When I worked in Neuropsychiatry between 1970 and 1988, this stuff was in its infancy. This course is delightful in part because Dr. Gabrieli is so clear.
How we process information - especially misleading information - can be attributed to what we know and how we apply what we know about visual inferences. This lecture is an excellent way of allowing us to understand how we work with each other in all areas of social interactions. Thank you for sharing this information to the world.
Thanks to the MIT and the team for a great video. This really help to open the world of knowledge for a girl like me who are searching for an international curricular in my country which is way too expensive but also couldn't afford to have an abroad education. Really appreciate the video my mom is so happy now ^^
Three cheers for copyright restrictions reminding us that some things in reality are personally owned and controlled by other individuals, just like you. They just have special permissions to exclude others from learning specific parts of reality, since they “own” them
Open Culture brought me here. So far, I gotta say, these lectures are much more biological than I thought they'd be. When I think about Psychology, I think about a guy on a coach talking to a shrink. I'm gonna stick with it of course, don't wanna miss anything important.
I'm always looking for new interesting lectures on Psychology/Philosophy, please let me know if you guys have any recommendations, would be highly appreciated
Thanks a lot for the free content! I'm troubled and ashamed by the countless monkeys or other animals we tortured to understand how neurons respond to color
Ok. Hi. I’m a savant who can draw perfectly sideways very sophisticated surreal illusions without really seeing or knowing or determining what I’m drawing. My brain from the back has a way of taking over the front during my bilateral drawing with a touchpad and two fingers in an app online that has an elegant brush Brain REALLY likes. Brain is my rear “smart” motor and Mind is my driver who cannot always determine what to do or what something is.
This started awhile after receiving EMDR from an LCSW for psychosexual trauma and I recovered a big life shaping memory. I found the app and the first time I used it was unbeknownst to me, not an abstract rock in an abstract landscape but instead if rotated sideways; a female character who looks a little like the Aeon Flux cartoon but she has a little baby demon hiding or living in her face and neck and he blends in with her structure and features which have an aesthetic I never honed outside that first time on the app. It took two weeks to rotate it and see a different perspective and discover something was there I hadn’t planned.
Most of this material is basically intro to anatomy, not really about psychology, this 5th lecture is not much different from the examples from lecture 1-2 where other optical illusions are presented. I thought that the first 3 lectures were supposed to be like an intro to the real deal? But is this whole course just going to be about studying the anatomy and physiology of the brain? I thought Psychology goes beyond that and sees a person as a whole and not just as a biological being that has organs that function in a particular way, this is pretty limited I mean so far I have watched over 5 hours and not a single mention of some historical people that influenced and developed psychology, people that tried to understand how others think and how their lives influenced them or shaped them.
When I worked in Neuropsychiatry between 1970 and 1988, this stuff was in its infancy. This course is delightful in part because Dr. Gabrieli is so clear.
Lecture 1 - Introduction
Lecture 2 - Science and Research
Lecture 3 - Brain I - Structure and Functions
Lecture 4 - Brain II - Methods of Research
Lecture 5 - Vision I
Lecture 6 - Vision II
Lecture 7 - Attention
Lecture 8 - Consciousness
Lecture 9 - Learning
Lecture 10 - Memory I
Lecture 11 - Memory II - Amnesia and Memory Systems
Lecture 12 - Language
Lecture 13 - Thinking
Lecture 14 - Intelligence
Lecture 15 - Emotion and Motivation
Lecture 16 - Personality
Lecture 17 - Child Development
Lecture 18 - Adult Development
Lecture 19 - Stress
Lecture 20 - Psychopathology I
Lecture 21 - Psychopathology II
Lecture 22 - Social Psychology I
Lecture 23 - Social Psychology II
Lecture 24 - Conclusions - Evolutionary Psychology, Happiness
6:54 “tabula rosa” means pink slate, latin for blank slate is “tabula rasa”
How we process information - especially misleading information - can be attributed to what we know and how we apply what we know about visual inferences. This lecture is an excellent way of allowing us to understand how we work with each other in all areas of social interactions. Thank you for sharing this information to the world.
