Thanks to Brilliant for sponsoring this video! Go to brilliant.org/sideprojects/ to get a 30-day free trial + the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual subscription.
Just signed up to brilliant, and forgot to watch the video. Sunk the last hour and a half into it. Very addictive...I mean "fun"...Very fun. Now I gotta go do other stuff and come back to this later.
simon, i really like your narration lately, you're more animated and friendly than when you first started years ago. it's better like this because you're more relaxed 👍
Lost my right hand in 1993. The mirror box is all that saved me from insanity. It felt clenched exactly as Simon described, when I saw what looked like my right hand open up the pain went away pretty much instantly.
I do this kinda work as a medical massage therapist and I treat the attachments to amputated limbs the same way I would as if they were still there. It's pretty amazing when you are just rubbing the air where a knee use to be and the persons ghost knee somehow relaxes
My grandmother, whom hadn’t spoken French since she was a child, spoke fluent French despite her English being severely affected by her strokes. After a couple days the hospital had to find a French-speaking nurse. She was also an accountant for most of her life and, like the French, could count perfectly after. To this day she still has partial-aphasia when it comes to any English speaking
It's weird but not that unusual. Studies show that the brain area supporting the first learned language is smaller than the areas for later learned languages. Hence, strokes tend to interfere with later learned languages more so than the native language even if the language hasn't been used for many years.
@@JonnyMack33 it’s not that they learnt a new language, it’s that their most used one (english) became unavailable, so the brain focused on the latent memories of French that she already had from her childhood but hadn’t used for many years.
My mom recently passed from MS. She was having a lot of seizures at the end, it would cause things like ..the entire concept of left not existing for her? Or cortical blindness which means she was blind but 100% thought she could see just fine. It was sad but also fascinating because of how complicated the brain is. During these episodes she honestly didn't think anything was wrong, even if the entire left side of her body was paralyzed. It just didn't exist anymore (neither did anything to the left) and she was fine cause it had always been like that
@@BlanBonco not really. An example I remember was the doctor asked what color shirt I was wearing and she immediately and confidently said the wrong color
1:19: 🧠 The brain is the most complex object in the universe, composed of billions of specialized neurons and trillions of neural connections. 3:35: 🧠 The brain's incredible memory capacity and how different regions handle different types of memories. 5:51: 🧠 Split-brain patients, who have undergone Corpus Callosotomy surgery, experience interesting side effects such as the inability to verbally describe images seen by the right half of the brain and difficulty in naming objects held out of sight in the left hand. 9:12: 🧠 Phantom limb sensations occur when amputees feel sensations in body parts that are no longer there, and it is believed to be due to reorganization of neurons in the somatosensory cortex. 11:12: 🧠 The brain can be easily fooled and damaged, leading to unusual effects on perception and behavior. 13:52: 🧠 The brain has remarkable abilities, including precision in body control, spatial neglect, and neuroplasticity. 16:52: 🧠 The brain quickly adapts to new circumstances and repurposes unused areas to learn new tasks, but reverts back to normal when the circumstances change. Recap by Tammy AI
Age 52, I suffered a fall - face versus the lawn and the lawn won. I was in the middle of getting a masters in econ. I couldn't look at a computer for 3 months. It's 3 years later and I still deal with fatigue, intolerance to heat & temp changes, and I have not regained my ability to do higher math (complex algebraic simplification, calculus, linear algebra). I was able to reteach myself math through quadratic equations, and that was it. I got into a knock-down fight with the 1st neurologist because she told me a concussion "wasn't a brain injury". Two things on my side - I research like crazy, and I grasp complex information. Argued that diffuse axonal shear is a brain injury, and what she was siting (nothing on imaging) was the medical textbook definition of the difference between mild/moderate and major TBIs. Ugh. Had to quit the masters program, then had to quit my accounting job as more problems came up. But "not a brain injury", am I right?
I was born with hydrocephalus and I’ve had 7 brain surgeries and I’m thinking about going to medical school to become a neurosurgeon or neurologist and the human brain is in my opinion one of the most fascinating things
Same, had a lot of surgeries too, not fun, got 4 Masters degrees. Go for every dream you have, people like you can truly help the world. My hydro buggered my coordination, so surgery isn't for me...or for patients.
@@-Neo_Genesis- shunt insertions and shunt revisions and not they couldn’t help with that. A shunt is like a catheter that drains the excess fluid from the brain to another part of the body to get absorbed
I have very nearly a quarter of my brain removed due to a very large and nasty cancerous brain tumour. It was the front right portion but I have lost no function. My memory is still as good. And I am quite a clever chap by the way if I do say so myself.
