What’s the smartest age? - Shannon Odell

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  • Опубликовано: 21 сен 2024
  • At what age are you smartest? Dig into how your brain development affects your skills at different stages of your life.
    --
    Tomorrow is the annual Brain Clash - a decathlon of mental challenges, trivia competitions, and puzzles. Amir needs a smart and capable teammate and must choose between three people; all of different ages and talents. So, who should Amir choose for the contest? Shannon Odell breaks down the idea of “smart” and explores how our brain development impacts our skills at various stages of our lives.
    Lesson by Shannon Odell, directed by Biljana Labović.
    This video made possible in collaboration with Bezos Family Foundation
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    A special thanks to Ali Cohen who provided information and insights for the development of this video.
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Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @hehebwoy4132
    @hehebwoy4132 Год назад +2884

    Age and experience complement each other. It helps with learning and improving from mistakes.

    • @GhostBata675
      @GhostBata675 Год назад +5

      Yeah

    • @SnoopyDoofie
      @SnoopyDoofie Год назад +12

      Don't tell that to the Brits. They would prefer to fire their Prime Minister right now than let her improve on her mistakes.

    • @NightspeakerR
      @NightspeakerR Год назад +3

      Ah yes Wisdom

    • @oracleofdelphi4533
      @oracleofdelphi4533 Год назад +1

      Two sides of the same coin one might say.

    • @Blake-Urizen
      @Blake-Urizen Год назад +2

      complEment

  • @liamriddy358
    @liamriddy358 Год назад +5564

    In my experience, 4-year old's have life all figured out. No school, all meals cooked for you, plenty of sleep etc etc...

    • @oracleofdelphi4533
      @oracleofdelphi4533 Год назад +571

      They can learn 5 different languages simultaneously, figure out mobile phones and even master video games.
      Mine's even figured out exactly how far they can push my buttons before I lose my temper.
      Yet he still smacks himself on the head when trying to open a bag of snacks.

    • @DEATHGamerStickmanStories
      @DEATHGamerStickmanStories Год назад +107

      Yeah and they can be literally care free , no stress, just a peacefully, beautiful absolute perfect life :)

    • @random20000
      @random20000 Год назад +39

      I was in school since 3 so idk what ur saying and before that I was in pre-school

    • @DatOne.Gallia
      @DatOne.Gallia Год назад +36

      you just decribed a dog my man

    • @dylansp4049
      @dylansp4049 Год назад +20

      @@DEATHGamerStickmanStories Until they throw a temper tantrum for the dumbest reasons.

  • @gelbug1991
    @gelbug1991 Год назад +1545

    Not gonna lie... I felt the smartest in my teens. That passion for learning had me reading lots of books, doing activities, and having time to explore. I felt my vocab was at its peak and recall was fast.

    • @JasonMomos
      @JasonMomos Год назад +35

      What made you feel less smarter after teenage years?

    • @gelbug1991
      @gelbug1991 Год назад +126

      @@JasonMomos I think I got really overloaded in my higher education programs where reading and learning transitioned from something I did for fun to work. I also was in a doctoral program that really drained me straight after my bachelor's. Maybe such a thing as too much learning? Lol

    • @chonchobar378
      @chonchobar378 Год назад +13

      @@droberts5583 so you still remember calculus and chemistry 🤣🤣

    • @randomname285
      @randomname285 Год назад +65

      I feel like I was at my smartest in terms of being to quickly creatively problem solve, retain information and reason at around 18-19. Feel like in some ways I'm now (age 27) smarter, especially linguistically, but generally I can feel myself getting duller as time goes on.
      Think work taking up a large part of my cognitive load is a big factor. I'm still pretty intellectually curious but at the end of a working day I'm now more likely to go for lighter forms of entertainment than I used to.

    • @TheMrMRsmoke
      @TheMrMRsmoke Год назад +22

      I believe “The more you know the more you dont know” thats because one might seek more knowledge and realise they know nothing in the process In teenage years you often only know just enough to feel smart, reinforced by being the smartest in your friend groups/schools but that might not enough to want to be smarter

  • @erinharrington29
    @erinharrington29 Год назад +9601

    i feel like no matter what age i am i’m dumber than i’ve ever been

    • @fhinpus
      @fhinpus Год назад +282

      When you were 4, your sister was half your age, you are now dead what's your sister age?
      Only the smartest people can answer this

    • @arjunarunkumar3097
      @arjunarunkumar3097 Год назад +138

      @@fhinpus 73 and 6 months.
      next question please

    • @keeno5567
      @keeno5567 Год назад +73

      @@fhinpus 2?
      I mean what is now? Is it now as in irl now or as in the theoretical now where I am now 4 and now dead?

