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Does Brain Training really work? - PsyFile
A few of our experts muse on the possible benefits - or otherwise - of "brain training".
This video features in order of appearance: Ellen Poliakoff, Penny Lewis and Daniela Montaldi.
University of Manchester School of Psychological Sciences: www.psych-sci.manchester.ac.uk/
Videos by Brady Haran
www.bradyharan.com/
Brady's other channels include:
czcams.com/users/periodicvideos (Chemistry stuff)
czcams.com/users/sixtysymbols (Physics and astronomy)
czcams.com/users/numberphile (Numbers and maths)
czcams.com/users/DeepSkyVideos (Space stuff)
czcams.com/users/nottinghamscience (Science and behind the scenes)
czcams.com/users/foodskey (Food science)
czcams.com/users/BackstageScience (Big science facilities)
czcams.com/users/favscientist (Favourite scientists)
czcams.com/users/bibledex (Academic look at the Bible)
czcams.com/users/wordsoftheworld (Modern language and culture)
czcams.com/users/PhilosophyFile (Philosophy stuff)
zhlédnutí: 66 901

Video

Is Psychology a Science? - PsyFile
zhlédnutí 163KPřed 11 lety
Is psychology really a science? (re-upload due to terrible type first time - pls comment again if you want to contribute) This video features in order of appearance: Luke Jones, Penny Lewis, Daniela Montaldi, Deborah Talmi, Warren Mansell and Ellen Poliakoff. University of Manchester School of Psychological Sciences: www.psych-sci.manchester.ac.uk/ Videos by Brady Haran www.bradyharan.com/
Ten Percent of Your Brain - PsyFile
zhlédnutí 77KPřed 11 lety
Do we only use 10% of our brains? This video features in order of appearance: Luke Jones, Deborah Talmi, Warren Mansell, Ellen Poliakoff and Daniela Montaldi. University of Manchester School of Psychological Sciences: www.psych-sci.manchester.ac.uk/ Videos by Brady Haran www.bradyharan.com/
Memory and Sleep - PsyFile
zhlédnutí 45KPřed 11 lety
Penny Lewis conducts research into sleep and memory. Book by Penney about sleep: www.palgrave.com/products/title.aspx?pid=474183 University of Manchester School of Psychological Sciences: www.psych-sci.manchester.ac.uk/ Videos by Brady Haran www.bradyharan.com/ A run-down of Brady's channels: periodicvideos.blogspot.co.uk/2012/06/here-are-my-channels.html Extra links provided by Penny about her...
Do you know what I'm thinking? - PsyFile
zhlédnutí 68KPřed 11 lety
It is perhaps the question most commonly asked of psychologists: "Do you know what I'm thinking?" So, do they? This video features in order of appearance: Deborah Talmi, Penny Lewis, Luke Jones, Warren Mansell, Ellen Poliakoff and Daniela Montaldi. University of Manchester School of Psychological Sciences: www.psych-sci.manchester.ac.uk/ Videos by Brady Haran www.bradyharan.com/
Time Perception - PsyFile
zhlédnutí 102KPřed 11 lety
How does the human brain keep track of time? Interview with Luke Jones from the University of Manchester. More from Luke about time perception coming soon. University of Manchester School of Psychological Sciences: www.psych-sci.manchester.ac.uk/ Videos by Brady Haran www.bradyharan.com/

