Hey! Type <3 if you see this :P
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Реклама на транспорте | Размещение рекламы на общественном транспорте - Duration: 5:35.
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Tin Tức Mới Nhất 29/1 | Thời sự thế giới | PUTIN ĐE DỌA LẠNH LÙNG về KHỦNG HOẢNG VENEZUELA #185 @E4U - Duration: 35:20.
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12 Conseils pour stimuler la pousse de cheveux|Nouvelles24h - Duration: 10:28.
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How To Get CLICKABLE YOUTUBE THUMBNAILS in 2019 📈💥 // HEY.com - Duration: 6:04.
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Тефтели в томатном соусе в духовке - Duration: 2:22.
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SHAGGY MEME COMPILATION !😇🙏 *he still only used 0.2344111110002% of his power* - Duration: 12:31.
who likes scoob manuse only 17% of my power
without words
I want that sentence oh boy you know cool Wow hold on no on
second thought that one is pretty compelling enhanced image the backside
I'll choose you say my name so my powers will become yours don't worry shaggy
I'm so scared I wish I had a ham sandwich to calm my nerves
experience at an IMAX excuse me sir yes but what would happen if Shaggy
became angry enough to use 100% of his power 100% yes I have no idea complex
they have access to infinite time and space but they're not bound
Oh what is an unlighted or whatever quit the tour Josie I did have a say 13 hours
Oxford of the night
in the beginning God created the heavens and the earth how did this guide make
the world did he take pre-existing material and reshape it did he set about
a chain of events that went to the gradual development of the world as we
know it God did something even more miraculous something that seems too
simple to be true but is he spoke no a demonstration of what shaggy is capable
of at only 26.3% of his power
okay
rhaggy are you okay no excu I'm only using one percent of my power dude
crisis
are you challenging me there's no way that could be right can like not bad
Vegeta man you made me use 10% of my power
it's Robo riding a rubber broom
don't make me do this right like come at me Scoob Stoics I'm ready
this can go two ways Punk one you walk away too
juice sauce a little bit dress
this can go two ways Punk one you walk away to I walk on your face
your choice
like you oku watch me swim in
I walk on your face your choice
am I glad he's frozen in there and that we're out here and that he's the sheriff
and that we're frozen out here and that we're in there and I just remembered
we're out here what I want to know is where is the caveman
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L1: Cyber Security Tutorial In Hindi|Cyber Attack |What is Cyber Secirity|need of CS |History of CS. - Duration: 17:09.
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Nightcore - Monsters (Katie Sky) - Duration: 3:09.
This video include lyrics on the screen
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Картофельные лодочки "Приплыли!!!" - Duration: 3:20.
List of ingredients for 2 servings: • potatoes - 4 pcs .; • Smoked sausage - 100 g; • sour cream 15% - 50 g; • hard cheese - 80 g; • dill - 10 g; • salt - to taste; • ground black pepper; • vegetable oil - 1 tsp. Calorie - 150 kcal per 100 grams. Cooking time - 60 minutes.
Hello everyone! Today Priprava Club prepares potato boats
Wash the potatoes and boil them in their skins.
Cut Smoked Sausage
Grate the cheese on a fine grater and mix with the sausage.
Let the potatoes cool and cut it in half
Remove the middle part, leaving 2-3 mm "walls"
Mash the potatoes with a fork
Mix cheese, sausage and potatoes, add sour cream
Add salt and pepper
Lubricate the form of vegetable oil
Fill the potatoes with stuffing
Put on a baking sheet
Bake in the oven for 15 minutes to melt the cheese.
Chop greens
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Ciirex ft. Anoir - Sofitel - Duration: 2:35.
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How to Grow Your Channel Fast in 2019 - A YouTube Strategy - Duration: 14:05.
- Alright, listen up.
This is important.
First round of the final of the second leg
of the YouTube Cup Final.
We're gonna play a shotgun formation
with a nickel and dime on the top here,
outputting to the subscriber count.
We've got likes and dislikes playing on substitutions,
and then suggested videos playing
a long ball to monetization,
which will hopefully play the offside trap
to the notification bell.
Did you get all that?
- [Robotic Male Voice] vidIQ - [Robotic Female Voice] vidIQ
- [Man Whispering] vidIQ.com
(funky guitar music)
- If you're gonna use a prop, you might as well
milk it for all it's worth.