    • @gabrielbuenodossantos5203
      @gabrielbuenodossantos5203 Год назад +12

      ​@@fhinpus a 99% chance interval to be at 2 until 88

    • @michaelsotkiewicz6675
      @michaelsotkiewicz6675 Год назад +149

      @@fhinpus Half dead. Can't get anything by me

  • @crispin9152
    @crispin9152 Год назад +2010

    I genuinely believe ages 16-45 are the smartest in terms of developing beneficial practices and ideas. Experience plays a huge role in life, but it can also skew a positive trajectory by “sticking to what you know.” In my career field, medicine, older providers are commonly on a downward trend due to them refusing to “update” their knowledge. If your experiences hinder you from adapting and growing, you are not the peak of intelligence.

    • @wren_.
      @wren_. Год назад +11

      That could also be the lead

    • @kimi9572
      @kimi9572 Год назад +41

      reminds me of Einstein refusing to accept Quantum Mechanics when he was old

    • @datboiisforreal
      @datboiisforreal Год назад +3

      @@wren_. Explain how?

    • @Cinnapupz
      @Cinnapupz Год назад +8

      Bro snuck in 16 💀

    • @crispin9152
      @crispin9152 Год назад +42

      @@Cinnapupz Why would I not include 16? That’s a prime age for students to begin leadership roles and entrepreneurship. I didn’t include it just for fun.

  • @okenwaayomikun
    @okenwaayomikun Год назад +2015

    The smartest age is 8, 16, 25, 65 and everything in between.
    People over 65: ...and I took that personally.

    • @shreydoshi110
      @shreydoshi110 Год назад +227

      Children under 8* Gugu Gaga

    • @user-pakshibhithi10
      @user-pakshibhithi10 Год назад +71

      It makes sense tho. Because people under 8 and over 65 are less stable.

    • @toddboothbee1361
      @toddboothbee1361 Год назад +31

      I hope my friend doesn't come to this channel. She's been awarded a MacArthur Genius grant based on work she'd done in her late sixties. Also funny is that usually the reaction time in a 60 year old is the same as when that person was 20. I suppose much depends on maintaining good enough health.

    • @toddboothbee1361
      @toddboothbee1361 Год назад +2

      @@user-pakshibhithi10 I've heard the same said of women.

    • @user-pakshibhithi10
      @user-pakshibhithi10 Год назад +18

      @@toddboothbee1361 Some people maybe more healthy compared to an avg person. You're friend might be one of them. It depends from person to person, but, on an avg, people under 8 and over 65 are less stable. And, I didn't understand what you wanted to convey by saying "I've heard the same said of women."

  • @FedJimSmith
    @FedJimSmith Год назад +115

    I'm well advanced to my 30s, and I feel smarter every passing year. I hope this keeps going forever and ever

    • @draheim90
      @draheim90 Год назад

      Your knowledge base will grow but your fluid abilities (things like spatial ability, processing speed, attention, working memory, reasoning) have already begun to decline since your early-to-mid 20. (when your frontal lobes fully developed). The decline is pretty slow until your 40s-50s. Google images for “fluid intelligence throughout lifespan” if you’re curious.

    • @gabrielgarcia7554
      @gabrielgarcia7554 5 месяцев назад +3

      Likewise, although I am about to enter my 30s. I think having a passion to learn is what allows us to be better people as learning requires deep self reflection from learning from your mistakes. Attempting to learn subjects that you find difficult allows for a deeper understanding of yourself, your limitations and how you can work through them.

    • @Texan_christian1132
      @Texan_christian1132 5 месяцев назад +2

      30 is the smartest age. Anyone younger has there brain less developed and less smart. The only reason they can learn and be creative easily is because they have a caretaker that constantly trains em and it’s socially unacceptable for adults to do stuff children do which makes em look more creative. But there brain is actually less developed and less smart. But after 30 people’s brains decline. So 30 is the smartest age.

    • @Ectooooo
      @Ectooooo 4 месяца назад

      @@Texan_christian1132 stop lying science says and many sources the brain fully developps at 25 not even 30 you are just making things up with no scientifical source or no source in general because you are probably near 30

    • @clairehelen6914
      @clairehelen6914 9 дней назад

      That's not at all true. There's many people that have achieved great achievements for humanity in their 40's ​@Texan_christian1132

  • @coolman6139
    @coolman6139 Год назад +694

    this actually reminds of a study where kids, teens, and adults did a test from nasa themselves.
    Most adults failed, half of the teens failed, and most kids passed.
    The conclusion they came with is that kids have no consequences for making mistakes and don't fear them at all while teens have fear as they're more or less seen as adults while having creativity similar to a child.
    And adults get the short end of the stick as consequences for them messing up can be life changing.
    I'd recommend check out the home movies review from emp lemon as he goes into more detail about the Nasa experiment himself.