I had a head injury in 1991 and lost most of my right frontal and right temporal lobes. Was a mess with many of the symptoms mentioned in the vid plus epileptic for years, but now it's like it never happened. `except for sleep problems`. Pleased you're alright now. We`re the same best wishes from Graham Coventry UK🤗
Sounds scary, good for you that you'r ok now. Did any friends, family or coworkers notice any change in your behaviour? Or are you the same Willjeffery as before?
Sounds scary, good for you that you'r ok now. Did any friends, family or coworkers notice any change in your behaviour? Or are you the same Graham as before?
It would make sense that the guy born without a corpus callosum would develop speech centers on both halves of the brain. Neuro plasticity plus the fact that the hemispheres were never connected so there would be a demand for speech recognition on both sides
All I can say is that I seem to have encountered many people in my life who exhibit signs of only using 10% of their brain. Usually right after lunch, when they "forgot" their wallet...
well, you can be yourself without every other body part, except the head. This means we all are just naturally skilled meat-and-bone mech pilots. Fascinating, isn't it?
I was totally intrigued with the entire video. I am a brain tumour and meningitis Survivor. Lost Vision in one eye, and i struggle with depth perception issues. I'm just thankful I'm still here, and more than ever, always looking to learn more everyday! Thank you for the great video!
Excellent video. Something I am fascinated in as a neurodivergent with a bunch of neurological issues, is how the brain functions. I'd love some more in-depth on some of these topics, specially phantom limb, and brain damage. Anything on pain, and neurology would be great too.
I found this especially interesting, having suffered a stroke myself and feeling the effects on my memory, speech and motor control, it took quite a few years have my brain start to get some of that back
A friend of mine got hit on the head by a heavy falling object a couple years ago. He immediately was unable to speak. He apparently received some damage to his speech center. Along with that he had some seizures. He was not able to drive for a while because of it. He started getting speech therapy right away and has regained normal speech and the ability to sing again. (He's a musician). There are still some residual effects and he needs to take medication to prevent seizures.
I'm an anaesthetic nurse and it's fascinating to know that we're still not sure how anaesthetics work on the brain. We just know that they do work.....
My grandfather had Phantom Limb after a series of right arm amputations due to cancer and he'd feel reflexive actions such as putting out his nonexistent hand to shake when meeting someone.
Man this is a good episode. I learned why people that lose a basic sense, why the others get better. Confirmed something I thought was BS in an episode of House, MD. And I think I know what is wrong with Amos Burton from The Expanse.
This videos was really awesome! Can you do some more videos on the human mind? Or, would you do a video of the amazing capabilities of non-human minds?
Thanks for another interesting video. I was lucky enough to get a research fellowship in a lab working with split-brained clients, and the work changed my professional path permanently, as it was so fascinating. One comment on the language centers, you mentioned that it is rare to see them in both hemispheres, but about 30% of ambidextrous people have them.
I just watched a really interesting video explaining neuroplasticity and how it is re-activated for a short period of time after a trauma to the brain like stroke for example. If you start teaching the people who have suffered a stroke really quickly after it happened - you can reverse a lot more of the damage than starting the learning process just a week later. And - if that's not crazy enough - they did an experiment with mice. If the mouse had a stroke and was immediately taught how to be a mouse again - great success. If the learning was allowed later - the results were much worse. But that's not the weird part! If the mouse who missed the re-activation period of the first stroke and was as a result brain damaged, was given a second stroke later and then immediately started to learn again - even the damage from the first stroke was able to be reversed! The re-activated neuroplasticity power allowed the brain just repair everything it found to be faulty, doesn't matter if the trauma happened in the past! Truly fascinating!
simon, i really like your narration lately, you're more animated and friendly than when you first started years ago. it's better like this because you're more relaxed 👍
I have minor nerve damage on the right side of my body, due to an accident. I have a loss of sensation, but it appears due to my brain's body map, that I still know I have a right side, although since the incident, I have suffered a loss of sensation which means if I don't see some event which causes me to suffer a minor injury like a cut...I don't know about it until I see it later....annoying. But at least I know it's only peripheral nerve damage and added to that when it first happened I was also very unstable on my feet, but because I learned dance and movement at primary school, those skills have kicked in from my memory and I am not so bad now, plus the muscle spasms I used to get badly are not so bad now, because I believe my motor center of my brain, has found a way around them. I believe this proves that such things can be overcome by your brain, provided they are not too bad to start with.
17:46 Ok, so now I'm fascinated: I lost my sight so young that I have no memory, conscious or otherwise, of sight. I know because I don't even see in my dreams even though I did live 18 months with perfect vision. So I've always been terrified of the idea of my sight being restored because I believe my brain would not know what to do with the stimuli because it's forgotten how to handle it. But now I wonder how accurate that belief is and also what would happen to my tactile knowledge?
