Words is only an explicit way to represent thoughts. I believe brain has its implicit representation of thoughts and abstract concepts without requiring to express them in words. So while processing of language is localised in certain area of brain, the thoughts those words represent is distributed.
Isn't modern technology incredible? With functional MRI scanning we can get so much more information about the way the brain works. Often computers are more trouble than they are worth, but when it comes to the internet and image processing it has caused incredible changes in how we communicate and understand this world. Credit to the people who invented the technology and did the study.
+HumanoidOrganism If you are not an anthropologist in career, you certainly are at heart! :-D I could not agree with you more! Now, we must see how to help this lab prepare the same experiment cross-culturally! Wouldn't it be fun to be a volunteer?
Ooooo ... I want to ask the researchers: have they attempted this across cultures yet? I wonder about the degrees of difference in the human brain about all sorts of things, and also of the similarities. FASCINATING! I want to do it ... please, map me, docs! :-D
The language remain located in the 2 known places; Broca for understanding spoken language, the other closer to visual area to read words. Everywhere else, it is just labels that we add to explain the concept manipulated by each brain area. For example, the two locations with the label "family" are areas that become active when thinking about any family. But the English word 'family" is still recognized in the Broca area. Once Broca identify the word "family", then it trigger one or more brain areas which know the concept.
this means that we can map each thought word by a human to a string of digits that represent the locations of the brain that are activated by that word. Then we can send these strings via bluetooth to another computer wich would decode them into words and read them to another human, who would in turn respond with another phrase which will be sent to the first human and so on. Thus achieving universal telepathic communication.
Interesting description of the fundamental way the brain works. Each area process concepts. When listening to a story, the brain area get activated as the words with appropriate context are identified.
A highly correlating theory about why we humans build this word map in our brains, how we build it during language acquisition in infancy and how we use it to understand and generate language, can be found in the cortical.io white paper "Semantic Folding Theory" (arxiv.org/abs/1511.08855).
I could kind of understand depression with this video, as when following one word after another, they align in groupings. One side of a word will have the opposite of it on the other side. It's kind of like having conscience on each side. A check and balance of good and bad.
+◯ Advaita What do you mean with 'one of those things'? Perhaps the spatial measurement units of fMRI (voxels)? Almost certainly this is not the case. Even single neurons are complex systems that can perform computations within themselves, but most cognitive functions are even distributed across networks of neurons. Even this video gives examples of this. The word 'top' elicited increased 'activity' in many different parts of the brain.
+◯ Advaita :)) when people become more conscious they tend to have an existential crisis, it's the price you pay when you wonder away from eat, sex, tribe, enemy, sleep. persist and things reach equilibrium again. if you enjoy the perspectives of advaita i have written an short essay that gives a scientific look at it (altho i'm not really into the advaita philosophy). careful as it can increase existential angst :) - anywherein12seconds.tumblr.com/post/141490986906/we-are-human-kline-bottles-things-are-not-what
Does this imply that there is not a language "part" of the brain, but rather, that language uses "all" parts of the brain (perhaps similarly to the way playing a musical instrument uses all parts/regions of the brain simultaneously)?
This running in real time and abilities expanded could help with psychological or couples therapy when addressing associations and triggers. Expanded abilities could include mapping emotional responses as well so the depth of data can further explore whatever might be the issue with more clarity. I had been playing with the concept of software and hardware engineering to such ends but might just toss that project back into oblivion since it seems that's where science might be taking us anyways^^
+Sasha Koniev empirical evidence is still needed to answer a similar question. There is, in fact, an ongoing debate over the relation between language and cognition; does language affect thought? if speaking a different language entails thinking differently then this would indicate that we may have different semantic representations underlying the same concept ... this suggests the activation of different cortical or subcortical regions for the same concept (along with shared ones ). Some studies answer YES but to which degree this yes stands tenable is questioned.