    • @lucky_clover_4
      @lucky_clover_4 Год назад +19

      Just watched it! Thanks for the recommendation, it’s super interesting how elusive yet valuable creativity is in our world today

    • @coolcapibara
      @coolcapibara Год назад +22

      whats the name of the experiment called?

    • @adyan4010
      @adyan4010 Год назад

      @@coolcapibara it must be in the video

    • @wallie963
      @wallie963 8 месяцев назад

      @@lucky_clover_4 What movie is it? I'd love to watch it

  • @yeet8627
    @yeet8627 Год назад +230

    In my opinion, I think the peak intelligence for most people is the teenage years. It’s the transition between childhood and adulthood, it’s the time where kids are growing and learning to explore themselves and the world, the time where they form hobbies and be more responsible. It’s also the time where one realizes how vast the world actually is and how there is so much to learn and know. I’m not saying humans are the smartest when they are teens (def not), what I mean is that it’s the time where we actually learn new things and start exploring.

    • @salahuddinuddin5070
      @salahuddinuddin5070 Год назад +2

      Agreed
      But in my opinion anyone can be smart at any age and at any way whether if it is ideas,creative,memory,learning etc etc..
      All they need is just logic and try.

    • @adriangaming4853
      @adriangaming4853 Год назад +6

      Teenage are mentally not very stable, from my experience currently being one.

    • @Texan_christian1132
      @Texan_christian1132 5 месяцев назад

      Sounds good but 30 is the smartest age. Anyone younger has there brain less developed and less smart. The only reason they can learn and be creative easily is because they have a caretaker that constantly trains em and it’s socially unacceptable for adults to do stuff children do which makes em look more creative. But there brain is actually less developed and less smart. But after 30 people’s brains decline. So 30 is the smartest age.

  • @ScienceVashu
    @ScienceVashu Год назад +84

    I appreciate the animators, they never run out of new techniques of animation

  • @lukeg1b50n8
    @lukeg1b50n8 Год назад +411

    In my limited experience, I definitely felt more intelligence about 4 years ago. I’m 20 now

    • @silvesta5027
      @silvesta5027 Год назад +35

      I’m 19, can relate. I was on my academic GRIND at 16-17. A-levels are so stressful

    • @marsovac
      @marsovac Год назад +13

      "felt" is very scientific :D

    • @VegetableMigraine
      @VegetableMigraine Год назад +54

      The reason is you're just starting to realize how little you really know and how much more you need to learn.

    • @harutakashima4233
      @harutakashima4233 Год назад +4

      Agree, it feels like im way more smarter when i was a kid being able to think of something that no one still did Such as A.I. before it was a hype or a thing, but now i cant even think how did i manage to think like that, make them. Wished i wrote my ideas and how to make them... That way now i can test and polish them
      Im 20 now

    • @Laz3rCat95
      @Laz3rCat95 Год назад +23

      You probably weren't any smarter back then, you just became more self-aware and now you realize how you're lacking. Actually, gaining self-awareness is a sign you've become smarter.

  • @pranatirajput546
    @pranatirajput546 Год назад +46

    Title: What’s the smartest age?
    The video: *proceeds to confuse you*

    • @MisterCynic18
      @MisterCynic18 Месяц назад

      Just means you're not at your smartest age

  • @nocturno7660
    @nocturno7660 Год назад +118

    I feel the smartest right now, currently 28, the overall experience and knowledge just surpasses all me
    I could learn the quickest in my teen age years, particularly 15-16, I noticed I picked up skills very fast and mastered them in no time

    • @silvesta5027
      @silvesta5027 Год назад +4

      What kind of skills did you quickly pick up at 15-16?

    • @FeelLikePac
      @FeelLikePac Год назад

      Ya prime

    • @arleneazurin
      @arleneazurin Год назад +1

      I have the same question as Silvesta, what kind of skills did you pick up at 15-16? Why do you think you picked them up very quickly and mastered them in no time? What did you do to achieve mastery in those skills you have learned?
      Sorry for all the questions, I'm just curious.