It might take a while, but your brain would likely adjust. It depends I guess on why you lost your vision. If the visual cortex of your brain is undamaged (or could be restored to what it was pre vision loss), I image your vision would return as this is what that part of your brain evolved to do and vision is an incredible asset to have (over any other function that part of your brain might have adjusted to). Given that you did have vision at some point it's possible that your brain would be able to adapt faster than someone who was born blind. It's like how deaf people who get cochlear implants might struggle to make sense of the noise input at first (especially if they were born deaf), but once their brains get a chance to adapt to it the start to make sense.
You might wind up with blindsight. You might wind up able to see, but not know what you're seeing, no conscious awareness of it. It's a fascinating topic.
I was in the Air Force with a guy who got hit in the head as a kid and now only sees black and white, he always compared it to “an old I Love Lucy episode, not a splash of color.”
Whoa, *that's* interesting! Most colour blindness is caused by the eye not having developed one or more of it's types of 'cones' (humans have three types of cones that pick up on three wavelengths of light, each wavelength being a colour and all colours being a mix of these three). Never heard of someone being colour-blind due to a head injury, I'll have to look up why!😯 EDIT: Okay, looked it up! From what I can gather there a few reason why this happens, two of which are: a) The part of the brain that processes the exact wavelength of the visual input is damaged (so it can't tell the colour), or b) the brain can still tell the colour, but the part of the brain that allows a person to *consciously* know what that colour is is damaged (so the brain can figure out the colours, but the pathway from that part of the brain to the part that let's you consciously pick the colour is damaged, like a PC running properly without a display).
Fascinating indeed! Interesting to learn the mirror box treatment - the TV show "House" actually used this in an episode, and I wondered at the time if that was a real thing or if the character House was (again) being god-tier brilliant. I did know the show tried to base MOST of its medical plot points on real science, so it's nice to see that confirmed. You could probably do a whole video solely on speech center troubles, or cases of brain injury that SHOULD have killed the person and didn't. Though I think y'all already covered Phineas Gage in a Biographics.
If you want know more about mirror box therapy, check out "The Tell-Tale Brain" by V. S. Ramachandran. He pioneered mirror box therapy and made many new insights into how our brains work, or don't work.
Why does the brain have to be so complex? My step dad is suffering from dementia and is slowly losing his memory. You can tell him something, and (about) 5 minutes later, he's forgotten what you said. His long term seems to be intact - he remembers his daughter (from previous marriage). I just don't know how long it will be, before me and my mom are complete strangers to him. 😢 Until then, we are both spending as much time as we can with him. After that, 💔 we will do what we can, when we get to that point 😭.
I was probably 12 or 13. One of my pet cats lost one of his front legs after being hit by a car. I remember teasing him and being met with a retaliatory swipe at my eye from his stump. It's possible he would have caused real damage if the limb was still there, which I'm sure he intended, and I probably fully deserved! Thank goodness in that instance for phantom limb syndrome!
I think the reason why opposite side control is so you can present the non critical controls to a threat and still fight even if the brain on that side is damaged.
IIRC, the answer is found in the "fish" stage of evolution and is a result of the brain effectively turning upside down in relation to the rest of the body. So in some sense the right half does control the right side and vice versa, but the signal is twisted 180 degrees somewhere along the way and the right half is on the left now. It's around this time that we likely got our laryngeal nerve detour from brain->loop-around-heart->larynx because at that time for those animals that's what they had that worked out best and things only got complicated later on when their descendants inherited the results and had to work off of less-than-ideal plans.
I'm going for brain surgery in September and of course, being a need, have read so many books in a sort of prep for it. I highly recommend "the brain that changes itself"
I enjoyed this so much! I'm a huge Alice Sheldon & Harlan Ellison fan. My Mom got me into Ellison, and I got her into Alice Sheldon! Audible has a good selection of Ellison's collections recently, I think I have 13 of his books (short stories galore!) available to listen to, and I do very often. That number includes his general fiction & the things he wrote about being in a gang too.
Thank you for this amazing information about the brain. It is interesting and I was unaware of the many facts mentioned. I believe that there is much more to be learned about the brain and the rest of the body. All of the functions of the brain are fascinating.
🤯this is why I watched Simon Whistler no matter what channel it is I've been trying to get my wife to watch him because I watch five or six of his videos a day and it's just like wow what a learning experience and she went to school in Rexburg Idaho and I feel she can greatly benefit from watching videos like this since her IQ I guess is about 87 which makes it hard to communicate and teacher stuff when my IQ is 145 Simon you are a godsend and please don't ever stop making videos
I suffered a TIA (mini stroke) a few years ago. I was also diagnosed with bipolar disorder when I was about 12-13. After I had the TIA, I noticed a drastic improvement in how well I was able to register the symptoms of my bipolar disorder (in particular, the duration of which I experienced extreme anger or anxiety). While some of this can be explained with experience and age, the change was too great to be attributed to those factors alone. I also noticed that I have a harder time with containing "happy crying" but I can quickly revert to normal.
