад +19

      @@fairwind8676 Doesn’t necessarily have to be adhd.
      Such behaviour can also often be seen in people with autism, depression and even in some neurotypical people.
      In my case I‘m just pretty sure because I have an adhd diagnosis and it fits well with what many other people with adhd experience and the way interest affects affects the ability to focus in people with adhd.
      So it’s not a clear indication of adhd, but if you also have other adhd symptoms, it might be a good idea to visit a psychologist and see if you have adhd.

    • @fairwind8676
      @fairwind8676 2 года назад +3

      @@yourlocaltoad5102 that's a good idea actually. Doesn't hurt to check up.

    • @ch-de7ys
      @ch-de7ys 2 года назад +5

      Same here. Everything else will be covered in fog during hyperfocus.

    • @Oscar4u69
      @Oscar4u69 2 года назад +1

      wait what
      omg I suffer from something similar
      was your ADHD clinically diagnosed by a professional?

  • @Melanie____
    @Melanie____ Год назад +2

    I learn french.. is started for a couple years just audio. And then added writing.. I feel like I could literally feel the connections being made that week I started writing and reading it.. it was so stimulating I couldn’t sleep. It was like my brain was like - hey we need to connect all this aural connection over in word box too. It lasted for like a few weeks. A lot of french learning makes me realise how childrens brains are amazing too doing their learning and growing.
    I watched a news thing on neroplastictiy when I was near start saying the brain can learn anything with enough repetition i think that that has helped me in the language learning journey.

  • @andyl.7976
    @andyl.7976 Год назад +2

    W🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
    00:00 🏖️ Understanding Rasmussen's Encephalitis
    01:00 🧠 Neuroplasticity Explained
    04:04 🚖 Neuroplasticity in London Cab Drivers
    07:48 🧠 Neuroplasticity's Role in Alzheimer's Prevention
    10:59 😊 Conclusion: Embracing Neuroplasticity for a Happy Brain
    Made with HARPA AI

  • @bingflosby
    @bingflosby 2 года назад +8

    I have multiple sclerosis and this is a good description for what is happening to me trying to stop my immune system and heal the damage

  • @sinfulpotato7804
    @sinfulpotato7804 2 года назад +26

    1) learn new skills ( second language)
    2) good diet and exercise.
    3) stress management.
    That's how you rewire your brain.
    ( if your seeing this pls provide solutions for maladaptive daydreaming, I was diagnosed at 13, am 17 things were going better but the study stress has increased I drift back aty dream world only to realize it's midnight and I haven't got anything done sine afternoon, just running round and round in circles smiling and muttering with myself.)

    • @jacobcampos2407
      @jacobcampos2407 2 года назад +3

      I realize how badly I’ve been managing my stress like I lived my life around video gaming and it kept me up all night and stressed me out for couple years a now I’ve slowed down a lot and feel a lot better and sleeping soundly

  • @raoulduke344
    @raoulduke344 Год назад +1

    I was addicted to heroin for 20 years, and benzos a kittle longer. My entire adult life. I read about neuroplasticity and bought a guiat when I had my last relapse and said "enough, I'm done".
    I had also been diagnosed with epilepsy a few years before.
    I've been learning the guitar for 18 months and I've completely lost all desire to get high. That's nothing short of a miracle. I'm not addicted to a different kind of gear, and blues.

    • @ritatownsend7408
      @ritatownsend7408 11 месяцев назад +1

      That’s great! My music director husband had to learn a little bit about all types of instruments in college. He said the guitar was by far the most difficult for him. He was shocked and humbled because he prided himself on his musical abilities.
      At the risk of sounding like your mother, I’m proud of you. My own mother has dementia now and I’m emotionally struggling with my fear of it. There is a lonely guitar upstairs…maybe I should dust it off.
      Keep up the great work my friend.

  • @ivanodriscoll5874
    @ivanodriscoll5874 2 года назад +18

    That was a really cool video. Great to hear ways to help people avoid and also help with dementia.Thanks.

