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[4] [1] He worked at The Washington Post from 2001 to 2011, [5] [1] writing its "Department of Human Behavior" column from 2007 to 2009. [1] He then wrote an occasional column called "Hidden Brain" for Slate. [1] Vedantam published The Ghosts of Kashmir in 2005, a collection of short stories discussing the divide between Indians and Pakistani. [6]
The show originally began as a segment of NPR's Morning Edition. [5] The first episode of the podcast focused on a concept called "switchtracking". [6] [7] [8] Vedantam founded the independent company Hidden Brain Media in 2019 and left NPR in 2020. [9]
The free energy principle is a theoretical framework suggesting that the brain reduces surprise or uncertainty by making predictions based on internal models and updating them using sensory input. It highlights the brain's objective of aligning its internal model and the external world to enhance prediction accuracy .
What you can do about it: If you find yourself getting fixated on not-so-wonderful thoughts, try setting aside a 15- to 30-minute block of dedicated “worry time” to focus on them, recommends ...
Brain death - Lazarus sign The Lazarus sign or Lazarus reflex is a reflex movement in brain-dead or brainstem failure patients, [ 1 ] which causes them to briefly raise their arms and drop them crossed on their chests (in a position similar to some Egyptian mummies ).
In telling a story one of the most successful devices for easily creating uncanny effects is to leave the reader in uncertainty whether a particular figure in the story is a human being or an automaton and to do it in such a way that his attention is not focused directly upon his uncertainty, so that he may not be led to go into the matter and ...
Self-enquiry, also spelled self-inquiry (Sanskrit vichara, also called jnana-vichara [1] or ātma-vichār), is the constant attention to the inner awareness of "I" or "I am" recommended by Ramana Maharshi as the most efficient and direct way of discovering the unreality of the "I"-thought.
Understanding is a documentary television series that aired from 1994 to 2004 on TLC. [1] The program covered various things understood from a scientific perspective and was narrated by Jane Curtin, Candice Bergen, and Peter Coyote. It originally aired on TLC and as of 2013 is currently being shown on the Science Channel.