+Amina Klibi, your point is clear. I think, the authors have done a great piece of work. It would be interesting though to have the same text be translated to other languages and to create an interactive map in Chinese, German, Russian, etc... Would the location of words be more or less the same or completely different?..
+Tam McDonnagh I get your point. I totally agree. However we still need empirical evidence to clear it up. I will refer you to an interesting article in which you may better understand my point : Boroditsky. L. 2009. HOW DOES OUR LANGUAGE SHAPE THE WAY WE THINK?. EDGE. Available at edge.org/conversation/lera_boroditsky-how-does-our-language-shape-the-way-we-think accessed the 01/03/16 . Please Read it!you will end up thinking again .
Hi! Связь с иностранными словами как с синонимами на родном. Мы видим разноцветные карандаши, но все они карандашами и запоминаются, окрас теряется. Так и мозг уже не понимает на каком языке назван карандаш - он в любом случае предъявляет вам каранда, а не тростинку или авторучку.
Excellant presentation. Let's hope these researchers soon publish something on storing vision information. This might lead to effective therapies for brain damages experienced after hip operations. Thanks to Terry Licia for the link to the online version. Hope to explore this ASAP.
Super video. This is a great way to help learners understand why pronunciation is so important. How we hear a word matters to how we comprehend it and how quickly we can come to that understanding. What a useful video and research study.
This can serve to refine research done on why people respond more neutrally to a person called "African-American" vs. negatively to the same person who is labled "Black"...
I agree with you. This post is truly inspiring. I like your post and everything you share with us is current and very informative, I want to bookmark the page so I can return here from you that you have done a fantastic job.
It's just incredible how the brain keep a new word and organize it to specific areas in the brain, I'd never imagine that, everytime I learn bout my own brain I'm sure that chemical is the best thing of this fucking universe
i find it very interesting how the words wife,family, mother and pregnant all correlate in the same region. the semantics are different but the concept is the same. the brain couples concepts to derive memory and feeling it would seem.
+Curiosity Science2 But it's my understanding that they do not "correlate in the same region." They light up many areas of the brain! At the same time! And just look at all the associations in the same color range! (have you gone to see the 3-D brain viewer on the web .. and played with it? A picture is worth ... yanno! LOL) Here's the site: gallantlab.org/huth2016/ ...
That was inspiring! I am just asking myself the following: Linking 2 different things together? Like the famous mnemonics - what woulld that look like. Maybe the word then appears in both places? Also: If you know more then one language, I am asuming the places for words with the same meaning are identical? Wonderful indeed... And how about people that see colors and characters in numbers? maybe their "one" is in the angry, red and number region?
what about dialects, diphthongs, manner, rpm's, vowels , consonants, language barriers, artistry of photographer, emotion embedded in words suggestively? exposition to other language scales and levels or terraces? Rise and fall of frequency waves of sound, gradual recording of the info. you have no real proof to provide, sorry.
what about dialects, diphthongs, manner, rpm's, vowels , consonants, language barriers, artistry of photographer, emotion embedded in words suggestively? exposition to other language scales and levels or terraces? Rise and fall of frequency waves of sound, gradual recording of the info. you have no real proof to provide, sorry.
what about dialects, diphthongs, manner, rpm's, vowels , consonants, language barriers, artistry of photographer, emotion embedded in words suggestively? exposition to other language scales and levels or terraces? Rise and fall of frequency waves of sound, gradual recording of the info. you have no real proof to provide, sorry.
You are completly right. I did (and do) not have any evidence to support my questions. I was just asking myself these questions. You point "emotion embedded in words" also made me wonder about connotations.
For educational purposes, is there a way to get such a 3d model of the brain available for video production tools (format for 3dsmax, blender, etc.) ??
Could this be some how connected to dreams because when we are sleep our brains are working could our brain be using the words to create a story which is a dream.