    • @sherlockholmes3746
      @sherlockholmes3746 2 года назад

      what are you saying bro, the guy just said "be healthy" for 10 minutes

  • @cogs7777
    @cogs7777 2 года назад +24

    the brain seemed like a machine to me, doing math, logic, etc. but i realized it's an organic thing. it can grow and react. the fact that it can think abstractly and can involuntarily control our body is genius in its construction. it doesn't matter what we don't know, the brain can learn it piece by piece. if we're injured, it is able to figure out how to heal. i believe with the right biofeedback, the brain can figuratively wrap itself around anything.

    • @hellohello-fs7we
      @hellohello-fs7we 2 года назад +2

      Does your consciousness exist in your stomach or do you just pretend to not need a brain for consciousness, because you are talking about them like you don’t have one or is separate from you

    • @cogs7777
      @cogs7777 2 года назад

      ​@@hellohello-fs7we that's a good point, that the brain even constructs the mind, so we can analyze brains, lol.

    • @Raven7400
      @Raven7400 2 года назад

      The human brain IS the throne of God of the temple/body

  • @jonahjerryson4913
    @jonahjerryson4913 2 года назад +8

    Thank you so much for putting this together.

  • @emangamal6593
    @emangamal6593 2 года назад +6

    You are a great science communicator
    Love from Egypt 💕

  • @Lampey22
    @Lampey22 Год назад +1

    9:33 as a classical musician, your pronounciation of Pachebel triggered me

  • @logothaironsides2942
    @logothaironsides2942 2 года назад +1

    Try simple computer programming languages like basic ,they really help give you a boost because you have to think in all directions. Chess is really good too to help with forward planning.

  • @yakuzzi35
    @yakuzzi35 2 года назад +7

    Imagine having to make this decision as a parent, omg

  • @nutzeeer
    @nutzeeer 2 года назад +13

    Tldr: stimulation that uses your brain. (And on a personal note: switch your brain halves every now and then. Meaning they have different specializations. Art brain and logic brain and racing brain.

  • @glenrisk5234
    @glenrisk5234 2 года назад +4

    Started using computers a bit over twenty years ago and always felt there was a promise in the technology I couldn't find?
    Then I tried VR.
    I figured I'd like it because I quite liked 3D movies.
    I have played computer games here and there over the years but never found them all that compelling so would not describe myself as a gamer.
    VR changed that.
    Feel like I have learnt more in the last few years than in the previous twenty.
    For a good while I really felt like a kid again, profoundly excited by the possibilities before me.
    That's worn off now but I'm still learning and still enjoying VR a great deal.
    It still seems overwhelming, there's just so much I need to understand.
    But I'm enjoying the journey so while it can seem daunting there's no reason to give up even if it happens that I can never do what I would like to?
    I am someone who has always enjoyed learning.
    I think it truly unfortunate that society makes it so difficult for adults to continue educating themselves.
    In a world so dependent on technology it might even be societal suicide?

  • @hata6290
    @hata6290 9 месяцев назад

    thank you for citing literally everything in the video :) i wish every youtuber did that, especially 20yo+ ones considering thats something they shouldve learned in school by now

  • @mozartsbumbumsrus7750
    @mozartsbumbumsrus7750 Год назад +1

    Serious high art music and music-making makes people better human beings.

  • @GAGONMYCOREY
    @GAGONMYCOREY 2 года назад +4

    Sometimes I really wish my parents never got that new fridge

  • @HairyKnees1
    @HairyKnees1 2 года назад +2

    So it’s good that I keep changing my careers! Now at 47 I’m in classes again, starting a new career again.

  • @williampope3503
    @williampope3503 Год назад +1

    "She had a horrible headache". You don't say...

  • @watfunstu9086
    @watfunstu9086 2 года назад +1

    The reason they researched on London taxi drivers is because they specifically have to learn for years to memorise the streets and locations of London and how to get around for a test before they become cab drivers of london

  • @williemartinez5070
    @williemartinez5070 2 года назад +5

    You know what I'm really interested in to know is the the depth of faith and what it has to do with the brain and its development with neural plasticity.

    • @glenrisk5234
      @glenrisk5234 2 года назад +1

      I'm interested to know what you mean by faith?
      To be upfront I'm not at all a fan of the corrupt nature of the organized blaspheme of the Holy spirit called religion.
      To be fair I'm not a fan of the dishonest way science mines religious knowledge for insight and then disparages it either.

