Lecture 1.1: Nancy Kanwisher - Human Cognitive Neuroscience

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  • čas přidán 6. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 32

  • @billywhite1403
    @billywhite1403 Před 2 lety +8

    Man, Nancy is really a treasure. she really has a way of bringing out the Cool in this subject. Thanks Dr. Kanwisher and thanks MIT!

  • @moonxx6700
    @moonxx6700 Před 22 dny +1

    I love neuroscience thankyou so much for free lectures !!

  • @colza1025
    @colza1025 Před 4 lety +18

    I'm very interested in Cognitive Neuroscience and now spending time studying it. However, after watching this video, I realised I need to study some more pre-material before fully understanding this course. If anyone can give me some info or link, I will really appreciate. I'll also keep googling to see what I can find. Thanks!

    • @mitocw
      @mitocw  Před 4 lety +26

      If you visit the syllabus page on the OCW RES.9-003 site there is a general list of prerequisites that you need for these materials: ocw.mit.edu/RES-9-003SU15. You will be able to find a lot of these background materials elsewhere on the OCW site ocw.mit.edu by using the topics search. Good luck with your studies!

    • @akeemjames2409
      @akeemjames2409 Před 3 lety +2

      Crash Course Psychology & Anatomy of the Brain

    • @klumpytheklown3798
      @klumpytheklown3798 Před 2 lety +2

      I too am super-interested in this field of study. First, familiarize yourself with the simple rudimentary basics of electricity and how electrons move from negative positive potentials. Nothing happens without that. Learn about cell structure, specifically neuron cell structure. Axons, dendrites, axon hillocks, synapses, ion channels and ligands are the parts that do the heavy lifting. The basics of DNA are important, as well as a thorough understanding of what Evolution by Natural Selection really means. A solid understanding of what fractals are, including the terms recursion, iteration, similar-but-different, would really help.
      After that, Robert Sapolsky's lectures from his Stanford University course called Human Behavioral Biology is just awesome. It is available on CZcams. He has a couple documentaries on CZcams that are fascinating as well. I suggest watching them first.
      It's been a while since your post. I hope you have had success with your neuroscientific education.
      I hope this helps. It should.

  • @JaysonSunshine
    @JaysonSunshine Před 5 lety +5

    At 24:34, I would somewhat disagree with Nancy that no part of the brain can ever be sufficient. I think we should define a new concept, sufficient-given-input, i.e. if you have proper inputs supplied to the module/region, is that module/region sufficient for process X.

    • @anirudh4309
      @anirudh4309 Před 4 lety +1

      I didnt fully get you at first, but then I did. Yeah youre right.

    • @randomhuman8649
      @randomhuman8649 Před 4 lety +2

      But if it's receiving input from another brain region to complete process X, isn't it then by definition not sufficient? Wouldn't that mean that for any functional process X, the final area involved (the area that finally "completes" the task) would be the only "sufficient" region?
      Sorry I'm sure I'm misunderstanding

  • @SachinYadav-wt8cf
    @SachinYadav-wt8cf Před 5 lety +9

    Thank you MIT,
    can anyone tells me where these students talk about these lectures?

  • @MohamedAdel-od1dq
    @MohamedAdel-od1dq Před 6 měsíci +1

    اشكرك على الافادة

  • @HitomiAyumu
    @HitomiAyumu Před 6 lety +4

    You're an amazing teacher Nancy. I don't know a lick of psychology yet I understood you very easily.

  • @srimuharyati2387
    @srimuharyati2387 Před rokem +1

    Terimakasih banyak

  • @heitorsilva3359
    @heitorsilva3359 Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks MIT

  • @wanderingpalace
    @wanderingpalace Před 3 lety +9

    I am now an MIT student LOL

    • @leif1075
      @leif1075 Před 3 lety

      Why is that LOL worthy?

  • @vihungvan8924
    @vihungvan8924 Před 5 lety +3

    Nice, good knowledge

  • @mxrkxo
    @mxrkxo Před 4 lety +2

    thanks from fucking egypt

  • @sahar1usa
    @sahar1usa Před 5 lety +1

    My question is: whether s worth to get a master in Cog Neuroscience?
    My background is in healthcare IT but i want to know whether the ms in CN provide better and easier career development?

    • @arthavjoshi
      @arthavjoshi Před rokem

      pursuing MS in computational neuro will be good for you. letter you can apply for PhD in cog-neueo or AI in health..etc.

  • @d.k.8118
    @d.k.8118 Před 2 lety

    Very interesting

  • @derpyKAT229
    @derpyKAT229 Před 9 měsíci

    im here

  • @carinaesparza9434
    @carinaesparza9434 Před 11 měsíci

    Does she have 2 arms or 1

  • @Guylovesleep6802
    @Guylovesleep6802 Před 6 měsíci

    26:03 i felt roasted here😂

  • @muhammedcagrkartal9954

    is there a 2021 or 2020 version of this

    • @mitocw
      @mitocw  Před 3 lety

      There is a 2021 version of this but it is not available on MIT OpenCourseWare: cbmm.mit.edu/summer-school.

    • @muhammedcagrkartal9954
      @muhammedcagrkartal9954 Před 3 lety

      @@mitocw for up to-date education i believe courses would be better if we can see what professors talk about with the latest advancements in technology and science.
      By the way I am thankful that mit shares these classes online.
      Thank you so much

  • @thaddsreal
    @thaddsreal Před 2 lety +2

    Dr. Kanwisher, I truly hope this gets to you. I listen to you summarizing your work and expressing what irritated you and one thing comes to mind. Your privilege and budget allow you to be so detailed in your research. Its not that the rest of us from underserved communities, do not have your resources to express ourselves. We can't even get 150k to finish the masterplan for an African American 3 year ag and tech college to bring our youth through based on heuristic techniques because we can't afford to do what you have a budget to do. Its difficult to explain to the rural kids why they don't have a building to set up a microscope to look at our river water. My friend, your privilage tells me you have nothing to gain from this comment and we have everything to lose for using our noodle. Yet you gain for having the overwhelming privilege you do. What good is your work if rural kids don't understand their development.

  • @mayc8674
    @mayc8674 Před 4 lety +4

    The "respectable society" back then was very closed minded.

    • @m8111806
      @m8111806 Před 3 lety +2

      Respectable society still is! They are the pioneers of scientism.

  • @user-bz7gt4zi7r
    @user-bz7gt4zi7r Před 3 lety +2

    Unacceptable behavior calling someone idiotic,stopped watching there.

  • @SebastianBeresniewicz
    @SebastianBeresniewicz Před 4 lety +3

    Great information but the judgementally towards claims she doesn't agree with takes away from her credibility. calling something stupid or idiotic doesn't tell me anything informative other than you don't agree with it and it triggers an emotional response that you cannot control the knee-jerk reaction to