Of course I have two brains! I have two heads too! Sometimes I think with the one in my hat, sometimes I think with the one in my pants. Something to do with blood pressure I think...
I learned to control switching sides of my brain. When I'm on my right side, I am and creative, and things starting chaotic. When I switch to my left side, I feel calm and quiet.
0:00: 🧠 The brain is the most complex object in the universe, composed of neurons that transmit signals to each other. 3:42: 🧠 Our incredible memory is what makes humans truly unique, and different types of memories are handled by different regions of the brain. 7:17: 🧠 Patients with split brain exhibit different abilities depending on the side of the brain that processes information. 10:59: 🔑 The mirror box is an ingenious invention that tricks the brain into perceiving a missing limb, providing relief from phantom pain or discomfort. 14:42: 🧠 The brain's ability to adapt and compensate for rare conditions like echinotopsia, a motion blindness disorder, is remarkable. Recap by Tammy AI
Have you done a vedio on the 'Hard Problem of consciences'? (How millions of distinct cell's somehow create an illusion of a single individual). I'm sure it would be captivating.
Simon you should do a video on the emerging science of the connection between autoimmunity-clinical infection - inflammation and mental health disorders, this area challenges the psychology vs physician dogma. Examples Encephalitis, PANS & PANDAS, oh and the film Awakenings.
"Our incredible memory is what makes humans truly unique." Except, yano, for elephants. And other creatures that we simply haven't figured out a way to test. Humans may well be the only animal who cares so deeply about being the only animal who does something. That said, the brain is a tremendously amazing apparatus, and this was a great video.
Optic ataxia can occur because what your eye perceives goes to different parts of your brain: One area that identifies *what* an object is and one that identifies *where* it is. Optic ataxia occurs when there is something wrong with the 'where it is' part (either at that part of the brain or somewhere else along the pathway from the eyes to that area). This means that people with damage to this area/pathway are able to identify an object, but they can't properly discern where it is so have difficulty coordinating their body to interact with objects. The opposite is also possible, where a patient can't identify *what* an object is, but is able to tell *where* it is (I'm not sure what the term for this condition is). This one I think is weirder as a lot of people with this are able to still interact with objects without being able to tell what it is (the example that was in my text book was using a lock, a person may not be able to identify it as a lock, but their hand will still get the feeling to try and do the twisting motion that is required to use the lock. They can still 'see' it, they just don't know what it is). Another interesting thing I learned was about 'proprioception', this is a sense we have that allows use to know where our limbs are without needing to look at them (eg, if I shut my eyes I can know where my arm is if I were to raise it above my head, or if I were to open and close my hand, etc). We looked at the case study of a man who was injured and lost the ability to feel where all of his limbs were. Doctors thought he would be bed ridden and essentially unable to move for the rest of his life, but with months of effort he taught himself to move and walk again by looking at his limbs and imagining moving them. This means to walk and do activities he has to actively think about them rather than doing them subconsciously, but it's still amazing that he was able to regain any movement at all. As for the brain re-purposing areas; many people who are blind or become blind are able to do a form of echolocation (some to an insane level, look up Ben Underwood, who has unfortunately passed away but had an amazing use of echolocation). The part of their brain that is usually used for vision is generally re-purposed to allow for this. The brain is truly amazing!!
Great episode!!!!! Let’s share in this blessing with the shiny ones are oh divine providence I ask not for more riches bit more wisdom to help make better choices with the gift we were all given at birth the ability to take control and direct our minds to whatever ends it may desire
As a tall person I can attest that living with head trauma is challenging in haunting ways. Sure sometimes you remember the color and texture of a childhood blanket lost decades ago, then you forget the name of your coworkers.
When my grandmother had a stroke when she was 91 years old. I went to see her in the hospital she was speaking Swedish because she was born and raised iean Sweden. It took me asking her to speak English a couple of times before she started talking in English. The nurse came into the room and said that my grandmother was speaking gibberish, and I told the nurse that she was wrong she was speaking Swedish.
A friend in school once asked me if i thought our soul was controling our body like a sim game, but our animal consciousness is still alive and trapped inside
A long time ago I remember hearing that the "We only use 10% of our brain" claim to have been based on an observation that only 10% of our neurons were firing at a given time. The retort was that it wouldn't have been a good thing for all of them to be simultaneously firing. I have no idea if it was true, but it sounded good.
"learn and adapt at a rapid pace" also humanity,"lets do the same shit we've been trying for the last 1000 years and see if we get the same result" sure Simon.Sure.
"The human brain is the only object in the known universe that can predict its own future and tell its own fortune. The fact that we can make disastrous decisions even as we forsee their consequences is the great, unsolved mystery of human behavior. When you hold your fate in your hands, why woule you ever make it a fist?"-Daniel Gilbert.