Hello, my name is Rob.
Welcome to vidIQ, the YouTube tool and channel
that educates you on your YouTube journey
and in this series, we're charting that success
throughout 2019.
Our aim is to help you get more views and more subscribers
to ultimately grow your channel.
To watch the full plethora of videos in this series,
click on the link over here.
And if you enjoy this series,
don't forget to subscribe to vidIQ
for all of the awesome content we put out every single week.
There's some graphics appearing, some subscribe buttons.
Just click on 'em, yeah?
Good.
Hmm, strategy note to self: more enthusiasm
when asking people to subscribe.
And if you think I can write that fast ...
Alright then, let's get to the important stuff.
In the first couple of videos in the series,
we've been talking about how
you should just start making videos.
Hashtag press record.
Get something out there, gain some experience,
start your channel just so that you have
an understanding of the very basics.
The fundamentals of what goes into a channel
and a YouTube video.
But eventually, you're going to need
a channel strategy in place to attract an audience,
build a community, and sustain the channel in a long run,
so you don't run out of ideas and burn out.
So let's take a look at where you should start.
Alright, I've got a little challenge for you,
and this may take a while,
but it's really worth doing to try and identify
your target audience.
If you were to pick out one ideal viewer in the world,
who would they be?
And answer the following questions:
What gender are they?
How old are they?
What's their occupation?
What is their main interest in life?
What are they trying to learn?
What are they trying to fix?
What is the one thing they are struggling with?
Essentially, what I'm asking you to do here is
profile your ideal viewing candidate.
And there's two reasons for doing that.
The first reason is to get you into the mindset
of what's in it for the viewer.
Not what's in it for you and your channel.
Let's be honest about this.
When you watch somebody's content for the first time,
you don't care about that somebody
because you know nothing about that somebody.
That somebody has to first provide value to you, the viewer
before they are willing to invest back into the somebody
who eventually becomes a name at some point.
This is what I like to refer to as the trust factor.
And we'll talk a lot more about this in a future video
about how to get more subscribers.
The second reason for doing this
is that the vast majority of you will realize
that you're profiling yourself.
More often than not, what you like watching on YouTube
is going to be similar to what you end up
creating on YouTube.
And it may be that you enjoy several different topics
that identify with different demographics on YouTube,
from politics to soccer;
from wrestling to videogames.
But strip all of that away
until you have one specific answer
to every single question that I've asked
and other questions that come up in your head
about how to profile your ideal viewer.
Ultimately, the goal of this exercise
is to have as much of this as possible.
Call it your channel focus.
Call it your niche.
Call it your "nitch."
Call it your "nitcheese."
That one ideal viewer that you've just profiled,
you wanna make videos that target that person
time and time again.
As I said earlier, you might have all of these
different little interests, but this is the one
that you know most about.
And this is the one your audience expects
when you create content.
Concentrate on this topic, whatever it is.
Let me give you a couple of great examples.
We did a case study on a channel which had no direction.
They're doing prank videos, and then exposes
on different YouTubers, and a couple of gaming videos,
and they were getting a few hundred views.
And then they changed their attention
to one particular topic on a particular game.
And that was, how to increase frames per second
on the game called Fortnite.
And when they concentrated on that one topic
and produced video after video,
they went from hundreds of views per video
to thousands, if not tens of thousands of views per video.
If you wanna watch this case study, click on screen now.
Want another example of channel focus, you've got it.
I used to run a technology channel,
and when I focused on the one particular topic of
how to record your iPhone screen, my views
again went from hundreds to thousands,
if not hundreds of thousands of views.
And if you search for VGJFelix iPhone screen recording,
you can take a look for yourself.
You will find that most successful channels
started with one focus.
And over time they built value with their audience
who put trust into the video creator
who could then take them to other topics.
Let's look at it from this weird Rob Wilson point of view.
When people line up at a bus stop,
they're lining up for a particular bus
to take them to a particular destination.
And if they get on that bus every single day
they may get to know the driver.
And they may get friendly with the driver.
And at some point they may build up a friendship
with them to a point where,
Hey, I go to this location every single weekday,
but I wanna go somewhere else on the weekend.
And you know what?
I'd like that bus driver to take me there
because I enjoy their company.
Does that work as a analogy of a YouTube channel?