Komentáře

  • @TheBjcn
    @TheBjcn Před 10 lety

    I like the Tardis in the background xD

  • @funnnnnnnn3442
    @funnnnnnnn3442 Před 10 lety

    We do use 100% of our brain, but not all at the same time. Let’s pretend there’s a table you have that you place and move things on it a lot. Do you use 100% of the table at any instant? No (unless the whole table is covered with objects all the time). Do you use 100% of the table throughout the year? Yes. After a year, most likely almost every part of the surface of the table will have had something put on it. Do we use 100% of our brain at a given instant? No, about 10% to 30% are being used at any given instant depending on the task. Do we use 100% of our brain throughout the day? Yes, most likely every single part of the brain will have been used after a day, but they weren’t all used at the same time. Is 100% of the brain active all the time? It kind of depends on your definition of “active”, but in general, yes. Are 100% of the neurons in the brain constantly activated? No, only some are activated at any given instant. But that certainly doesn’t mean the rest of the neurons are dead. It just means they aren’t being used (they aren’t firing nor receiving signals from adjacent neurons). So do we use 100% of our brain at an instant? Never. But we do use 100% throughout the day right? Yes. So technically we do use 100% of our brain but just not all 100% at the same time right? Exactly. So the “we only use 10% of our brain” myth is kind of true right? Yes, at any given instant we use 10% to 30% of our brain depending on the task. Therefore, the answer depends on how you interpret the question. Watch 1:57 to 2:53. Pay very close attention. She explained what I'm trying to say quite perfectly.

  • @borysklinga1989
    @borysklinga1989 Před 10 lety

    Doctor Who Time Machine ? 0:28

  • @Ledon177
    @Ledon177 Před 10 lety

    At the end of the video we can read "more soon". Looks like Brady's sense of time is not that good.

  • @blackbwoyinc77
    @blackbwoyinc77 Před 10 lety

    Perhaps the brain evolved to the point where it needs to do less to maintain a person, so it can live longer.

  • @ModerateAmerica
    @ModerateAmerica Před 10 lety

    You wouldn't want conscious control of 100% of your brain

  • @rogerdotlee
    @rogerdotlee Před 10 lety

    I think you're oversimplifying things. That line of thought would be similar to someone saying that they're an expert car mechanic because they can put gas in the tank or change a flat tire.

  • @christianrayfield4365
    @christianrayfield4365 Před 10 lety

    did anyone notice how perfect the older lady's teeth were?

  • @complementarycontrast4132

    1:14 But if psychology is a subdivision of biology then surely biology is just a subdivision of chemistry because we are powered by reactions between molecules and we are made from atoms but if that is true then chemistry must just be a subdivision of physics because all atoms and chemical reactions follow the laws of physics and so why doesn't every scientist call themself a physicist since everything is just a subdivision of that?

  • @FrontalBeep
    @FrontalBeep Před 10 lety

    Are they playing mindgames on us? WHERE ARE THE VIDEOS? :D

  • @Walid-nr8bp
    @Walid-nr8bp Před 10 lety

    Yes we use our whole brain ...meaning our whole brain is active.But we dont use the full POTENTIAL of the brain. What these people dont realize is that the brain is a muscle and it expands the more we use it, the neuron connections increase through critical thinking. Just like when starting to lift weights you are using your entire muscle...but not to its potential....after several months of weight lifting and gradually increasing the weights, you find that lifting the weight that at first took your entire muscle strength would now take only a small portion of muscle strength.So just like that the more you use your brain the more powerful the brain becomes. Hence we only use 10% potential of the brain. :)

  • @zibbydafuqjo4584
    @zibbydafuqjo4584 Před 10 lety

    Brain potential that is to be unlocked? 100% of the brain is literally an epileptic seizure.

  • @NachtReich
    @NachtReich Před 11 lety

    3.) The belief that "intuition" is science - That's obvious to us all. And I don't understand why did you use this statment. However, important hypotesis can be brought by intuition and not only, firstly, by observation. 4.) The belief that conformity = intelligence - Dude, wtf? 5.) The usage of logical fallacies such as "argumentum ad populum" or "argument from authority" etc... - What? I really would like to know "what the heck is this". There is not such a thing in any of Psychology fields.

  • @NachtReich
    @NachtReich Před 11 lety

    I'll do It. 1.) Lack of objective analysis - Not true. It's objective, there is no space for interpretation in a science. Instead, interpretation could be present in Clinical Psychology, maybe, sometimes. But there is a reason, an important one, and I won't deal here with It. 2.) Lack of empirical data - Not true. As a science, It can provide a lot of empirical data with a wide range of instruments (especially technological ones).

