Right Brain Essay

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    us to believe our identity is valid? Memories are the keys to this question. To begin discussing about this, one must distinguish the difference between the right side of and the left side our brain. In Jill Bolte-Taylor’s TED talk, “My Stroke of Insight,” she says, “the right side of the brain is all about right here, right now.” The right hemisphere uses the kinesthetics,

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    Music Neuroscience

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    When you listen to music, multiple areas of your brain become engaged and active, but when you actually play an instrument that activity becomes more like a full body brain workout. This statement was written by Anita Collins a researcher at Ted Ed. She and her colleagues developed a film entitled “How playing an instrument benefits your brain,” which helped to explain what really happens inside your brain when you play an instrument. Research in the new field of Music Neuroscience shows that it

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    FFA Journal Summary

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    studies have found that impairments to the face processing centers of the brain result in the difficulty of recognizing familiar faces primarily by facial features (De Renzi, 1986). Also previous studies show that recognition of objects requires the ability to discriminate between certain categories. Also people may become experts at recognizing certain categories through prolonged

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    are not produced in the right amounts, the message pathway becomes confused or blocked Nerves I. Some axons and dendrites are long and others short. Axons and dendrites of many

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    Brain on Fire My Month of Madness by Susannah Cahalan is a story of the author and her struggle with a rare disease in her brain. It made her scared, hallucinatory and affected her relationship with her peers. In the end, the condition was a unique rare brain disease called anti-NMDAS-receptor encephalitis. Cahalan was a bright twenty-four year old woman who lived in New York City and a reporter for the New York Post. She has worked in that Post since she was seventeen when she was hired as an intern

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    measures of brain atrophy and volume were from MRI scans an average of 3.5 years after the sleep quality measurement. The variables involved in the study were sleep quality, body mass index (BMI), blood pressure, age, and physical activity of the participant. However, only the post hoc analysis took age, BMI, blood pressure, age, and physical activity into account. The results that were derived from the study were that lack of sleep quality was correlated to reduced volume in the superior right frontal

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    remember that even though their brains are learning at peak efficiency, much else is inefficient, including attention, self-discipline, task completion, and emotions. So the mantra ‘one thing at a time’ is useful to repeat to yourself. Try not to overwhelm your teenagers with instructions.” ― Frances E. Jensen. Noting that teens are in the process of having a fully mature and self-disciplined brain, there is always a step by step procedure that leads to the right path. No matter how dangerous the

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    Question 1: Researchers found that Einstein's brain had a higher ratio of glial cells to neurons than other brains. What are glial cells, and why might having more glial cells be important? Answer 1: Glial cells are cells that surround neurons and provide support for and insulation between them. Glial cells are also the most abundant cells in the central nervous system. Types of glial cells include oligodendrocytes, which have processes that form the myelin sheaths around CNS nerve fibers, astrocytes

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    Neuroethics arose from the fact that the field of neuroscience is giving us new ways of understanding the brain, monitoring and manipulating the brain. In understanding the brain, different inquiries develop in what these new insights can tell us about ourselves as human beings. Cognitive enhancement, a popular field of neuroscience, is improving the cognition of a cognitively normal person. Farah tells us that a person acts for reasons and not because of causes; a fundamental difference between

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    Etkin Grey Matter

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    Dr.Amit Etkin decided to test whether common physiatrist disorders had a similar structure in the brain. Him and his colleagues sifted through almost 200 structural brain imaging studies that involved over 7,000 people with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depression, addiction, obsessive-compulsive disorder or anxiety, along with about 8,500 healthy individuals. They eventually found that all of them showed a loss of Gray matter which Etkin defined as the things that allow a person to function

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