We understand that your channel focus can be very
difficult to define at the start of your YouTube journey,
which is another reason why you should be
experimenting as much as possible, as early as possible.
Through this, you'll get a flavor of
the type of videos you enjoy making
and the topics you enjoy talking about,
as well as how your audience reacts to it.
This process could take one video,
it could take five videos, it could take 50 videos.
It could take 500 videos before you really know
what your focus is on your channel.
And that's fine.
Remember what we said in the
How to Start Your YouTube Channel video: patience.
And just one more thing.
What is your channel focus if you're a vlogger?
And I think the best answer I can give you is storytelling.
You have the unenviable task of getting the audience to
place value in you within seconds of meeting you.
And that's done through an emotional connection,
which is ultimately storytelling.
Good luck with that.
(elevator lifting)
You know what we do here on the vidIQ channel, right?
We educate video creators, i.e. you,
on their YouTube journey.
That is, currently, our elevator pitch.
You can call this your value proposition
or you can pose it as a question.
Who should be watching and why?
For the two examples we've already looked at,
the elevator pitch might be
"I want to help gamers improve a
performance of Fortnite on their PC,"
and "I want to help iPhone and iPad owners
record their screens."
But those elevator pitches probably don't go far enough.
And they don't really talk about the why.
They talk about the who and the what.
So let's go back to our first example:
a video creator is making content that helps PC users
improve a performance of Fortnite on their PCs.
Well the question is why?
And I think the answer is, if a game performance
is improved, that allows a player
to improve their own performance.
So I came up with the value proposition of
improve the game, level up your skills.
Example two:
showing people how to record their iPhone screens.
But why?
Well, once people know how to record their iPhone screens,
they're gonna want to do something with these recordings.
That means sharing it somewhere.
So I came up with the value proposition:
record Apple, share your moments.
And yeah, that's my effort of drawing a little apple.
Now I know these value propositions are flaky at best
because I've spent five minutes coming up with them.
So here are some good examples from some
industry-leading channels.
Tim Schmoyer and his Video Creators TV
value proposition is certainly
one of the best in the business.
Master YouTube tells you the who and the what.
Spread your message tells you the why.
The ultimate guide to growing your following
and making money as a video influencer.
Sean Cannell & Benji Travis over at Video Influencers
leave you in no doubt as to what their channel is all about.
But in some rare cases, your value proposition
can be summed up in a single word.
Evan Carmichael wants you to believe.
And now it's back over to you folks
for another exercise you can do in the comments below.
What is a value proposition of your channel?
The who, the what, and most importantly, the why?
Try and keep it to 10 words or less.
And I'll be looking through those comments
and giving you feedback as soon as I can.
You see what I did there?
I wrote consistency three times.
I've also got to remember to rub this out
straight away because the dry erasing still marks
this board for some reason.
Got a question for regular followers of vidIQ.
Do you know how often we post videos?
We don't share this information on our channel banner,
in the about section of our channel,
in video descriptions.
And I don't tell you what
the schedule is on videos themselves.
But, we post videos on Monday,
generally at around 8 am Pacific Standard Time.
And we do a live stream every Tuesday at 11 am.
And then we have other videos spread across the week
whenever we feel it's necessary or if it's a trending topic.
The key schedule that we hold is a Monday and a Tuesday.
I know you're probably thinking,
"Oh yeah, there's always something from
vidIQ the beginning of the week."
So we stick to a consistent schedule with bonuses on top.
Also, you know that when you watch a vidIQ video
it's going to be something about growing your channel.
Getting more views, getting more subscribers,
how to do something on YouTube.
All of our content surrounds the YouTube universe.
So in summary, we have a consistent posting schedule.
And we have a consistent focus on the
topics that we cover here at vidIQ.
You wanna make a promise, written down or not,
to both yourself and your audience about
when you're going to post videos
and what they are generally going to be about.
Now, how I recommend doing that is working to 80 percent
of your maximum YouTube capacity.
In other words, if you could publish four videos
a week, aim to publish three videos a week,
and then you always have a bit of leeway
for when life gets in the way.
If you make four videos a week,
then consider one of them perhaps an experimental one.
You can cover a slightly different topic
to what your audience is used to.
Or a different video style.
Something that gains experience for you as a video creator
and sustains you creatively.