    • @nocturno7660
      @nocturno7660 Год назад +1

      @@silvesta5027 Stuff at school, drawing, gaming

    • @alyponk5016
      @alyponk5016 Год назад +3

      I was quite average until my mid 20s. My smartest age started since I was 26. I'm now 30 and it's only getting better

  • @eyesyt7571
    @eyesyt7571 Год назад +64

    I'm 17 years old, and looking back I don't think I've changed at all over the years. I can remember when I was three, and besides being more optimistic perhaps, I had the same thought process. I'm how I've always been. Perhaps, less happens in my mind than when I was younger, but that is the only change.

    • @siddhantjhaveri
      @siddhantjhaveri Год назад +2

      I can relate to you. Quite the same.

    • @PineappleLiar
      @PineappleLiar Год назад +1

      Sitting at 25, I do feel like I’ve experienced some change since my teenage years, but also that I’ve carried particular modes of thought with me from my preteens all the way into adulthood (there are some parts of my childhood thought process I recall, but I feel like my internal monologue/dialogue was till developing then). But in some cases I’d say it’s situational to lifestyle more than my age, the two just happen to coincide. How I thought about certain things changed when I went to college, then they changed again when 2020 happened and I was at home, then they changed a third time when I got my first full time job. The synapses that fire and the thought processes you need every day change and so do the thoughts that go along with it. Idk just putting it out there.

  • @Stanger_95
    @Stanger_95 Год назад +21

    The way they are presenting information and animating it has just elevated to a whole new level. Like pick any other video from 2-3 years ago and compare it with the recent ones! Like I'm not saying that the ones done before are bad. But just wanted to highlight the improvement that they have introduced in the quality of their videos.

  • @KnightsofGaming2016
    @KnightsofGaming2016 Год назад +29

    "There is no age at which we stop learning"
    - Barrin, Tolarian Archmage

  • @joey3354
    @joey3354 Год назад +44

    If I look back at my 29years of life, I would always pick the 29year old me.
    I think my ability to learn and concentrate only improves over time. Also the experience and amount of information I hold only increases. But I am only 29. I don't know if this is continuous.
    I do agree that at certain ages I had a better understanding of certain subjects. Languages and mathematics I never use degrade over time. But relearning those old skills is as easy as reading it once.
    It's the same as movies. There are movies I haven't seen since I was a child. But just watching the first 5min of that movie brings back the entire movie and information I processed.
    If aging continues like this, I think I will become a better version of myself. But the catch in this all is that I need a healthy brain and keep practicing my knowledge. My work is solving problems and I think this also has an influence on my brain.

    • @jocylinfrancis930
      @jocylinfrancis930 Год назад +5

      I’m not an expert, but the older people I’ve talked to have said similar things. To them, the only bad thing about aging is your body decaying.
      Basically, brains seem to work on dragon logic, with older ones being far more powerful.
      Of course, getting “set in your ways” can be a problem, especially if society has changed too much. For instance, in America, racial segregation ended in 1964. That wasn’t too long ago, and I bet there’s still people who supported it that are still alive today. I don’t think I need to explain why failing to adapt past 1964 is problematic.
      But maybe there’s some self-fulfilling prophecy here. If you believe that you can get better, you will get better- and you can always learn new things. In fact, there is a gaming RUclips channel run by an old lady who started gaming relatively recently. I forgot the name though.
      Honestly, as long as your brain doesn’t start to activity decay you should be fine.

  • @zoowon730
    @zoowon730 Год назад +15

    This video is telling us no matter how old we are. Aging concerns many people. people become easily disappointed by the fact of they get old. But I would like to suggest them changing the view of them. What you can obtain at 70 years old is what you can't at 20 years old. Valuable is every age.

  • @mxka-b5m
    @mxka-b5m Год назад +8

    0:39 as someone who's been fluent in 2 languages for as long as I can remember, idk why but it's surprising to me when people think speaking two languages is impressive

    • @Yu-Gi-Oh36508
      @Yu-Gi-Oh36508 7 месяцев назад

      Yeah same, learning languages doesnt require that much inteligence just patience and work

  • @WorldITAcademy
    @WorldITAcademy Год назад +59

    Let's all appreciate the animators for such a good animation.

  • @favegossipgirl
    @favegossipgirl Год назад +93

    Honestly, I wish I learned more languages as a child. Im in hs now and it would have been easier to learn languages younger yk

    • @vogeline_
      @vogeline_ Год назад +7

      There's no reason to care even a little bit about something you can't change.

    • @rorantruong
      @rorantruong Год назад

      @@vogeline_ What's that supposed to mean ? i'm confused

    • @vogeline_
      @vogeline_ Год назад

      @@rorantruong I wanted to say one of epictetus' but didn't remember it so I just said that. Anyway heres the quote I was referring to:
      "There is only one way to happiness and that is to cease worrying about things that are beyond your power and will"

    • @TheWanderstar
      @TheWanderstar Год назад +4

      Are you 25 in highschool? If not, you're still at a good age to start learning languages. Don't feel sorry for what you've lost, be grateful for what you can have.