  • @NachtReich
    @NachtReich Před 11 lety

    That smells a bit like bullshit. Clearly, you neither know what Psychology is. And, to be honest, talking about "Psychology" in such a generic way makes me sick. "Psychology" covers a very wide range of subfields, from Social Psychology to Behavioral Neuroscience or Cognitive Neuroscience, that are based on a lot of kind of data (qualitative, quantitative; statistical, 'mathematical' [even if statistics is a part of maths]).

  • @jesseleewelch
    @jesseleewelch Před 11 lety

    Prometheus Complex was right, psychology is not a science. A science uses spectroscopy methods, chromatography methods, and other methods that allow you to witness physical phenomenon and prove things about the world around you that none can deny or refute. The best psychology can offer up as evidence is statistics. Statistically speaking, African Americans purchase more watermelons than whites. Based on stats and psychologies logic, what scientific conclusions can I draw?

  • @93MickyD2
    @93MickyD2 Před 11 lety

    R.I.P psyfile

  • @ccwdev
    @ccwdev Před 11 lety

    Normal heart rates range from 60 to 100 beats per minute, where lower is healthier. 60 beats per minute, you don't say? Your comment made me think, too. Our perception of time could definitely be related to the heart rate, and our ability to recognize slight time differences could have helped us notice underlying heart conditions as well. I think this is a plausible evolutionary theory for human time perception! :)

  • @Charlie2531games
    @Charlie2531games Před 11 lety

    I'd like to see some more videos on this channel. Perhaps you could make a video on connections between neuroscience and psychology. For example, Jeff Hawkins' "Memory Prediction Framework" is a good theory about the brain that gives some explanations for different behaviors examined in psychology.

  • @TreibsandTV
    @TreibsandTV Před 11 lety

    Please Brady, work on that volume levelling. I love your videos, but they are often very quiet and then BOOM CZcams hits me with a blasting ad. Do it for our ears! :)

  • @knightfrog8729
    @knightfrog8729 Před 11 lety

    Says someone who has clearly never studied psychology.

  • @FruitGod
    @FruitGod Před 11 lety

    psychology is important but not science

  • @leafar1717
    @leafar1717 Před 11 lety

    sleep people! sleep at least 8 hours a night that you can do! and its free!

  • @ArchitKumar27
    @ArchitKumar27 Před 11 lety

    Time

  • @therflash
    @therflash Před 11 lety

    I can very easily imagine how dodgy devices and advertised training courses are scam, but lucid dreaming is as real as anything else. I can say because I was there. It's definitely neither awake nor unconscious state. I can't explain something that's so far from everyday life in terms of everyday life though, you'd have to see for yourself. Or you can keep your truth about not believing, because that's what your life taught you, and I will keep my memory of it, for that's what my life taught me.

  • @zablujnc
    @zablujnc Před 11 lety

    It is really hard to say whether psychology is really a science, since what it studies is itself in essence immaterial (even though it behaves with some predictability in respect to its material "basis"). The mind is directly known and experienced only by the individual, with the existence of other minds being only indicated at through the observance of actions which postulatedly require a human agent. But the question is, is demarcation really so important?

  • @Cruz0e
    @Cruz0e Před 11 lety

    5:55 Tell this to the guy Roy Sullivan, the guy who was hit 7 times by lightning. :-)

  • @kardiaskepsi3425
    @kardiaskepsi3425 Před 11 lety

    4:10 Yes, because pressing buttons is silly while reading and writing isn't. Back a thousand years ago plenty of people would tell you reading and writing is silly while remembering entire epic oral stories is not. Times change, buttons are simply the new pens.

  • @lmao1214
    @lmao1214 Před 11 lety

    I think that if a specific part of the brain is never or only rarely used it will simply decay over time, so if you dont use certain parts of your brain once in a while they will be gone after some time.