Be bigger. Be better.
Be diff ... different.
Did I spell that right?
This is the unspoken question that you may never hear
but is always asked, and you need to try and answer
as soon as you start your channel.
Why should I watch your video?
And YouTube's algorithm is asking a similar question.
Why should we promote your content?
Let's start with the bigger principle first.
When I had a tech channel, I was trying to find ways
of making my tutorials more appealing to viewers.
And when I saw Video Creators doing 10 tips on
a Galaxy S8, I thought, let's go bigger than this.
Let's go much bigger.
Let's do 850 tips on the Galaxy S8.
And I thought, if I'm going to do a camera guide
on a Galaxy S8, I'm not just going to
cover a couple a of tips.
I'm going to give people a comprehensive user guide
so I did 40 tips on the camera.
Because those videos were huge, they got massive watch time.
YouTube loves that, and so they promoted my videos more.
If you search for Galaxy S8 tips on YouTube
you should find two of my videos
towards the top of the list,
both with close to a million views.
So that's one strategy if you can
work it into your channel focus.
Now let's move onto the better principle
and we're going to use Ninja as an example.
He had a phenomenal 2018.
Crushing 20 million subscribers
and gaining at least 15 million subscribers
in that year alone.
The question is, why do so many people
watch Ninja on YouTube?
And the answer is simple.
He's one of the best Fortnite players in the world.
You can only find that level of skill
on a select few YouTube channels.
And with his daily posting schedule,
that helped propel him into the stratosphere.
And if you want to know more about how he is so successful,
we've done a case study on Ninja.
Do check it out.
There is a link on screen now.
Being bigger can take up a lot of time,
energy, and resources.
Being better can take years of practice.
But you can always and instantly be different.
Being different means providing something new
and intriguing to the YouTube audience,
and there's also a lot less competition as well
if you're completely different to anyone else.
I want to ask you a slightly strange Rob Wilson question.
Would you prefer to fish in the ocean
where there's an abundance of fish,
but is also lots of other boats trying to catch that fish,
or would you prefer your own little lake
where there's a lot less fish
but it's only you fishing there?
If you have something of value that you can share
that nobody else in the world can reproduce,
you've hit the jackpot.
And this goes back to finding your niche,
your own little corner on YouTube
which you can dominate and become the authority on.
We don't expect you to have your channel strategy
locked down within the first week
of you starting your YouTube channel.
Think of it as a kind of business plan,
the only difference being is that
you start the business first,
and then you write the plan as you shape your business.
I don't know, is that terrible business advice?
Yeah, probably.
I will go back to this point.
Gaining experience on YouTube
is more valuable than anything else right now.
And it will help shape the future of your channel.
One last thing I want you to
consider in your channel strategy.
Don't forget you in the strategy.
Some people describe this as being uniquely you.
Define yourself as a video creator
and people will either gravitate towards it
or they will despise it.
One way or the other, they'll have an opinion,
and that's better than no opinion at all.
By now, you're probably getting a flavor of who I am
on vidIQ and how I present my videos.
And either like it or you don't.
All I'm interested in is the people
who are watching right now.
And thank you very much for that.
If you want to watch more from this
grow your YouTube channel in 2019 series,
click on the playlist here.
If you want to watch more of our vidIQ content,
we'll have a video down here.
We'll see you on either of those.
Pop on over, and in the meantime,
enjoy the rest of your video making day.
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Rico Anak Kolong Bikin Gemes Mau di Ceburin Got #7 #ricoanakkolong - Duration: 4:07.
For more infomation >> Rico Anak Kolong Bikin Gemes Mau di Ceburin Got #7 #ricoanakkolong - Duration: 4:07. -------------------------------------------
Dolph Ziggler Entrance Video - Duration: 2:47.
[MUSIC]
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I Got To See And Hold My Brain - Duration: 10:48.
- The final guest video in this run is from Alie and Micah,
a neuroscientist and a clinical therapist who run Neuro Transmissions.
Their video has giant magnets, 3D printing, and a Star Wars action figure.
Alie, Micah, it's all yours.
- We're here at the Keck Center at UC San Diego.
And this is a functional magnetic resonance imager, or an fMRI.
- Well, functional, but not functioning.
This is actually a dummy scanner
that's used for educational and training purposes.