    • @dreamerstripsitting6786
      @dreamerstripsitting6786 2 года назад

      Well, God is energy and so is consiousness in Essence our consciousness is God.
      So our mental activity finds a thought in our brain so it becomes a combination of our Ego and our soul.
      Now Buddha isnt a person Buddha is a consiousness outside of Ego.
      A wave of light is no longer God for it has a destination towards a negative however if the frequency becomes high enough that it is no longer a wave but a singular point of existence you'll experience Buddha its a state where time is no longer relevant you'll be everywhere at once and be everything at once you could say this is the consciousness of God cant really know for sure ofcourse.... But it is deff a profound experience that changes the perspective of who or what we actually are.
      Ego is probably a lie and there might not even be an individual Existence.
      High energy and positivity enjoying the things you do generate serotonin so in Essence to be good at something to learn quick is to enjoy the things youre doing.

  • @CreationTribe
    @CreationTribe 2 года назад +10

    Actually - it's been proven that adult neurogenesis does, in fact, occur. From exercise and meditation to psychedelics, there are a variety of things that can spark and encourage neurogenesis in many brain regions.

  • @normanmacfarlane6724
    @normanmacfarlane6724 2 года назад +2

    I had a stroke 18 months ago
    The idea of nuroeplasticity came up in conversations with doctors, nurses and therapists.
    I embraced the concept
    One thing that I must say is that sleep is essential to the brain healing.
    I continued do the things that I loved like reading, playing guitar, light exercising.
    Things do return
    It is difficult and frustrating and depressing.
    It does not happen overnight but it does happen
    There are other issues such as balance, movement of limbs, and the stresses of life that can be problematic
    It is a slow process and you must constantly consider where you were and where you are
    I do hope that your brain injury is not too severe
    Keep striving and you will move forward

  • @kansasplowboy6861
    @kansasplowboy6861 2 года назад +7

    I knew polyphenols were good for us but I didn't know they were THAT GOOD! I go through a lot of Luzianne tea bag sun tea. YAY for me!

    • @jeffschultz4168
      @jeffschultz4168 2 года назад +2

      Check out matcha, is unfiltered so loaded in goodness. You might feel better after consuming a cup or too also.

  • @mttaylor129
    @mttaylor129 Год назад +1

    Fascinating, helpful, and well organized! Thank you.

  • @thesouthwindsays
    @thesouthwindsays 2 года назад +7

    learning new programming languages or databases is how I "hack" my brain

    • @conniefi
      @conniefi 2 года назад

      I'm 73 yrs old and learning Python. I have to relearn HTML, CSS, JAVASCRIPT next. To me Python is a puzzle game and very addictive.

  • @sivakar12
    @sivakar12 6 месяцев назад

    I am learning to juggle. I have mostly been terrible at sports. Now I am adding new brain circuits related by my fine motor skills, hand-eye coordination and reflexes.

  • @planktonfun1
    @planktonfun1 2 года назад +1

    The brain is flexible, if something is removed the person can just relearn it and put the new memory on another place, the only exception for this is the medulla which controls breathing and other organs unconsciously

  • @Serjan_deus
    @Serjan_deus Год назад

    10:10 l teach Guitar and have a couple of Psichiatric residents that came (with a relative of course) asking for Guitar lessons,l agreed to give them some lessons yes but never knew this could actually improve them in that manner.

  • @krukrok5218
    @krukrok5218 2 года назад +6

    Keep the great work man. I guess when you have a million subscribers you'll forget us.

  • @georgeharrisonOK
    @georgeharrisonOK 2 года назад +14

    Chess is great for neuroplasticity!!

  • @tr_g
    @tr_g 2 года назад +1

    I like you videos. Thank you (and I like that you use images from Australia too). Greetings from Perth.

  • @flabagaster7218
    @flabagaster7218 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for teaching me more about this than I already knew

  • @shortfactvideos6363
    @shortfactvideos6363 2 года назад +4

    Assignment Accepted: Mozart in the morning and Pachebel in the evening.