Thanks to the MIT and the team for a great video. This really help to open the world of knowledge for a girl like me who are searching for an international curricular in my country which is way too expensive but also couldn't afford to have an abroad education. Really appreciate the video my mom is so happy now ^^
Are you still studying? how's it going?
P
P
Ppp
P
Three cheers for copyright restrictions reminding us that some things in reality are personally owned and controlled by other individuals, just like you. They just have special permissions to exclude others from learning specific parts of reality, since they “own” them
Open Culture brought me here.
So far, I gotta say, these lectures are much more biological than I thought they'd be. When I think about Psychology, I think about a guy on a coach talking to a shrink.
I'm gonna stick with it of course, don't wanna miss anything important.
Lies again? SEP SAP
Q
Do you mean a couch?
Thanks MIT for giving us this great opportunity to learn
Wow😮…… That was a wicked gnarly set of fact(s).
Bin im Grunde so weit egal was nun kommt weiter als alle,wie immer.
war das uebersetzt? xD
It's "tabula rasa" not "tabula rosa".
thankfully he teaches psych, not latin
I'm always looking for new interesting lectures on Psychology/Philosophy, please let me know if you guys have any recommendations, would be highly appreciated
th-cam.com/play/PL30C13C91CFFEFEA6.html
Behavioral biology by Robert Sapolsky, the Stanford lecture. Highly recommended!
I feel like I'm in anatomy and physiology again ughhh lol
Thanks a lot for the free content! I'm troubled and ashamed by the countless monkeys or other animals we tortured to understand how neurons respond to color
I was only starting the mid-brain wave pscyhoneuritropic transmitter stimuli.
🐥👈he suggest a piano(keyboard) may change sound to fit the same key as a clarinet and same similar sound as well …
Ok. Hi. I’m a savant who can draw perfectly sideways very sophisticated surreal illusions without really seeing or knowing or determining what I’m drawing. My brain from the back has a way of taking over the front during my bilateral drawing with a touchpad and two fingers in an app online that has an elegant brush Brain REALLY likes. Brain is my rear “smart” motor and Mind is my driver who cannot always determine what to do or what something is.
This started awhile after receiving EMDR from an LCSW for psychosexual trauma and I recovered a big life shaping memory. I found the app and the first time I used it was unbeknownst to me, not an abstract rock in an abstract landscape but instead if rotated sideways; a female character who looks a little like the Aeon Flux cartoon but she has a little baby demon hiding or living in her face and neck and he blends in with her structure and features which have an aesthetic I never honed outside that first time on the app. It took two weeks to rotate it and see a different perspective and discover something was there I hadn’t planned.
funny that ai is now able to do most of the problem raised in the first few minutes
i let my pc going the whole night, and here is where it takes me
Is this really psychology?👀
Im really missing the linear algebra in the background
We are looking for patterns
i meant *write ;)
19:00
it's tabula rAsa not rOsa
8:07
good.. i was going to right that same thing.. then i saw your comment (and thumbed up) :D great
35:58 LOL
Most of this material is basically intro to anatomy, not really about psychology, this 5th lecture is not much different from the examples from lecture 1-2 where other optical illusions are presented. I thought that the first 3 lectures were supposed to be like an intro to the real deal? But is this whole course just going to be about studying the anatomy and physiology of the brain? I thought Psychology goes beyond that and sees a person as a whole and not just as a biological being that has organs that function in a particular way, this is pretty limited I mean so far I have watched over 5 hours and not a single mention of some historical people that influenced and developed psychology, people that tried to understand how others think and how their lives influenced them or shaped them.
It's not psychotherapy... Intro to psychology... Just dated
Did you complete it? I started thinking the same. But it is still interesting, and I thought he would talk about psychology in further lectures.
couch.