    • @parafraceren
      @parafraceren Год назад +1

      Honestly, if you are serious about this, just do it. You can still learn another language. Start with one and commit ^^

  • @Amantducafe
    @Amantducafe Год назад +8

    There are many factors in play and age, although a factor, it's impact is still debatable.
    When i turned 28 i started learning languages. I already was a spanish native speaker and learnt english in my teenager years. But when i reahed 28, and after finishing college, i decided to set myself that language learning goal.
    Now i'm 31 years old, i'm fluent in English, spanish, portuguese, italian and french with German, Japanese, Russian and Hebrew around B1-B2 proficiency, i've even done some part-time jobs as an interpreter because of that achievement which was another new thing i studied and gained, the interpretation skills.

    • @swanepoel4714
      @swanepoel4714 Год назад

      Hi. I am turning 15 soon and have been considering turning my language learning hobby into a career with translation. I am impressed that you learned so many languages in such a short time. Can you give me your method for learning languages?

    • @Amantducafe
      @Amantducafe Год назад

      @@swanepoel4714 Immersion-based learning, i live in Spain and learning english was easy due to the amount of online resources to fully immerse yourself in the language.
      For the other languages i just had to gain the basics through traditional learning and then challenging myself by visiting said places and forcing myself to read, listen, speak and write in that targeted language.
      Ofcourse not everyone can afford to travel and live in another country but the internet is an amazing tool to organize yourself into a partially immersed experience.
      Simple things like changing language settings, watching youtube videos from that language, reading books in their original language and most importantly Discord with dedicated language learning channels to speak directly with people.

  • @rd4931
    @rd4931 Год назад +20

    I love you TED-Ed ❤, thank you very much for everything you guys have done for us

  • @gabrielhemingway
    @gabrielhemingway Год назад +5

    Committing yourself to the expansion of your mind and being willing to cooperate when said mind is insufficient is crucial, I think.

  • @Skarpo89
    @Skarpo89 Год назад +7

    The animation in this video. It's just outstanding

  • @temursoliyev5315
    @temursoliyev5315 Год назад +2

    I'm watching this video from Uzbekistan 🇺🇿

  • @NavajoNinja
    @NavajoNinja Год назад +16

    A year or 2 before humans go through puberty is the most purest human u will ever be.

  • @dr.python
    @dr.python Год назад +9

    Another thing to note is that people are generally getting smarter, if you put 20 year olds against 20 year olds from 10 years ago in the past in the same competitive test the present ones will win

  • @astaridjatmiko8187
    @astaridjatmiko8187 Год назад +5

    When it comes to working, initiative is important. No matter what kind of smart you are, if you don't want to take the challenges and responsibilities, it won't develop.

  • @oldcowbb
    @oldcowbb Год назад +2

    this is the brain's solution to the explore-exploit problem. the closer you are toward the end. the more exploitative strategy you should use

  • @feynstein1004
    @feynstein1004 Год назад +7

    I seem to be stuck on the adolescent phase even though I'm 28. I have endless curiosity and find any new information interesting, no matter what field 🤔

    • @elvisedison1741
      @elvisedison1741 Год назад

      That's a good thing

    • @feynstein1004
      @feynstein1004 Год назад +1

      @@elvisedison1741 I guess 😅 Although, it's actually led to a problem. Ever since I was a child, I knew everything except what I was supposed to know 😂🔫 I only realized this recently and concluded that I need to start distinguishing between relevant information and irrelevant information. Then prioritize the relevant information accordingly.

    • @riflemanzy2187
      @riflemanzy2187 Год назад +1

      @@feynstein1004 Same thing happening with me maybe we share same Myers-Briggs type if you dont know what is your give a online mbti test and tell me the result.

    • @feynstein1004
      @feynstein1004 Год назад

      @@riflemanzy2187 I think it has more to do with autism than personality types but sure, I'll take the test and let you know. Did you overcome our problem btw? Like, being well-informed is good. But being well-informed on irrelevant things at the expense of basic practical knowledge is greatly harmful. I call it being anti-smart 😅

    • @feynstein1004
      @feynstein1004 11 месяцев назад

      @kestya963 Yeah I'm an INTP-T apparently, whatever that means 😂

  • @3800S1
    @3800S1 Год назад +6

    My teen years were by far my worst, I was generally bad at everything except technical/science type stuff. I believe I had/have a learning disability.
    I didn't start to shine until my late 20s and now I'm in my mid 30s I amaze myself what I am capable of and feel like I am at peak or heading towards it. It's become obvious now that I'm not neurotypical and that explains why I struggled with all aspects except the mentioned for most of my younger life and excelled later.