  • @stazy3725
    @stazy3725 Год назад +1

    So all I gotta do is take half my brain out

  • @PhonkAttack4DX
    @PhonkAttack4DX Год назад +1

    Aint no way this is making me 10 TIMES SMARTER that'd be insanne

  • @consultorrdtheeconomistdrp9121
    @consultorrdtheeconomistdrp9121 2 года назад +5

    Actually, Neuroplasticigy and Neurogenesis go Hand in Hand. We still creat about 700 hundred new neurons per month and they have the longest lifespan of any type of cell, around 8 months. To such a Point that at the age of 50 we have finally replaced the brain cells we had when we were born.
    Other cells like bones and etc. Have different spans, those last 10 years about and we have another skeleton each 10 years, for, we replace their nutrients on a daily basis... It is even eetimated that your eyes are replaced every 2 days!!!! So she developed new brain cells, and, although her brain wasnt creating another half, like the liver, she did train her left side to develop the same skills she had in the right side.
    Also, both sides, although focus on logical Left and emotional right, communicate between each other so they have a sketch so to say of your other half, thus, having the capacity to develop their functions in case of need.

  • @_TravelWithLove
    @_TravelWithLove 2 года назад

    Sauber !! Vielen lieben Dank für deine intelligenten Sendungen !! 謝謝你 !!Thank you very much !!✌️😎💕

  • @pauldodd2120
    @pauldodd2120 2 года назад

    BTW, both training and damage can't be used with an added s to create a plural as you use them here. Just use them without an s.

  • @DanteGabriel-lx9bq
    @DanteGabriel-lx9bq 2 года назад +1

    I was has a child very scared of death and tought artificial technology could be the only way to heal my fear and make me immortal one day, well today having explored spirituality and having become more mature I've changed my mind, biology is extraordinary and exploring the power of the brain, the genes and DNA has made me understand that there should be a limit between instruments of technology and biology, we should balance it and keep technology what it was meant to be, a instrument.
    With the power of imagination, frequencies and colors we can manipulate our way to learn and use this hack to learn faster and become literally the best versions of ourselves.

  • @chamsiwijewardana5346
    @chamsiwijewardana5346 2 года назад +2

    That's why lord Buddha asked his followers not to eat after 12.00pm until the next morning. asked them to meditate, and practice gratitude. Because if his teachings are a religion. It's the religion of the mind. I'm vegan because of my love for animals, I'm a tea drinker without sugar, I skip dinner, I meditate and I use four languages

  • @ConnoisseurOfExistence
    @ConnoisseurOfExistence 2 года назад +1

    I eat fish, lean meat, leafy greens, nuts and berries. I do weight training, running, learning to juggle (rarely since half an year, but want to go back to it, same with meditation), play lumosity games (they're actually pretty mentaly intensive, if you get into it), solve coding challenges daily, and just started 1st year university course in data science and neuroscience, aged 38. Also do long walks, which helps me reflect on my life and experiences and everything that I know, and synthesize new knowledge/hypothesis. But I guess all these activities do require also some degree of natural curiosity...

    • @ConnoisseurOfExistence
      @ConnoisseurOfExistence 2 года назад

      @InkaBe Meat is necessary for good health in humans and especially for optimally functioning brain, fish even more so. Not eating meat must be the cause of 17 out of 16 diseases, I guess... :D

  • @mike-0451
    @mike-0451 Год назад

    Very helpful video that did not induce anxiety. Thank you.

  • @Tony-rf1vo
    @Tony-rf1vo 2 года назад +1

    Ten languages so far.
    Classical guitar.
    Intermittent fasting 15 hrs a day.
    Good health.
    Excellent memory.
    76 yo.
    Gym every day
    I think I am on the right path
    I guess....

    • @Name..........
      @Name.......... Год назад

      Health is often genetic as well, I'm happy to hear that yours is great. But for those in poverty it isn't always the case.

  • @kshimi
    @kshimi 2 года назад +2

    so what you're saying is, I'll be 10 times smarter than someone that, doesn't eat healthy, doesn't exercise, doesn't learn anything and is stressed?, mindblowing really never would've guessed it

  • @r4nd0msh1t
    @r4nd0msh1t 2 года назад

    I use something called mendi I found on kickstarter. Basically you move a little ball on a screen with your brain by focusing on your hippocampus. Weirdly enough felt like it was randomly moving the first few weeks but now I actually feel like I can control that ball. Regardless it feels like meditation and that alone makes me feel more in control of my brain, so yeah maybe try some meditation!

