BRAINS! Read all my ideas about brains as well as others theories

Brain

June 22, 2007

Wired News - AP News [del.icio.us]

Forget the clicker: A new technology in Japan could let you control electronic devices without lifting a finger simply by reading brain activity. The "brain-machine interface" developed by Hitachi Inc. analyzes slight changes in the brain's blood flow and
by higgins3 @ 12:37 pm. Filed under Uncategorized

G Rating

What's My Blog Rated? From Mingle2 - Online Dating

Via Bora of NC-17 rated A Blog Around The Clock. Omni Brain is G-rated? Maybe we need to spice things up...

Hmm, well, Vaughan at Mind Hacks has been writing about autoerotic sex deaths, most recently involving a man who constructed a complex full-body plastic bag. More links to studies (many include NSFW pictures, most require subscription but some older articles are free) below the cut:

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by Omni Brain @ 9:00 am. Filed under Uncategorized

Time Graph

In the new blog Crappy Graphs, which is not really crappy, Brian's come up with a depiction of coolness in social media.

time-wasted-reading-graph.png

See more.

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by Omni Brain @ 8:00 am. Filed under Uncategorized

Heavy Mental Music

amygdaloids.jpg In I-was-going-to-write-about-this-months-ago news, The Scientist magazine profiled The Amygdaloids: Scientists Who Rock Out:

With a serious air about him, New York University neuroscientist Joe LeDoux takes hold of a microphone to introduce the first song, about "one of the great enigmas in the history of civilization" -- the mind-body problem.

The Amygdaloids -- whose name is a play on the amygdala, an oval structure in the brain's temporal lobe involved in emotional behavior -- are a band comprised of LeDoux and NYU biologist Tyler Volk on guitar and vocals, NYU neural science postdoctoral student Daniela Schiller on drums, and Schiller's research assistant, Nina Galbraith Curley, on bass. Their "gimmick," says LeDoux, is that all of their original songs are about science.

"Mind Body Problem" is reminiscent of the Eagles and Bob Dylan -- easygoing classic rock that makes people in the audience tap their feet. "My body wants you so, but my mind just says no," LeDoux sings. At the end of the song, Volk, consistently the most energetic, throws his arms in the air, yelling to the audience in reference to the song's title: "Did that solve it for you!?"

Watch the band in videos at their web page, including a show a Madison Square Gardens complete with The Wave.

More seriously, check out the LeDoux Laboratory's research on emotions and memory. There's also a good NIH lecture video online.

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by Omni Brain @ 8:00 am. Filed under Uncategorized

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