  • @user-xy8ml3jx7w
    @user-xy8ml3jx7w Год назад +13

    I think it doesn’t depend on ages.
    Passion and continuity to learn are important for to be smart no matter how old we are.

  • @RodrigoFerreira-of8bu
    @RodrigoFerreira-of8bu Год назад

    'm 28 years old, sometimes I start out excited to learn LANGUAGES, or RUN more after a month, I GET DISCOURAGED, but I was 15 and more excited!!!!

  • @emilvinod
    @emilvinod Год назад +5

    With the speed humans are learning I'm sure a 15 yr old 100 years from today will be as smart as our professors

    • @geminix365
      @geminix365 8 месяцев назад +1

      You could say the same for today, as anybody has access to all the information in the world in the palm of their hands

  • @autumngalix4616
    @autumngalix4616 8 месяцев назад +1

    I always say if you want to learn about experiences, talk to an older person. If you want to learn about new things, talk to a kid. Talking to many people is a good strategy to get a wider scope on the world around you. You'd be surprised about the staggering amount of things that shape people into who they are.

  • @i_am_that_sink
    @i_am_that_sink Год назад +7

    It's 4:06 for people with my attention span

  • @Student-gi4lb
    @Student-gi4lb Год назад +1

    This is one of the most simple-complicated topic I have ever been.

  • @valerieryu1923
    @valerieryu1923 Год назад +10

    Legit never thought abt this before
    Also love the ozo/ulu riddle cameo!

    • @graham.crackers
      @graham.crackers 4 месяца назад

      And the children with the green eyes one!

  • @Gabytron
    @Gabytron Месяц назад

    I find myself remembering things I thought or believed when I was 8-12 years old and how insightful, logical or philosophical I managed to be.

  • @SnoopyDoofie
    @SnoopyDoofie Год назад +6

    "Well if age doesn't matter, I guess I might as well pick anyone. What's the prize?"
    "$1 million"
    "Oh, in that case, it's the 5 time champ."

  • @SirAU
    @SirAU Год назад +2

    1:26
    Everyone Else: "OK, let's break down the concept of 'smart' into categories."
    Me (A Cuber): "HOW DID THEY GET THE COLOUR SCHEME WRONG!!! ALL THE CUBERS ARE DYING BECAUSE OF IT!!!!"

  • @mattkroll4464
    @mattkroll4464 Год назад +4

    That is because you are at a lower part of the dunning-kruger curve, you know enough to know that you don't know a lot.

  • @kul.vedant
    @kul.vedant 5 месяцев назад

    Everyday is smart, if lived consciously, smilingly!

  • @arkscrew
    @arkscrew Год назад +5

    Idk why but this video just gave me an anxiety attack. Now I need to study.

  • @CombuskenKid
    @CombuskenKid 6 месяцев назад +1

    And yet 16 year olds can't vote, at least where I'm from. They really should be able to, and being able to provides motivation to learn the difference between good and bad policy from a younger age when learning is easier.

  • @e-ben616
    @e-ben616 Год назад +5

    Dear Lord, thank you for Ted-Ed. I've learned so much from them.

  • @JackieOwl94
    @JackieOwl94 9 месяцев назад

    I felt the “smartest” in terms of neuroplasticity, in my early teens, and I noticed a decline in my ability to think more flexibly once I hit 18. It has gone downhill from there in that department, but my ability to remain calm and think things over, though slower, still does me good.

  • @bluerobloxplays2127
    @bluerobloxplays2127 8 месяцев назад +8

    But who did he pick?

  • @DiggyT
    @DiggyT Год назад +1

    I was smart enough to know this would be a click bait video, fast forwarded to the end to confirm my asumption.

  • @boyruatara4372
    @boyruatara4372 Год назад +3

    The day you realise how little you know in comparison to what there is to Learn. That's the day you start to become Intelligent.