The mirror box only works on about 50% of patients and at best relieves about 40% of a patient's pain. Not bad, for a noninvasive treatment. But not great if you're not in the 50%.
It would be fascinating to see a video about aphantasia (people who can't see anything in their mind's eye) and hyperfantasia (the opposite, where people can see perfect photographs and movies play in their mind). It's really interesting, especially as an artist & creative person who has aphantasia & who has friends who have hyperfantasia or something somewhere between the two, yet aren't creative. It's wild
I know, I have what I call "The octopus" and "the otter" and I've spent most of my life working them out. Consider my brains to be bodybuilders/powerlifters.
Oh my gosh, I think I need to follow another channel that you have where you were discussing true crime… Amazing I found you here and I love this channel I am subscribed and thank you.🎉
I'm frequently unable to see things that are in front of me, like on a table with nothing else there. I know they are there. I remember putting them there ... but I can't see them. I carefully touch the whole surface of the table ... but still can't find them. The moment I give up looking I see them. I videoed myself whilst having this experience. My hand carefully touched the whole surface of the table ... except for where what I was looking for was. Even when I brushed my hand across the table I lifted my hand over the object I was looking for. I sometimes wonder if I've got an "alternate self"... a "doppelgänger" ... that is playing tricks on me. I experience other "peculiarities of consciousness".
I've read a couple articles about people who were born missing part of their brains, and it wasn't realized until they were adults. I read an article about a Chinese woman who had mild developmental issues and some gait/balance issues, but nothing so great that you would think she was missing her entire cerebellum. Crazy stuff.
The corpus callosotomy is only used in extreme cases where patients are literally seizing to the point of brain damage, many times in a day. There's a great interview on SBSK with a young woman who had the procedure when she was really small. Her mother describes her condition before the surgery, she was barely able to function at all, and her mental development was severely stunted as a result. I can see that you're able to watch a video on a fairly complex topic and make a completely coherent comment. I'm confident that no doctor would ever decide that the benefits would outweigh the risks in your case. I hope this makes you feel better. I realize it was just an offhand remark, but I know what medical anxiety can be like sometimes 🙃
@@ForestFire369 okay this genuinely made me feel better thank you so much. I seize multiple times a week and I do have slight brain damage as a result, and my neurologist basically told me 'idk what else to do' so it's always eating away at me
Stroke Patient here, Right Brain-- Young age 31 years old, complete Left Side Weakness-- can't feel anything left side... I also have left side neglect-- I ignore objects on my left side. I often hit walls and just THINGS on the left side that I didn't see ( or even feel until it knocks me over). It's bizarre. I do all sorts of things to try and bring back my awareness of my left but it's not easy. I do the mirror therapy often. Seems to help!
I don't feel so brilliant , but this episode I could identify cause of a stroke that has left me with nerve damage. Gee I wish Brilliant could teach health care guidance towards means of access . How is it that my left side was affected by my stroke including my eye socket pain/numbness 😅😅
I remember seeing an experiment, decades ago, in which participants wore eyeglasses that flipped images upside-down. After a period of time, the brain reversed the images, so they saw normally. After they stopped wearing the glasses, there was a period in which images were, again, upside down. I don't recall brain scans being done, though. I would be interesting to see such a study done now. It's all so fascinating.
Thanks to Brilliant for sponsoring this video! Go to brilliant.org/sideprojects/ to get a 30-day free trial + the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual subscription.
Just signed up to brilliant, and forgot to watch the video.
Sunk the last hour and a half into it.
Very addictive...I mean "fun"...Very fun.
Now I gotta go do other stuff and come back to this later.
This video is sponsored by SponsorBlock
simon, i really like your narration lately, you're more animated and friendly than when you first started years ago. it's better like this because you're more relaxed 👍
"Seeing the world as if it were choppy"
The jumpcut at that very point was intentional, wasn't it?
@@HealingBlight yes
'If the human brain were so simple that we could understand it, we would be so simple that we couldn't.'
Attributed to Emerson M. Pugh.
That hurts my brain
@@aguynamednathanas it should
R u callign me stupid
Literally. It's called the Pigeonhole Principle, which applies to so much stuff besides.
UP next, the Third Eye?
Lost my right hand in 1993. The mirror box is all that saved me from insanity. It felt clenched exactly as Simon described, when I saw what looked like my right hand open up the pain went away pretty much instantly.
That's awesome! Did you ever need to repeat that treatment, or did it go away permanently after doing it..?
@crxtodd16 still have pains but nothing like in beginning. And yes it was a few times in the box
I do this kinda work as a medical massage therapist and I treat the attachments to amputated limbs the same way I would as if they were still there. It's pretty amazing when you are just rubbing the air where a knee use to be and the persons ghost knee somehow relaxes
@@Lunch_Meatthat is so strange and amazing
@@Lunch_MeatIt's almost as if you're rubbing the soul. The physical arm isn't there but the soul's arm is.