+Terry Licia Thanks for the link; I sent them an email. The email address for the head scientist is gallant@berkeley.edu, in case you want to email them as well.
flarn2006 THANK YOU! I feel like I was being an advertiser for them but hey, if you can't shout out about good science, then heck, why shout out anything at all? :-)
Is that possible that different people of different cultures have different kind concepts in different kinds of places? Actually, I do not think that people from China have the same kind of concepts of people from Italy. Cultures are totally different... I mean does it make sense to you? or I am just wrong?
+Terry Licia the larger the data set the better... but without pairing the semantic layer to individual connectome maps (Budapest Reference level interconnectivity) and linking the distrabution of voxel mapping to individual word clouds the dataset will remain skewed because of the low sample size. Plain English: yeah more data's great!
Cameron J Yeah, that was one of the first things I looked for - how many? Not many. All English speakers, American culture. But a start is a start! :-) (and it is just SO cool to watch, eh? lol)
this would mean that different parts of the brain are in charge of determining meaning... hooooly shit.... we know that some people have common interests but this puts things into a new perspective for me. this means that brains can be very similar to one another, more than just looks, you could find someone who thinks the same.exact.way.you.think.
I think the language tested here is English. How other languages? Or even more, how about someone who speaks different not similar languages? for example; english, chines and germany??? Will that person has words from different languages at the same places?? Science is amazing.
The concept of "locating" a word in the brain seems very naive - it would be more reasonable to assume that these correlations of brain activity with certain terms don't necessarily reflect distributed language processing, but just general thoughts and representations evoked by the words. If you do not believe that humans "think in language" all the time, the presentation of these results in the video seems a bit overblown and insincere regarding their supposed importance.
They aren't locating a word in the brain -- they are observing which areas of the brain are activated following the presentation of a word (spreading activations of related semantic nodes for understanding and action). Yes, these are all of the neural assemblies that are most strongly related semantically to a lexical item -- I agree that we don't necessarily think in language per se, we think using a system of concepts that underlies language processing (i.e. a semantic and pragmatic deep structure).
Well, the video explicitly called it a "word map" and insinuated that the results pertain to language. But judging from these experiments alone, it's also possible - and likely - that similar results would have been obtained by showing the participants picture stories, or something along such lines. As I said, I criticized mostly how these results were represented at some points in the video. (they conflated strictly language and general "semantics" at some points, imo) I agree with you, but wouldn't say that such a system would simply underlie the language processing, i.e. that language sits on top of the deep structure. My guess would be, that there's some sort of simultaneous exchange happening at all times. But all these words can't cover up the fact that we have virtually no idea about how these processes work mechanistically. What I found very strange, btw, is that they read stories to the participants - possibly to avoid ambiguity? Well, the problem is that the perception of a coherent(!) story, probably doesn't occur in real time- but that listeners are able to anticipate good chunks of it beforehand, so that it often won't even be necessary to process words individually.
I think to understand this we also need to keep in mind how memories work. We mostly agree now that memories aren't a point source or stored at a single location but rather a memory is more like a series of events or functions, almost like a block chain, where multiple synapses communicate with each other, this would explain a lot of the overlap, ie a single neuron can be a component of multiple memories even ones that are pretty different.
I hate that people keep talking about different languages or the different people convey SEMANTICS. This is about the mapping of the SEMANTICS PERCEIVED! Not the symbols being CONVEYED.
8 ปีที่แล้ว +1
Fantastic. I wonder what happens in the brains of bilinguals.
8 ปีที่แล้ว
Oh I see there has been abundant debate on this issue.
Braincopying into a robot, to store memories into them as a legacy is that a good idea towards evolution and human progress?, copy to a dream recorder as well, make contact with it and keep memories forever? Maybe more comments later if i get to it laters June-november-2023+-2024+-
Words is only an explicit way to represent thoughts. I believe brain has its implicit representation of thoughts and abstract concepts without requiring to express them in words. So while processing of language is localised in certain area of brain, the thoughts those words represent is distributed.