  • @checkm8rr
    @checkm8rr Год назад +1

    Everyone under 8 and over 65: *paralysed from not knowing literally anything, including movement*

  • @varunprakash6207
    @varunprakash6207 Год назад +8

    2:43 Animation 👌 Vera level 😍 Solving the riddles As teenager learn more exploration of more area The ages 8 , 16 , 25 , 45 and 65 More over Age and experience are complicated they can learn each and everyday so the cannot tell this or that age it not barriers 👍

  • @camerongrow6426
    @camerongrow6426 Год назад +1

    This video is one of the best explanations for Zordon's choice in Power Rangers

  • @strange_and_magnificent
    @strange_and_magnificent Год назад +37

    Love the animation!❤‍🔥

  • @shiiyouu
    @shiiyouu 4 месяца назад

    that explains a lot of stuff... I'm 11 and know 5 languages, english (very well actually!), brazilian portuguese (native), french (in progress), japanese (in progress) and spanish (in progress)

  • @ranimele
    @ranimele Год назад +6

    This animation is so calming! Thank you!

  • @blackvelvette
    @blackvelvette Год назад +2

    This video came at the right time, I’ve been worrying about what age I was smartest 😭

    • @notevencalm
      @notevencalm Год назад

      The current you is simply the smartest

  • @timgorg1919
    @timgorg1919 Год назад +3

    I felt most smartest at 4-6 years. At four I could read at two languages, count past 1 000, name a huge number of animals, remember the names of all planets, know how the earth is built, and keep up with third class in terms of math. And around 6 years of life I was able to keep up with fifth class math and read binary code. I still (eight class) benefit from it for example reading binary codes. Knowledge was who I am.
    But now in middle school I feel dumber. Sure, I am still smarter than the idiots around me, but now violence defines me in school. At least what I am at home doesn't changed

  • @kiwimaniseatingfroot
    @kiwimaniseatingfroot 7 месяцев назад

    Done for Gabriela.I speak 3 languages and I'm also an outside the box thinker

  • @minashin1562
    @minashin1562 7 месяцев назад +7

    The smartest age is 0 as it has the best chance of not getting ruined by other people

    • @TroyQwert
      @TroyQwert Месяц назад

      There's no chance. 0 age is a starting point, not a lasting feature. 😊

  • @Hiro-wf6qe
    @Hiro-wf6qe 4 месяца назад

    I'm 19 and the difference between me now and when I was 18 is crazy big

  • @philoslother4602
    @philoslother4602 Год назад +23

    0:35 is 8 and fluent in 2, languages
    I: *laughs in European*

  • @JojoJere
    @JojoJere Год назад +2

    The narrator is great

  • @danmanproking2179
    @danmanproking2179 Год назад +3

    I lie, how they used a Rubik’s cube for memory, Rubik’s cubes are surprisingly easy one you only need to learn a couple sequences of moves to shuffle the pieces around!

  • @lethuumalachi8130
    @lethuumalachi8130 Год назад +2

    Can you please make a video on how our taste buds change. I've been wondering how I hated spinach when i was ten but I love it now

  • @ramanand6737
    @ramanand6737 Год назад +38

    Age of death is the smartest age
    Because learning never stops.

    • @simsim4910
      @simsim4910 Год назад +8

      not necceserily, as there are several traps you might fall into, such as static thinking, unability to adapt or others and also mental diseases can play a part, like alzheimer or demencia which often come with age

  • @BrainPortion
    @BrainPortion Год назад

    I'm very satisfied with the idea of breaking down intelligence rather than relying on the ambiguous measure of IQ

  • @unwantedmacguffin5611
    @unwantedmacguffin5611 Год назад +16

    Well according to my twelve year old cousin twelve is the smartest age

  • @Hollowdude15
    @Hollowdude15 6 месяцев назад +1

    Amazing video TED-Ed :]

  • @gnggng.
    @gnggng. Год назад +5

    I'll save you 4:52 minutes of your life.
    "There is no good answer"

  • @DiyoraYuldosheva-j4e
    @DiyoraYuldosheva-j4e Месяц назад

    I think it is very good tedtalk I feel calm myself during tedtalk

  • @watch5759
    @watch5759 Год назад +3

    I am still in my adolescence and College never fails to question my ‘smartness’ and if I am even a master to one skill. That’s why I’m surprised to learn that it is perfectly normal for adolescents to be jack of all trades.

  • @draheim90
    @draheim90 Год назад

    The tl;dw is that cognitive flexibility (an aspect of creativity) may be highest in children; “fluid” abilities (e.g., processing speed, reasoning, attention, working memory capacity, spatial ability) peak in our mid-20s; and crystalized abilities (e.g., knowledge) continue to increase throughout our life. So who to pick on your team depends on the nature of the game or test.

  • @Eliza-vz8ch
    @Eliza-vz8ch Год назад +3

    I actually think children are quite intelligent. Well, for me as a child i grew up hearing different languages a lot, from the tv and outside i heard english, and from my parents I heard a different one. But as your a baby, your brain picks up these languages but chooses the one that will be more functionable and needed for them to speak more fluently. For me, I picked up english faster, even though my family didnt (because they didnt grow up hearing english). And later on improved my mother tongue.