  • @Gnomefro
    @Gnomefro Před 11 lety

    I'm sure there exists psychologists you can basically buy a diagnosis from, but such behavior does not undermine psychology as a science more than doctors doing the same undermine the medical sciences.

  • @Gnomefro
    @Gnomefro Před 11 lety

    The best example of this is perhaps how anti-depressants can be used to enable people to become more active, get a positive feedback loop going and subsequently not need the drugs after they get their lives in order. I think what you may be thinking about is cases where parents or lawyers are hounding "psychologists" either for access to drugs or for a diagnosis.

  • @Gnomefro
    @Gnomefro Před 11 lety

    Ultimately, modern psychology is fusing more and more with neuroscience and can often offer causal explanations for many types of dysfunctional behaviors and trace them back to brain malfunctions or learned disorders and often can have quite a bit to say about how to treat them even without medication. In fact, it is quite uncommon to put people on permanent medication because of "chemical imbalance". Psychologists primarily use medication to enable people to get started on therapy.

  • @Gnomefro
    @Gnomefro Před 11 lety

    You should also realize that psychology started out as a hard science working out the limitations of human senses using all kinds of objective tools and techniques to acquire the data and this tradition has continued right through fads like Freud. You might want to look up B.F. Skinner's work in Behaviorism as well. While the field ran into methodological limitations and has been superseded by the cognitive approach, it was thoroughly scientific and produced many interesting applications.

  • @Gnomefro
    @Gnomefro Před 11 lety

    "There are also zero scientific instruments involved." Utterly false. Psychologists perform hard measurements of all kinds of phenomena in their research. Psychometrics has a long history that you apparently are completely ignorant about. "People that are quick to call Psychology a science typically do not understand what "science" is." No. The problem here is that you have no clue how broad the field of psychology is. Google "cognitive psychology" and "psychometrics" for a start.

  • @ChiktarWorshipper
    @ChiktarWorshipper Před 11 lety

    I'd like to hear what these people have to say about savants, in particular after statements such as 2:53

  • @capnmo6718
    @capnmo6718 Před 11 lety

    That's what William James said, and what could be the start of the myth: a misunderstanding over time of James's quote.

  • @capnmo6718
    @capnmo6718 Před 11 lety

    There are parts of the brain we use subtly, if that's what you mean.

  • @SilvioPorto
    @SilvioPorto Před 11 lety

    Shit Brady, seriously, if you don't plan on uploading frequently on a channel, then I suggest you don't open a new one!

  • @oBCHANo
    @oBCHANo Před 11 lety

    You're a moron.

  • @BrentVis
    @BrentVis Před 11 lety

    I suggest you read "The Brain That Changes Itself", by Norman Doidge. It explains clearly how neuroplasticity works and how it's optimally 'used'. Very interesting to read, and I think you'd enjoy it.

  • @BrentVis
    @BrentVis Před 11 lety

    We want moar. :3

  • @NachtReich
    @NachtReich Před 11 lety

    All I can see from here, by almost every comment, is a big lack of knowledge about "Psychology" and all It's subfields/specializations. Greetings, everyone.

  • @shonshrinks
    @shonshrinks Před 11 lety

    1:40 The Tardis!

  • @Damien420Cross
    @Damien420Cross Před 11 lety

    i woulda meditated with her

  • @handfullocheez
    @handfullocheez Před 11 lety

    i've never had one or attempted to

  • @handfullocheez
    @handfullocheez Před 11 lety

    you could possibly have a dream in which you had a lucid dream--or from the belief of possessing control without really having it

  • @handfullocheez
    @handfullocheez Před 11 lety

    for reals?

  • @rafaeld101
    @rafaeld101 Před 11 lety

    no.

  • @Candoran2
    @Candoran2 Před 11 lety

    I don't think Psychology is a science, but I do think it's science.

  • @LEWIAYY97
    @LEWIAYY97 Před 11 lety

    if you practice "brain training", you will get better at the brain training tests. adding up small numbers etc.