Isn't modern technology incredible? With functional MRI scanning we can get so much more information about the way the brain works. Often computers are more trouble than they are worth, but when it comes to the internet and image processing it has caused incredible changes in how we communicate and understand this world. Credit to the people who invented the technology and did the study.
+HumanoidOrganism If you are not an anthropologist in career, you certainly are at heart! :-D I could not agree with you more! Now, we must see how to help this lab prepare the same experiment cross-culturally! Wouldn't it be fun to be a volunteer?
Ooooo ... I want to ask the researchers: have they attempted this across cultures yet? I wonder about the degrees of difference in the human brain about all sorts of things, and also of the similarities. FASCINATING! I want to do it ... please, map me, docs! :-D
Марк Пресняков ROFLMAO! I bet I'd have more fun that you -- I'm almost 60!
What if you know more than one language?
+Muffinfordinner please don't confuse the scientists, we will leave the decoding of other languages to the Chinese people.
Good question!
+MrLimcon Your guess seems good to me but we have to await a research project like this one except aimed at answering Muffinfordinners question.😊
+Muffinfordinner good question, I do have the same one.
I imagine the words in the two languages would be rather close in the map. And you'd have more or less two overlayed maps.
Truly fascinating. Proves that cognition is not localized to one area and how multifaceted the brain is in understanding language.
The language remain located in the 2 known places; Broca for understanding spoken language, the other closer to visual area to read words. Everywhere else, it is just labels that we add to explain the concept manipulated by each brain area.
For example, the two locations with the label "family" are areas that become active when thinking about any family. But the English word 'family" is still recognized in the Broca area. Once Broca identify the word "family", then it trigger one or more brain areas which know the concept.
That's an absolutely insane amount of work! So inspiring! And what could be more fascinating than how meaning is represented in the brain? So cool!
this means that we can map each thought word by a human to a string of digits that represent the locations of the brain that are activated by that word.
Then we can send these strings via bluetooth to another computer wich would decode them into words and read them to another human, who would in turn respond with another phrase which will be sent to the first human and so on.
Thus achieving universal telepathic communication.
Received 08 January 2014
Accepted 02 March 2016
Published online 27 April 2016 ! :)
Interesting description of the fundamental way the brain works. Each area process concepts. When listening to a story, the brain area get activated as the words with appropriate context are identified.
Amazing
Pls make video on synaptic integration
A highly correlating theory about why we humans build this word map in our brains, how we build it during language acquisition in infancy and how we use it to understand and generate language, can be found in the cortical.io white paper "Semantic Folding Theory" (arxiv.org/abs/1511.08855).
I could kind of understand depression with this video, as when following one word after another, they align in groupings. One side of a word will have the opposite of it on the other side. It's kind of like having conscience on each side. A check and balance of good and bad.
I still can't get over the fact that the decision to write this comment has physical origins in one of those things.
+◯ Advaita What do you mean with 'one of those things'? Perhaps the spatial measurement units of fMRI (voxels)? Almost certainly this is not the case. Even single neurons are complex systems that can perform computations within themselves, but most cognitive functions are even distributed across networks of neurons. Even this video gives examples of this. The word 'top' elicited increased 'activity' in many different parts of the brain.
Tobias Navarro Schröder
The whole brain, I meant the whole brain.
Don"t mind me i'm just having an existential crisis...
+◯ Advaita :)) when people become more conscious they tend to have an existential crisis, it's the price you pay when you wonder away from eat, sex, tribe, enemy, sleep. persist and things reach equilibrium again. if you enjoy the perspectives of advaita i have written an short essay that gives a scientific look at it (altho i'm not really into the advaita philosophy). careful as it can increase existential angst :) - anywherein12seconds.tumblr.com/post/141490986906/we-are-human-kline-bottles-things-are-not-what
Does this imply that there is not a language "part" of the brain, but rather, that language uses "all" parts of the brain (perhaps similarly to the way playing a musical instrument uses all parts/regions of the brain simultaneously)?