  • @mariotapia7
    @mariotapia7 2 года назад

    Great video man

  • @edithramos9786
    @edithramos9786 2 года назад

    My mom has Alzheimer’s and I’ll share this with my siblings so they can help her listen to Mozart and Paccabel

  • @alwells5779
    @alwells5779 2 года назад +1

    According to some recent studies, we do create new neurons as adults...

  • @dirkyh8384
    @dirkyh8384 Год назад

    Thx for this video!

  • @heart4536
    @heart4536 2 года назад +4

    Love your video man. Keep it up!

  • @mrx4814
    @mrx4814 2 года назад +5

    does learning one new thing translate into being better at learning other different things? or we just become better at the thing we're learning, if the latter's the case then it's counterproductive to take up time to learn something for the sake of increased brain activity

    • @ani_n01
      @ani_n01 2 года назад +1

      It's like exercising makes your muscles grow, and bigger muscles make it easier to lift something heavy the next time you have to

    • @jc-ph2ee
      @jc-ph2ee Год назад

      So you’d rather get dementia?

  • @DigitalDiaries
    @DigitalDiaries 9 месяцев назад

    Your channel is great.

  • @neerajchaudhary1821
    @neerajchaudhary1821 2 года назад

    Absolutely fantastic vid!

  • @anonwhyz
    @anonwhyz 2 года назад +1

    I trained myself to write with my non dominant hand. Its very useless but i find left handed people interesting

  • @barrie888
    @barrie888 2 года назад +1

    nice presentation Sir

  • @brianbordenkircher52
    @brianbordenkircher52 2 года назад

    Thank you for sharing!

  • @edvinzdev
    @edvinzdev 2 года назад +23

    Would non-dominant hand "training" be good for neuroplasticity?

    • @fairwind8676
      @fairwind8676 2 года назад +7

      Pick up an instrument instead?

    • @ultimatechojian1159
      @ultimatechojian1159 2 года назад

      Technically? But why?

    • @edvinzdev
      @edvinzdev 2 года назад +11

      @@ultimatechojian1159 why not? getting better at things with your non-dominant hand could end up useful in long-term

    • @ultimatechojian1159
      @ultimatechojian1159 2 года назад +1

      @@edvinzdev I bet I can think of 200 things that are more useful than being able to use the non dominant hand.

    • @edvinzdev
      @edvinzdev 2 года назад +3

      @@ultimatechojian1159 i bet you could think of even more than 1000 things more useful than that, doesn't mean it's not practical though, to each their own I guess

  • @pcmdenault5391
    @pcmdenault5391 2 года назад +4

    Strange, my family all live until late 90s-100+ and have full brilliant intellectual functioning till they physically cease. Wonder if physiological repair would increase their life further to increase their contribution of ever-advancing knowledge and cognitive abilities ?
    AND ...I Wonder why the sudden drastic increase in dementia/Alzheimer's in the general population ? bcs I don't recall it being predominant in ppl in their 80s ...?!?
    Is it genetics ? Or lifestyle ? Or Environment, heavy metals in air, toxic chemicals on food&water ? Or, a combination ?

  • @timpriestley3391
    @timpriestley3391 2 года назад

    Spectacular!!!!!!! Great work!!!!

  • @sirdino1450
    @sirdino1450 2 года назад

    The Caretaker been silent when this dropped..

  • @suresh-dv7he
    @suresh-dv7he 2 года назад +2

    You mean stroke patients can be healed completely?

  • @ArmaganSalman
    @ArmaganSalman 2 года назад +1

    Use it 9 times for billion times improvement (haven't watched yet).

  • @johndemore6402
    @johndemore6402 2 года назад +1

    remove half my brain is removing half of me.... I'd rather die

  • @paulryder6323
    @paulryder6323 2 года назад +2

    I use melatonin to stimulate growth hormone production and I take L-Arginine which has similar effect, plus this amino acid reduces risk of diabetes heart attack ,stroke and dementia etc. I also use collagen peptides which have numerous benefits.

  • @scalbaldyfruub7499
    @scalbaldyfruub7499 2 года назад +1

    Excellent video!! Always love learning more about the potential prevention/remediation of Alzheimer's!