It seems to me that the human brain is flattering itself here.
Also being confused about itself 😂
Thats what the pastafarians would have you think.
Well..we, or at least those like you, are always here to put a negative spin on everything. Now, toddle off to your Safe Space.
That meme of Obama putting a medal around his own neck
Lmao😂😂😂
My grandmother, whom hadn’t spoken French since she was a child, spoke fluent French despite her English being severely affected by her strokes. After a couple days the hospital had to find a French-speaking nurse. She was also an accountant for most of her life and, like the French, could count perfectly after. To this day she still has partial-aphasia when it comes to any English speaking
Being able to instantly speak another language is soooo weird! You'd think that it was something you'd have to learn. Amazing.
It's weird but not that unusual. Studies show that the brain area supporting the first learned language is smaller than the areas for later learned languages. Hence, strokes tend to interfere with later learned languages more so than the native language even if the language hasn't been used for many years.
@@peterjhayashi do you think people can have a sudden capacity for advanced mathematics and equation solving in the same way?
@@JonnyMack33 it’s not that they learnt a new language, it’s that their most used one (english) became unavailable, so the brain focused on the latent memories of French that she already had from her childhood but hadn’t used for many years.
‘You have two brains! “Yeah, one’s missing and the other one is out looking for it!” 😂😂😂
"Nancy and I are still looking for the other half of my head." - Ronald Reagan
Facts 🤣💯
Women say men have another in our pants lol
My mom recently passed from MS. She was having a lot of seizures at the end, it would cause things like ..the entire concept of left not existing for her? Or cortical blindness which means she was blind but 100% thought she could see just fine. It was sad but also fascinating because of how complicated the brain is. During these episodes she honestly didn't think anything was wrong, even if the entire left side of her body was paralyzed. It just didn't exist anymore (neither did anything to the left) and she was fine cause it had always been like that
RIP ❤
Sorry i hope she was mostly fairly content as much as possible. What did she think she saw? Was there any overlap with reality?
@@BlanBonco not really. An example I remember was the doctor asked what color shirt I was wearing and she immediately and confidently said the wrong color
She was right
I am so sorry for your loss 🤍😞
1:19: 🧠 The brain is the most complex object in the universe, composed of billions of specialized neurons and trillions of neural connections.
3:35: 🧠 The brain's incredible memory capacity and how different regions handle different types of memories.
5:51: 🧠 Split-brain patients, who have undergone Corpus Callosotomy surgery, experience interesting side effects such as the inability to verbally describe images seen by the right half of the brain and difficulty in naming objects held out of sight in the left hand.
9:12: 🧠 Phantom limb sensations occur when amputees feel sensations in body parts that are no longer there, and it is believed to be due to reorganization of neurons in the somatosensory cortex.
11:12: 🧠 The brain can be easily fooled and damaged, leading to unusual effects on perception and behavior.
13:52: 🧠 The brain has remarkable abilities, including precision in body control, spatial neglect, and neuroplasticity.
16:52: 🧠 The brain quickly adapts to new circumstances and repurposes unused areas to learn new tasks, but reverts back to normal when the circumstances change.
Recap by Tammy AI
Age 52, I suffered a fall - face versus the lawn and the lawn won. I was in the middle of getting a masters in econ. I couldn't look at a computer for 3 months. It's 3 years later and I still deal with fatigue, intolerance to heat & temp changes, and I have not regained my ability to do higher math (complex algebraic simplification, calculus, linear algebra). I was able to reteach myself math through quadratic equations, and that was it.
I got into a knock-down fight with the 1st neurologist because she told me a concussion "wasn't a brain injury". Two things on my side - I research like crazy, and I grasp complex information. Argued that diffuse axonal shear is a brain injury, and what she was siting (nothing on imaging) was the medical textbook definition of the difference between mild/moderate and major TBIs. Ugh. Had to quit the masters program, then had to quit my accounting job as more problems came up. But "not a brain injury", am I right?
Really sorry to hear that. Strange Parts on UA-cam recently had success treating his TBI from a blow to the head. Video about a month ago
I was born with hydrocephalus and I’ve had 7 brain surgeries and I’m thinking about going to medical school to become a neurosurgeon or neurologist and the human brain is in my opinion one of the most fascinating things
Same, had a lot of surgeries too, not fun, got 4 Masters degrees. Go for every dream you have, people like you can truly help the world. My hydro buggered my coordination, so surgery isn't for me...or for patients.