This running in real time and abilities expanded could help with psychological or couples therapy when addressing associations and triggers. Expanded abilities could include mapping emotional responses as well so the depth of data can further explore whatever might be the issue with more clarity. I had been playing with the concept of software and hardware engineering to such ends but might just toss that project back into oblivion since it seems that's where science might be taking us anyways^^
Is the location of words the same for other languages?
+Sasha Koniev empirical evidence is still needed to answer a similar question. There is, in fact, an ongoing debate over the relation between language and cognition; does language affect thought? if speaking a different language entails thinking differently then this would indicate that we may have different semantic representations underlying the same concept ... this suggests the activation of different cortical or subcortical regions for the same concept (along with shared ones ). Some studies answer YES but to which degree this yes stands tenable is questioned.
+Amina Klibi, your point is clear. I think, the authors have done a great piece of work. It would be interesting though to have the same text be translated to other languages and to create an interactive map in Chinese, German, Russian, etc... Would the location of words be more or less the same or completely different?..
+Tam McDonnagh I get your point. I totally agree. However we still need empirical evidence to clear it up. I will refer you to an interesting article in which you may better understand my point : Boroditsky. L. 2009. HOW DOES OUR LANGUAGE SHAPE THE WAY WE THINK?. EDGE. Available at edge.org/conversation/lera_boroditsky-how-does-our-language-shape-the-way-we-think accessed the 01/03/16 . Please Read it!you will end up thinking again .
Ok! Now I get your point :). Thanks for sharing.
Hi! Связь с иностранными словами как с синонимами на родном. Мы видим разноцветные карандаши, но все они карандашами и запоминаются, окрас теряется. Так и мозг уже не понимает на каком языке назван карандаш - он в любом случае предъявляет вам каранда, а не тростинку или авторучку.
Excellant presentation. Let's hope these researchers soon publish something on storing vision information. This might lead to effective therapies for brain damages experienced after hip operations. Thanks to Terry Licia for the link to the online version. Hope to explore this ASAP.
Absolutely fascinating! Would love to see this expanded to include individuals on the Autism spectrum.
Super video. This is a great way to help learners understand why pronunciation is so important. How we hear a word matters to how we comprehend it and how quickly we can come to that understanding. What a useful video and research study.
This can serve to refine research done on why people respond more neutrally to a person called "African-American" vs. negatively to the same person who is labled "Black"...
Words are just symbols that mean only what YOU think they mean. Haha
Wonderful discovery! This reaffirms the importance of reading and learning new concepts!!
I agree with you. This post is truly inspiring. I like your post and everything you share with us is current and very informative, I want to bookmark the page so I can return here from you that you have done a fantastic job.
It's just incredible how the brain keep a new word and organize it to specific areas in the brain, I'd never imagine that, everytime I learn bout my own brain I'm sure that chemical is the best thing of this fucking universe
I'd certainly be interesting to experiment with simple Lissajous figures to compare the geometry presumably synthesized by the brain.
dialects and diphthongs, vowels, consonants? other language barriers or exposition?
so how do we organize the semantic fields in our brain?
i find it very interesting how the words wife,family, mother and pregnant all correlate in the same region. the semantics are different but the concept is the same. the brain couples concepts to derive memory and feeling it would seem.
+Curiosity Science2 But it's my understanding that they do not "correlate in the same region." They light up many areas of the brain! At the same time! And just look at all the associations in the same color range! (have you gone to see the 3-D brain viewer on the web .. and played with it? A picture is worth ... yanno! LOL) Here's the site: gallantlab.org/huth2016/ ...
Fascinating! I cant wait to share this in class!
I wonder were positive affirmations are stored???
amazing. different language actives different areas?
Amazing work !
That was inspiring!
I am just asking myself the following:
Linking 2 different things together? Like the famous mnemonics - what woulld that look like. Maybe the word then appears in both places?
Also: If you know more then one language, I am asuming the places for words with the same meaning are identical? Wonderful indeed...
