• Coming August 9th - Talking With Dolphins
    Jul 29 2024

    Just in time for summer vacation - Talking with dolphins! Cognitive psychologist and marine mammal scientist Diana Reiss, PhD has been doing just that.

    Dolphins have large, complex brains that are a lot like the human model. What if we could get inside their heads and communicate with them?

    Plus musician/scientist Katy Payne, one of the team who discovered whale songs...

    For more information, transcripts, and all episodes, please visit https://thisisyourbrain.com

    For more about Weill Cornell Medicine Neurological Surgery, please visit https://neurosurgery.weillcornell.org

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    1 min
  • Coming This Friday - The Healing Power of Grief
    Aug 8 2022

    Our brain pathways are designed to get us through life’s traumas, as painful and debilitating as they are. Neurologist Lisa Shulman, MD, joins us this week to talk about how to make sense of grief, how trauma interrupts the connection between the cognitive and emotional parts of the brain, and how the brain learns to consolidate traumatic experiences and allow us to move forward.

    Plus… humans are not the only creatures to feel grief – hear how other animals experience loss.

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    1 min
  • The Mercurial Genius of Candace Pert
    Jul 26 2024

    Candace Pert discovered the opioid receptor, created a drug to stop AIDS in the brain, and identified stress as a cause of disease. She also inadvertently unleashed the overdose epidemic, got herself kicked out of the NIH, and was denied credit for much of her work. Pert was a trailblazing yet mercurial neuroscientist, a woman who made her male boss famous but has been largely forgotten herself. She was also a rebel, a workaholic... and a bit mad. In this episode, Pamela Ryckman, the author of a new biography of Pert, reveals some of the wilder tales about her and explains why she remains largely unknown even though her discoveries were truly life-changing. Plus... Other women in science who remain mostly hidden from history.

    For more information, transcripts, and all episodes, please visit https://thisisyourbrain.com

    For more about Weill Cornell Medicine Neurological Surgery, please visit https://neurosurgery.weillcornell.org

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    29 mins
  • Whispers & Tingles – ASMR with Craig Richard
    Jul 12 2024

    ASMR, or the autonomous sensory meridian response, is a state of deep calm accompanied by a sense of “brain tingles.” Not everyone experiences it, but if you do, you know what triggers it: a whisper or other soft sounds, a gentle touch or movement, even watching a Bob Ross video. Physiologist Craig Richard explains the science behind ASMR, and why in some people induces a deeply relaxing response that can resolve insomnia, relaxation, and stress. Plus: Who are the top “artists” of ASMR?

    For more information, transcripts, and all episodes, please visit https://thisisyourbrain.com

    For more about Weill Cornell Medicine Neurological Surgery, please visit https://neurosurgery.weillcornell.org

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    29 mins
  • AI: Reverse Engineering the Brain
    Jun 28 2024

    We will never create true artificial intelligence (if we really want that) until we know more about how the human brain works. Tech entrepreneur and author Max Bennett explains how AI learns, where it falls short, and how it stacks up against our own intelligence.

    As it turns out, what's easy for humans is hard for AI, but AI is better at doing some things that are quite hard for us. Mostly, what AI teaches us is just how remarkable the human brain is - it is much better at continued learning than AI is, and it requires less input to come to conclusions. But... Can we trust it?

    For more information, transcripts, and all episodes, please visit https://thisisyourbrain.com

    For more about Weill Cornell Medicine Neurological Surgery, please visit https://neurosurgery.weillcornell.org

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    29 mins
  • Decoding Brainwaves Into Language
    Jun 14 2024

    Language originates as brain signals -- mysterious lines of squiggles -- that somehow turn into speech. Meet the neuroscientist who is turning those squiggles into conversations, using artificial intelligence to translate brain activity into words and sentences. Dr. Edward Chang of UCSF talks with Dr. Stieg about the painstaking "magic" of decoding that has allowed a paralyzed man to speak after 20 years of aphasia, essentially live streaming signals from his brain and transforming them into language.

    Plus - Why are A.I. voices always female?

    For more information, transcripts, and all episodes, please visit https://thisisyourbrain.com

    For more about Weill Cornell Medicine Neurological Surgery, please visit https://neurosurgery.weillcornell.org

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    27 mins
  • Outsmarting Anxiety
    May 31 2024

    We are programmed by evolution to be anxious - fear was a lifesaver for early humans! So are why are some 21st-century humans crippled by it? Catherine Pittman, PhD, chair of psychology at Saint Mary’s College in Notre Dame, is an expert on how different parts of the brain create and manage anxiety, and how to overcome it. Learn just how fast your amygdala responds to a threat (before we even perceive it), and how your cortex jumps in to process the information. Turns out your amygdala has been watching too much Cortex TV, and you can train your brain to change the channel. Plus... the rare cases of people who are completely "fearless".

    For more information, transcripts, and all episodes, please visit https://thisisyourbrain.com

    For more about Weill Cornell Medicine Neurological Surgery, please visit https://neurosurgery.weillcornell.org

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    31 mins
  • Exploring The Magic Mushroom
    May 17 2024

    It's effective against depression, can help you stop smoking, even ease end-of-life distress. It's non-addictive, naturally occurring, and has been used for thousands of years -- but you can't have it. It's psilocybin, the compound that creates the "magic" in dozens of species of mushrooms.

    Johns Hopkins researcher Albert Garcia-Romeu, Ph.D. knows just how magical it is. He's conducting research on psilocybin's therapeutic value for everything from persistent Lyme disease to a range of mental health conditions. Find out what this psychedelic drug can do, and why it got such a bad reputation.

    Plus... revisiting Timothy Leary's rise and fall as he turned on, tuned out, and dropped out.

    For more information, transcripts, and all episodes, please visit https://thisisyourbrain.com

    For more about Weill Cornell Medicine Neurological Surgery, please visit https://neurosurgery.weillcornell.org

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    25 mins