@@owenshebbeare2999 YOU HAVE HYDROCEPHALUS TOO also what did you get degrees in
My brain is healthy but I'm pretty dumb, what kind of brain surgeries did you have? Could they help me? 🤔
@@-Neo_Genesis- shunt insertions and shunt revisions and not they couldn’t help with that. A shunt is like a catheter that drains the excess fluid from the brain to another part of the body to get absorbed
@@Hydrowarriornash Oh I get it! It's like having a juicy brain... Too much much juice, brain no work. ☹
I have very nearly a quarter of my brain removed due to a very large and nasty cancerous brain tumour. It was the front right portion but I have lost no function. My memory is still as good. And I am quite a clever chap by the way if I do say so myself.
I had a head injury in 1991 and lost most of my right frontal and right temporal lobes. Was a mess with many of the symptoms mentioned in the vid plus epileptic for years, but now it's like it never happened. `except for sleep problems`. Pleased you're alright now. We`re the same best wishes from Graham Coventry UK🤗
Sounds scary, good for you that you'r ok now. Did any friends, family or coworkers notice any change in your behaviour? Or are you the same Willjeffery as before?
Sounds scary, good for you that you'r ok now. Did any friends, family or coworkers notice any change in your behaviour? Or are you the same Graham as before?
@@mcstabba, still the same but suffer from headaches and horrible fatigue.
I read that one of the symptoms of losing a chunk of your brain is that you feel that you're quite clever afterwards.
It would make sense that the guy born without a corpus callosum would develop speech centers on both halves of the brain. Neuro plasticity plus the fact that the hemispheres were never connected so there would be a demand for speech recognition on both sides
All I can say is that I seem to have encountered many people in my life who exhibit signs of only using 10% of their brain. Usually right after lunch, when they "forgot" their wallet...
LOL
From the sound of it, they’re using the full 100% to take advantage of you…
When they get Tyrannosaurus hands?
Or maybe a twitter
The brain is the most important organ in the whole body... According to the brain
🤣
well, you can be yourself without every other body part, except the head.
This means we all are just naturally skilled meat-and-bone mech pilots. Fascinating, isn't it?
I have a gut feeling I need more bacon
@@Raspredval1337 if you really think about it we are all just wet Skeletons
@@roscojenkins7451😂😂
I was totally intrigued with the entire video. I am a brain tumour and meningitis Survivor. Lost Vision in one eye, and i struggle with depth perception issues. I'm just thankful I'm still here, and more than ever, always looking to learn more everyday! Thank you for the great video!
Excellent video. Something I am fascinated in as a neurodivergent with a bunch of neurological issues, is how the brain functions.
I'd love some more in-depth on some of these topics, specially phantom limb, and brain damage.
Anything on pain, and neurology would be great too.
0:31 unbelievable complexity
3:35 end of sponsorship
5:14 split brain
8:40 phantom limbs
12:27 brain damage
15:23 plasticity
the immediate clip just before Brain damage is just brilliant 🤣🤣🤣11:53
I hate when people do this. I'd like to scroll through the comments without the entire video being spoiled.
@@cleverusername9369Ridiculous!
@cleverusername9369 then why even go to the comments? People are gonna be talking about the video in the comments lol
I found this especially interesting, having suffered a stroke myself and feeling the effects on my memory, speech and motor control, it took quite a few years have my brain start to get some of that back
A friend of mine got hit on the head by a heavy falling object a couple years ago. He immediately was unable to speak. He apparently received some damage to his speech center. Along with that he had some seizures. He was not able to drive for a while because of it. He started getting speech therapy right away and has regained normal speech and the ability to sing again. (He's a musician).
There are still some residual effects and he needs to take medication to prevent seizures.
I'm an anaesthetic nurse and it's fascinating to know that we're still not sure how anaesthetics work on the brain. We just know that they do work.....
Bread and beer are how old and we only knew yeast was alive about 130 years ago.
Usually. They usually work. A few individuals have some very strange experiences when they're supposed to be under anaesthesis.
My grandfather had Phantom Limb after a series of right arm amputations due to cancer and he'd feel reflexive actions such as putting out his nonexistent hand to shake when meeting someone.
Man this is a good episode. I learned why people that lose a basic sense, why the others get better. Confirmed something I thought was BS in an episode of House, MD. And I think I know what is wrong with Amos Burton from The Expanse.
Everything is bs in House MD
Good episode, Simon... Nicely done.
This videos was really awesome! Can you do some more videos on the human mind? Or, would you do a video of the amazing capabilities of non-human minds?
0:35 - Chapter 1 - Unbelievable complexity
2:05 - Mid roll ads
3:35 - Back to the video
5:20 - Chapter 2 - Split brain
8:45 - Chapter 3 - Phantom limbs
12:30 - Chapter 4 - Brain damage
15:30 - Chapter 5 - Plasticity
- Chapter 6 -
Thanks for another interesting video. I was lucky enough to get a research fellowship in a lab working with split-brained clients, and the work changed my professional path permanently, as it was so fascinating. One comment on the language centers, you mentioned that it is rare to see them in both hemispheres, but about 30% of ambidextrous people have them.