  • @hayekhayek580
    @hayekhayek580 Год назад

    intelligence is not from your experience, its from your ability to absorb and retain information.

  • @Phymacss
    @Phymacss Год назад +3

    Love the animations!

  • @arabiannoon
    @arabiannoon Год назад

    I swear, I didn't expect to see my name (Amir) when I clicked on a TedEd video. This is amazing. XD

  • @PiCubing3.14
    @PiCubing3.14 10 месяцев назад +2

    1:21 Ooo, a rubik's cube

  • @portillamail
    @portillamail 3 месяца назад +1

    At 25 the brain is peaking. After that is going downhill. Experience is a very different thing than being at your most intelligent. Einstein did all his revolutionary work before being 24 years old.

  • @TundeEszlari
    @TundeEszlari Год назад +3

    You are a very good videographer. The video was perfect, keep it up. ;)

  • @WeWillWinForSure
    @WeWillWinForSure 4 месяца назад

    it's 100 years old. Experience rocks!

  • @CottonCandyTheWW2Geek
    @CottonCandyTheWW2Geek Год назад +10

    This is amazing like always

  • @RonFraser-fl5yc
    @RonFraser-fl5yc 9 месяцев назад

    I feel the smartest now, in my 50’s because I know now just how little I, and everyone else on this planet knows.

  • @infinitefuture1828
    @infinitefuture1828 Год назад +7

    I'm an Indian, by the time I was 3, I was fluent in 3 languages, like most kids in my class.

  • @anandtenguria
    @anandtenguria 28 дней назад +2

    It was not the question ‘who will he choose’…the question was how many views this thumbnail gets 😂😂😂

  • @thetinker9698
    @thetinker9698 Год назад +3

    I do feel that the second stage of teenage life i. E. (15-18) is where a person is at his best.
    But that is the time when he/she is facing different kinds of problem and has the important question to face like what to do with life or what kind of a person he wants to become.
    I am 18 now and the last two years of my high school were covid impacted and I was not able to study as well as I would have wanted to especially in my favorite subject I. E. Mathematics
    I am still doing a bachelor in mathematics in college but i feel that losing those two years will have a very high impact on my overall mental capacity of doing maths and logical puzzles later in life.

  • @tegathemenace
    @tegathemenace 11 месяцев назад +1

    Nobody talking about the animation of the queen slaying the king😂

  • @juanli4153
    @juanli4153 Год назад +3

    3:34 Ted Ed riddles!

  • @zee.lovessGod
    @zee.lovessGod 8 месяцев назад +2

    "There's no single answer."
    Me: *clicks off*

  • @deanab-se5op
    @deanab-se5op Год назад +4

    Cute animation 😍

  • @shailmurtaza9082
    @shailmurtaza9082 8 месяцев назад +1

    I think my brain works best when I'm emotionally active. Like when I'm angry

  • @Nobody.thatyouknow
    @Nobody.thatyouknow Год назад +4

    All the 15 y\o's named "Amir" watching this: 💀🤐

  • @61cents0
    @61cents0 Год назад +1

    I love this new content but it is still informational

  • @RickDelmonico
    @RickDelmonico Год назад +4

    Smartest versus wisest.

  • @selgeaus
    @selgeaus Год назад +2

    I feel like I am currently smarter and dumber than I was previously; smarter because I have more experiences but dumber because I start forgetting skills and knowledge that I don't use anymore

  • @iranjackheelson
    @iranjackheelson Год назад +3

    TedEd could do better. These are rather arbitrary lists of things each age group is good at. More principled and succinct way to see it is fluid vs. crystalized intelligence, where learning trend moves from former to latter as you age. This is due to decreasing neuroplasticity and can be a bad and a good thing depending on what you decided to crystalize as you age, which is easier said than done.

  • @MJ-2797
    @MJ-2797 Год назад +1

    IT WAS THE FRIENDS WE MADE ALONG THE WAY!!!!! AHHHHHHH

  • @christiant.g.994
    @christiant.g.994 Год назад +12

    "No matter who he picks, having an age diverse team is a good strategy" that's literally saying it matters 😂

    • @roastedman8384
      @roastedman8384 Год назад

      how so? different ages deal with different areas of thinking , so having a team of all ages would take care of all the parts .

  • @mariatrinidad79
    @mariatrinidad79 Год назад

    I was watching this on my grandma's computer but my real name is Amir too. :)