This is your brain on communication
Neuroscientist Uri Hasson takes us inside his lab's fascinating research -- and our heads -- to show the meeting of the minds that occurs every time we talk to each other.
Continue readingRather than purging real-world complexity from his experiments, Uri Hasson and his Princeton lab collaborators use messy, real-life stimuli to study how our brains communicate with other brains.
Using fMRI to peer into his subjects’ brain activity, Hasson has discovered that a great storyteller literally causes the neurons of an audience to closely sync with the storyteller’s brain -- a finding that has far-reaching implications for communicators, teachers, performers, and scientists alike.
Neuroscientist Uri Hasson takes us inside his lab's fascinating research -- and our heads -- to show the meeting of the minds that occurs every time we talk to each other.
Continue readingWe may, as Joan Didion once wrote, tell ourselves stories in order to live—but Uri Hasson is looking for a few more reasons. The neuroscientist based at Princeton University researches the neurological basis of human communication and storytelling, and in session 11 at TED2016, he shows off some surprising findings. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) […]
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