An actual fMRI machine houses a 3-Tesla magnet
that's more than 60,000 times more powerful than the Earth's magnetic field.
And over 3,000 times more powerful than your average fridge magnet.
If we were anywhere near the real deal,
well, we would put our camera and our equipment at serious risk.
- But why on earth would anyone possibly need a magnet so powerful?
Well, some of the researchers here
at UCSD are using fMRI to study the human brain
in ways that 30 years ago just weren't even possible.
- I'm Maggie, I'm a fourth-year graduate student at UC San Diego.
- My name is Stephanie Nelli,
I'm a sixth-year PhD student in John Serences' lab.
- We study mostly selective attention and expectation and other cognitive factors
and how they influence visual processing in humans.
- My research is about really basic visual perception.
How do we make sense of the world around us?
How do we choose, out of the plethora of things
that are constantly accosting our visual system,
how does your brain make sense of the massive amount of information
constantly bombarding it?
fMRI itself was developed not very long ago,
it's a very new technique, as far as human research goes.
And it was developed in the '90s, I believe, actually in Bell Labs.
- fMRI is a particular specialty of MRI called functional MRI,
so what that does is basically, instead of measuring the difference
between particular tissues, you're actually optimising
to detect the difference between oxygenated vs. deoxygenated blood
in a person's brain.
- For a long time, it was impossible to look at the brain up close
without cracking open someone's skull.
[Micah laughs]
And even if you got a brain from someone who's passed on, that's not all that useful
for understanding how it works.
When Leonardo Da Vinci dissected the human brain in the 16th century
it was with the intention of finding the seat of the human soul.
Spoiler alert, he didn't.
- Unsurprisingly, the functions
of different brain areas were essentially a mystery
well after the scientific revolution.
But fMRI changed all that by giving scientists
the ability to see the brain working in real time,
track activities in different brain regions,
and read your mind.
- No, unfortunately not for us scientists, an fMRI machine cannot read the mind.
It can tell you basically where blood is being transported to in the brain.
So which parts of the brain are active.
- An fMRI scan can tell you when someone is doing some cognitive task,
what kind of patterns of brain activity you see.
So which areas are active, what information are those areas representing.
For instance, if you have someone look at different images and you measure MRI
while they do that, then later if you have that same person come in and you say,
okay, think about something.
Now, based on that information, I can guess what you were thinking about.
- I could probably say you're looking to the left
by looking at your neural activity
or I could say you're looking at a horizontal line
by looking at your neural activity.
However, am I gonna be able to tell what you're daydreaming about
or who you're in love with or something like that?
No, I don't think think that's gonna happen in my lifetime but, you know,
I said it on camera so we'll be able to... [laughs].
- It might not quite make sense how a magnet does all of this,
so let's break down the process step by step.
Let's say that Rey here has been having
some neurologically linked problems and a doctor refers her for an fMRI.
All of her Force powers are messing with her head.
"Oh no, Kylo Ren keeps appearing in my mind!
"I can't stop thinking about his hot torso.
"Ohhh!"
- The technicians place her on the table,
give her some earplugs and stabilise her head
so she can't move it at all.
If the head moves during the scan, the images will come out fuzzy.
Next, the table slides into this large, doughnut-shaped
section which houses the ultra-powerful magnet.
The strong magnetic field of this magnet
then actually turns the hydrogen atoms in our blood.
- Wait, what?
- Yeah, the human body has a lot of hydrogen atoms because well,
we're mostly made up of H₂O, that's water.
The magnetic field from the fMRI interacts with the protons in the hydrogen atoms
and makes those protons essentially point in the same direction.
That's right, your molecules are magnetic.
Hence, the magnetic resonance part
of magnetic resonance imaging.
- Once Rey's in position, she'll hear a series
of very loud clangs and beeps.
[MRI machine beeps repeatedly]
But these sounds aren't just the hottest new beat,
they actually serve a purpose.
Every clang you hear is a radio wave pulse being fired off.
This radio wave disrupts the uniform direction of the protons and pushes them
in slightly different directions.
Here's the cool part.
As the protons move back into realignment,
they release their very own small radio signal
and those signals are then detected
by the fMRI machine's radio receiver,
which starts taking snapshots of cross-sections of your brain,
which you hear as the beeping sound.