  • @komlat253
    @komlat253 2 года назад

    I love this video . Thanks

  • @timothyacker8686
    @timothyacker8686 2 года назад +1

    Having three personalities that revolve and ascend and descend 10 dimensions also helps you gain more perspective.....
    (Think merry go round)

  • @aktechhubspot2035
    @aktechhubspot2035 2 года назад

    How this nueroplasticity can work in epilepsy? I mean to ask every seizure brings damage resulting in some brain cells dead with every seizure. How it can be helpful? Any regime to follow or how to practice nueroplasticity in day to day life.

  • @mariavictoria7829
    @mariavictoria7829 2 года назад +3

    It would be interesting to analyze what percentage of UK cab drivers actually develop alzheimers🧐🧐

    • @jonsmith20766
      @jonsmith20766 2 года назад

      Hopefully they're being tested and continually so.

  • @joshsantone2266
    @joshsantone2266 2 года назад +5

    Here's something I just thought of, I also watch videos about AI and I don't particularly care for AI type things as far as being dominant to humans but I wonder if AI could help with Alzheimer's patients.

    • @cogs7777
      @cogs7777 2 года назад

      i think biofeedback in any form is the fastest way to get a result, because the brain can track its progress.

  • @인형바보
    @인형바보 2 года назад +3

    Honestly, according to this, I should be the level of Albert Einstein already. But nope, I'm dumb as a brick and have the attention span of a fly.

  • @ramakrishna5480
    @ramakrishna5480 2 года назад +1

    Can we still have all our memories even after losing half of our brain ?

  • @rohanwilkinson1021
    @rohanwilkinson1021 2 года назад

    I calculate how many sides of a cube by seeing three sides of a six sided cube and then attempt to calculate how many sides there are of other objects. I also do my basic times table and do it backwards after.

  • @apinojilazul6571
    @apinojilazul6571 2 года назад

    From the heart comes thoughts, in motives, in vibration frequency waves energy, the brain receives and translates into english and the motive becomes information.
    with the motive works the spiritual and eternity, motive is behind and in the middle of the information before it and after it. out of nowhere comes information? in fact it comes from the motive, principle of eternal life, pre-existing archetypes.

  • @Daviddaze
    @Daviddaze 2 года назад

    Reduce stress by socializing too. The constant image change on this video stresses the eyes. Listen wuth eyes closed. The guitar player was left handed - midway in video- using rightside of brain.

  • @6torthor
    @6torthor 2 года назад

    While yes our brain is always making new connections regardless of age, neuroplasticity greatest the younger we are, so take advantage of it. It is why the older we get the more stubborn we generally become, and the younger we are the easier it is to learn things

  • @Kay-uy4xn
    @Kay-uy4xn 2 года назад +1

    You can only become a black cab driver in London if you pass 'The Knowledge'. It's an in depth knowledge of London, not just the streets. Only 20% of people manage to pass it

  • @pleaseenteraname3607
    @pleaseenteraname3607 2 года назад

    It’s amazing how many people still don’t know what the Silva Method is

  • @norvusordoseclorum
    @norvusordoseclorum 2 года назад

    Excellent video

  • @4587445
    @4587445 2 года назад +1

    Actually, there is one piece of fact that is wrong in the video. The brain DOES creates new brain cells by a process called neurogenesis. Scinetists discovered this only recently.

  • @etomraymundp.12stem1a8
    @etomraymundp.12stem1a8 2 года назад

    Thanks Bro!

  • @marioncamu6279
    @marioncamu6279 2 года назад +3

    Hi, what do you think about use of micro doses of mind altering substances for brain hacking?

    • @FatRescueSwimmer04
      @FatRescueSwimmer04 2 года назад +1

      They probably will not comment on this considering LSD is a illegal substance lol

    • @josedelarocha2455
      @josedelarocha2455 2 года назад +1

      If you're a talking about nootropics of any kind, some work but side effects in healthy individuals are rarely investigated

  • @spitalhelles3380
    @spitalhelles3380 2 года назад +1

    tells you a lot about school, that you do better in school with your right hemisphere removed.

  • @fangfang3085
    @fangfang3085 Год назад

    Does neuronplasticity still work even if the brain is going through so roughy time such as tinnitus snow syndrome sleep deprivation.

  • @Muskankumari-ct7we
    @Muskankumari-ct7we Год назад

    I belive myself ,I will surely do this continuosly for 21 days.