I was raised in Charsadda, a small district in the North-Western Frontier Province called Khyber Pukhtoonkhwah in Pakistan and am sure you know it's very close to Afghanistan and it's populated by Pashtoons just like Afghanistan. My point is, since it's a very conservative society, women covered their faces in what we call "Chaadar" in Pashto. All women who were around 20 to 28 years old looked beautiful with their faces covered and only their eyes visible. But as soon as the veil came off, it was a different story. I am addicted to your programs and can't get enough of these.
In my first college course in 1973, it was psych 101 and it was there I learned: "Everything psychological is biological," and that was the beginning of my passion studying Neurobiology...the discipline still 'blows my mind.' Pun intended! Thank you for this outstanding podcast.
@a.bodhichenevey1601 Hello, again!👋 it seems that we share a fascination with this subject, and both appreciate David's excellent way of presenting and engaging. Best to you.😊
Could an additional contributor to the glimpse effect be that brains can rapidly rule out if the image belongs to someone closely related? That is, a glimpse is enough to impose a filter against relatives (or other known individuals previously deemed undesirable) and signal that the glimpsed is a potential mate worth further analysis. This could be tested by including images of siblings or other close relatives in the experiment you described and seeing if the circuitry can fire fast enough.
I was raised in Charsadda, a small district in the North-Western Frontier Province called Khyber Pukhtoonkhwah in Pakistan and am sure you know it's very close to Afghanistan and it's populated by Pashtoons just like Afghanistan. My point is, since it's a very conservative society, women covered their faces in what we call "Chaadar" in Pashto. All women who were around 20 to 28 years old looked beautiful with their faces covered and only their eyes visible. But as soon as the veil came off, it was a different story. I am addicted to your programs and can't get enough of these.
Great stuff David !
Glimpse effect, mystery is good !
Fantastic! Great information! I love all your videos. ❤
Amazing as usual, yours and Huberman's podcasts/videos are the absolute best in YT.
In my first college course in 1973, it was psych 101 and it was there I learned: "Everything psychological is biological," and that was the beginning of my passion studying Neurobiology...the discipline still 'blows my mind.' Pun intended! Thank you for this outstanding podcast.
@a.bodhichenevey1601 Hello, again!👋 it seems that we share a fascination with this subject, and both appreciate David's excellent way of presenting and engaging.
Best to you.😊
@ I am old and retired and try to stay sharp with factual stuff I can apply to my own aging existence! 🙏😊
Tou are magnificent❤
Another amazing video. ❤
It's all about symmetry, beauty is.
Could an additional contributor to the glimpse effect be that brains can rapidly rule out if the image belongs to someone closely related? That is, a glimpse is enough to impose a filter against relatives (or other known individuals previously deemed undesirable) and signal that the glimpsed is a potential mate worth further analysis. This could be tested by including images of siblings or other close relatives in the experiment you described and seeing if the circuitry can fire fast enough.
Click bait title🥲...
Why David?