After some complicated computation, what shows up on the computer screen
is a series of images that show both
the anatomy of your brain and highlighted areas
where there's more blood flow.
Pretty cool, right?
- Yeah, so fMRI doesn't actually measure your brain activity.
It can't detect your individual neurons firing,
as cool as that would be.
fMRI machines actually detect what's called the BOLD signal.
- So the BOLD signal stands for blood-oxygen-level dependent signal
and it's basically an index of how much oxygenated haemoglobin
is in a person's blood at a particular point in their brain.
- Neurons themselves don't keep a high store of glucose hanging around
so that they can do their job and so the blood vessels,
through these things called astrocytes, actually,
help supply neurons with the glucose
and oxygen that they need to do their signalling.
- When you have neural activity that happens in your brain,
a bunch of blood will rush to that area
and it turns out that oxygenated and deoxygenated haemoglobin in your blood
have different magnetic properties. So deoxygenated haemoglobin
will disrupt the magnetic field more than oxygenated haemoglobin will
and it'll actually cause a decrease in the signal.
So when you look at an fMRI image, the higher the signal you have,
the more oxygen is in your blood at that point.
And so you actually can measure
with the BOLD signal after these neural events occur.
That basically tells you how much energy was consumed at that location.
- Now, it's not perfect.
It can't detect changes instantaneously
or tell you exactly what kinds of signals are being sent.
- But even with its limitations,
it lets us better understand which brain regions do what.
Using fMRI, scientists have been able to identify 180 distinct brain regions.
Better understanding the roles of different brain regions means
that doctors can use that information to help treat and support patients
with neurological disorders or brain injuries.
fMRI technology is cool, but both of us wanted more.
We wanted to get into the machine and see what our own brains looked like.
Maggie and Steph asked me to participate in a pilot research study looking
at how humans distinguish between faces and I jumped at the chance to help out.
- I didn't participate in the study but I was able to get a structural scan.
It doesn't measure blood flow
but it does give you a high resolution image of your brain's anatomy.
It was a strange experience, being inside.
It felt like being in a plastic coffin.
I can see why some people get claustrophobic.
- And participating in the study was harder than I expected.
While the task I was doing was easy,
it was hard to stay focused on doing
the same thing over and over for almost two hours.
But it was also really cool to see the results.
- And yet, we could not pass up on the opportunity of a lifetime.
- I mean, sure it's cool to see your brain on a screen
but imagine holding it in your hands.
What does my own unique brain really look like?
Well, as it turns out, we're able to find out.
- Thanks to modern software, we're able to take the 2D slices of our brains
and compose them into a 3D render
and print them out.
Cue the time lapse.
- Well, look at that beautiful brain.
- I really liked how the rainbow filament turned out on this.
- Yeah, it's so pretty. - This turned out really cool.
- I know, and I really like my glow-in-the-dark print.
It's super bright.
- The grooves are much wider in yours, and not quite as tightly packed,
whereas mine is super tightly folded.
- It's cool that you can see the inside too,
the hippocampus and all these different brain regions.
- Obviously I knew that my brain wasn't perfectly symmetrical, no one's brain is,
but you can really see very obvious differences.
It's really interesting to see, like, oh, that's my brain's shape.
- Right, I didn't really think about that before.
- Every time someone comes over to our house
I'll be like, did you see my brain?
- Lemme show you my brain. - Lemme show you my brain!
- It's incredible that we have the technology to track the activity
of a live human brain.
fMRI has pushed neuroscience to new heights
and has given us a glimpse into the seat of human consciousness.
And only somewhat less incredible
is the fact that we can use those same images
to build 3D models so we can create a life-size version
of our own brains.
How funny that just a chunk of squishy cells this big
can come up with such incredible tools
to help us better understand our minds and ourselves.
- Huge thanks to Maggie and Steph from the Serences lab for their expertise
and to UCSD for giving us access to their scanner.
And thanks to Tom for giving nerds like us the chance to share our brainy love.
Maybe we'll see you later?
- Maybe?
- Until next time, we're Neuro Transmissions,
over and out.
- Thank you folks, go subscribe to Neuro Transmissions.
I would recommend starting with Micah's video
on training a cat to high five
or Alie's video on how marijuana affects your brain.
And that's it! I'm back next week
and I will see you then.
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Bobby Roode Entrance Video - Duration: 1:37.
[MUSIC]
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