And how about people that see colors and characters in numbers? maybe their "one" is in the angry, red and number region?
what about dialects, diphthongs, manner, rpm's, vowels , consonants, language barriers, artistry of photographer, emotion embedded in words suggestively? exposition to other language scales and levels or terraces? Rise and fall of frequency waves of sound, gradual recording of the info. you have no real proof to provide, sorry.
what about dialects, diphthongs, manner, rpm's, vowels , consonants, language barriers, artistry of photographer, emotion embedded in words suggestively? exposition to other language scales and levels or terraces? Rise and fall of frequency waves of sound, gradual recording of the info. you have no real proof to provide, sorry.
what about dialects, diphthongs, manner, rpm's, vowels , consonants, language barriers, artistry of photographer, emotion embedded in words suggestively? exposition to other language scales and levels or terraces? Rise and fall of frequency waves of sound, gradual recording of the info. you have no real proof to provide, sorry.
You are completly right. I did (and do) not have any evidence to support my questions. I was just asking myself these questions.
You point "emotion embedded in words" also made me wonder about connotations.
How brain recognized and attach meaning to a slang/argot in one language?
Excellent experiment and results. Of course different languages mean that more of the brain is fired up??
And what about the bilingual brain. This extraordinary. I have so many questions. Beautiful film.
blown away - when we forget does the real estate in brain become available for new words ?
For educational purposes, is there a way to get such a 3d model of the brain available for video production tools (format for 3dsmax, blender, etc.) ??
Excellent. The Creator is amazing.
So amazing!
Could this be some how connected to dreams because when we are sleep our brains are working could our brain be using the words to create a story which is a dream.
There are a lot of people who have got heads only just to eat into. And they interfere the sound-minded with progressing.
can you please release your code?
Who should I contact/how much would it cost to get one of these made for my own brain?
+flarn2006 I don't know myself but I want to know the same thing! Where do we sign up to be volunteers?! Here's the labs website: gallantlab.org/
+Terry Licia Thanks for the link; I sent them an email. The email address for the head scientist is gallant@berkeley.edu, in case you want to email them as well.
flarn2006 THANK YOU! I feel like I was being an advertiser for them but hey, if you can't shout out about good science, then heck, why shout out anything at all? :-)
this is with english words. is there a study for different languages?
+Pedro Castaneda We think alike, Pedro! Are you an anthropologist too?
Is that possible that different people of different cultures have different kind concepts in different kinds of places? Actually, I do not think that people from China have the same kind of concepts of people from Italy. Cultures are totally different... I mean does it make sense to you? or I am just wrong?
Any chance for a downloadable version? The website is fairly unstable.
+Cameron J I would like to have the DL version too.
+Cameron J Go ask ... gallantlab.org/ .. I'm curious about volunteering, finding them funds, everything! This is just fantastic.
+Terry Licia the larger the data set the better... but without pairing the semantic layer to individual connectome maps (Budapest Reference level interconnectivity) and linking the distrabution of voxel mapping to individual word clouds the dataset will remain skewed because of the low sample size. Plain English: yeah more data's great!
Cameron J Yeah, that was one of the first things I looked for - how many? Not many. All English speakers, American culture. But a start is a start! :-) (and it is just SO cool to watch, eh? lol)
Mind blown.....🤯
Nice Work, interesting topic
Recovering aphasic am I - having trouble with pronoun antecedents in speaking. What to know more!
i dunno if ive been too high at once but the brain felt weird when it moved =o
Amazing.
this would mean that different parts of the brain are in charge of determining meaning... hooooly shit.... we know that some people have common interests but this puts things into a new perspective for me. this means that brains can be very similar to one another, more than just looks, you could find someone who thinks the same.exact.way.you.think.
I saw batteries and still can't stop laughing. Great science!
I think the language tested here is English. How other languages? Or even more, how about someone who speaks different not similar languages? for example; english, chines and germany??? Will that person has words from different languages at the same places?? Science is amazing.
try those experiences on leaders who claim they are always optimistic
let's see if they have less "worry areas " in their brain than normal people lol
Use neural networks to find the average map.
reading the bad info mostly unaware and brain connections at the given time and/or after that
Un video muy ilustrativo de cómo funcioan el cererbo
The concept of "locating" a word in the brain seems very naive - it would be more reasonable to assume that these correlations of brain activity with certain terms don't necessarily reflect distributed language processing, but just general thoughts and representations evoked by the words. If you do not believe that humans "think in language" all the time, the presentation of these results in the video seems a bit overblown and insincere regarding their supposed importance.
They aren't locating a word in the brain -- they are observing which areas of the brain are activated following the presentation of a word (spreading activations of related semantic nodes for understanding and action). Yes, these are all of the neural assemblies that are most strongly related semantically to a lexical item -- I agree that we don't necessarily think in language per se, we think using a system of concepts that underlies language processing (i.e. a semantic and pragmatic deep structure).
Well, the video explicitly called it a "word map" and insinuated that the results pertain to language. But judging from these experiments alone, it's also possible - and likely - that similar results would have been obtained by showing the participants picture stories, or something along such lines. As I said, I criticized mostly how these results were represented at some points in the video. (they conflated strictly language and general "semantics" at some points, imo)
I agree with you, but wouldn't say that such a system would simply underlie the language processing, i.e. that language sits on top of the deep structure. My guess would be, that there's some sort of simultaneous exchange happening at all times. But all these words can't cover up the fact that we have virtually no idea about how these processes work mechanistically.
What I found very strange, btw, is that they read stories to the participants - possibly to avoid ambiguity? Well, the problem is that the perception of a coherent(!) story, probably doesn't occur in real time- but that listeners are able to anticipate good chunks of it beforehand, so that it often won't even be necessary to process words individually.
How ironic..
I think to understand this we also need to keep in mind how memories work. We mostly agree now that memories aren't a point source or stored at a single location but rather a memory is more like a series of events or functions, almost like a block chain, where multiple synapses communicate with each other, this would explain a lot of the overlap, ie a single neuron can be a component of multiple memories even ones that are pretty different.
That's just in the headline, in the video you if you listen they talk about semantic colocation.
Perfect video
this is evidence of concept of "concept"
I hate that people keep talking about different languages or the different people convey SEMANTICS.
This is about the mapping of the SEMANTICS PERCEIVED! Not the symbols being CONVEYED.
Fantastic. I wonder what happens in the brains of bilinguals.
Oh I see there has been abundant debate on this issue.
Our Lord is great! Thanks for the video! Excellent!
podia ter tradução em português?!!! ninguem lembra da gente :-(
GT: Could there be a translation in Portuguese?!!! no one remembers us :-(
What about people who are neurodivergent?
1:05 オーブン用手袋
Where's the coordinates for religion and faith?
+JT4GM4K3R go look! The map online is easy to use! Here's the site: gallantlab.org/huth2016/
Magical...
is it odd that when she said top i thought of spinning top instantly?
+Nicodemo Lalli
Not entirely. I had the same reaction.
good stuff!
Totally fascinating. Go Science Go!
joseph barnes.
My brain Mao mapa.
One Word
Perfect.
Perfecto
Maravilloso
Números
Vibración
Magnetismo
Luz
Light
Balance
Work
Illuminated
Full
Art
So cool
enourmously.
I want them to try mapping my brain uwu.
coool job
Braincopying into a robot, to store memories into them as a legacy is that a good idea towards evolution and human progress?, copy to a dream recorder as well, make contact with it and keep memories forever? Maybe more comments later if i get to it laters June-november-2023+-2024+-
elmer reed.
❤
safe
!!
Yeah, OK. Interesting, and all.
But this ''knowledge'' is - let's be honest - pretty useless.
dialects and diphthongs, vowels, consonants? other language barriers or exposition?