I just watched a really interesting video explaining neuroplasticity and how it is re-activated for a short period of time after a trauma to the brain like stroke for example. If you start teaching the people who have suffered a stroke really quickly after it happened - you can reverse a lot more of the damage than starting the learning process just a week later. And - if that's not crazy enough - they did an experiment with mice. If the mouse had a stroke and was immediately taught how to be a mouse again - great success. If the learning was allowed later - the results were much worse. But that's not the weird part! If the mouse who missed the re-activation period of the first stroke and was as a result brain damaged, was given a second stroke later and then immediately started to learn again - even the damage from the first stroke was able to be reversed! The re-activated neuroplasticity power allowed the brain just repair everything it found to be faulty, doesn't matter if the trauma happened in the past! Truly fascinating!
Wow this is an amazing video, one of your best , so glad that I watched it !!! But did I really watch it ??
The brain isn't the only source of neurons in the human body. The second largest concentration of neurons is the gut, The heart also has neurons.
**reads bit about high concentration of neurons in the stomach**
Found the zombie..
True, and my gut-brain wants chocolate ice cream.
Also fascia
@@Ayeohx mine too. We must share gut brains. XD
Well I mean, technically neurons are everywhere, they are what make up nerves (which are the fast messenger system of the body).
simon, i really like your narration lately, you're more animated and friendly than when you first started years ago. it's better like this because you're more relaxed 👍
Unlike on CasCrim where he quivers in terror 😂
Tbh i like the tangents where he berates everyone especially on Decoding lol
I have minor nerve damage on the right side of my body, due to an accident. I have a loss of sensation, but it appears due to my brain's body map, that I still know I have a right side, although since the incident, I have suffered a loss of sensation which means if I don't see some event which causes me to suffer a minor injury like a cut...I don't know about it until I see it later....annoying.
But at least I know it's only peripheral nerve damage and added to that when it first happened I was also very unstable on my feet, but because I learned dance and movement at primary school, those skills have kicked in from my memory and I am not so bad now, plus the muscle spasms I used to get badly are not so bad now, because I believe my motor center of my brain, has found a way around them.
I believe this proves that such things can be overcome by your brain, provided they are not too bad to start with.
This is the most fascinating video I've seen in a while out of all Simon's channels
The brain is the only organ that can ask questions about itself.
I've said the brain is the most egotistical organ.... It wants to learn all about its self.
@@jakobburton-sundman8549 The penis is pretty self centric too
@@preppen78the penis and brain are often in cahoots with each other
My liver asks questions about my brains decisions
You don't know that for sure.
I’d go absolutely insane if my vision started lagging like a bad COD lobby.
Yeah, I'd probably rather be blind 😓
17:46 Ok, so now I'm fascinated: I lost my sight so young that I have no memory, conscious or otherwise, of sight. I know because I don't even see in my dreams even though I did live 18 months with perfect vision. So I've always been terrified of the idea of my sight being restored because I believe my brain would not know what to do with the stimuli because it's forgotten how to handle it. But now I wonder how accurate that belief is and also what would happen to my tactile knowledge?
It might take a while, but your brain would likely adjust. It depends I guess on why you lost your vision. If the visual cortex of your brain is undamaged (or could be restored to what it was pre vision loss), I image your vision would return as this is what that part of your brain evolved to do and vision is an incredible asset to have (over any other function that part of your brain might have adjusted to). Given that you did have vision at some point it's possible that your brain would be able to adapt faster than someone who was born blind.
It's like how deaf people who get cochlear implants might struggle to make sense of the noise input at first (especially if they were born deaf), but once their brains get a chance to adapt to it the start to make sense.
You might wind up with blindsight. You might wind up able to see, but not know what you're seeing, no conscious awareness of it. It's a fascinating topic.
I was in the Air Force with a guy who got hit in the head as a kid and now only sees black and white, he always compared it to “an old I Love Lucy episode, not a splash of color.”
Whoa, *that's* interesting! Most colour blindness is caused by the eye not having developed one or more of it's types of 'cones' (humans have three types of cones that pick up on three wavelengths of light, each wavelength being a colour and all colours being a mix of these three). Never heard of someone being colour-blind due to a head injury, I'll have to look up why!😯
EDIT: Okay, looked it up! From what I can gather there a few reason why this happens, two of which are:
a) The part of the brain that processes the exact wavelength of the visual input is damaged (so it can't tell the colour), or
b) the brain can still tell the colour, but the part of the brain that allows a person to *consciously* know what that colour is is damaged (so the brain can figure out the colours, but the pathway from that part of the brain to the part that let's you consciously pick the colour is damaged, like a PC running properly without a display).
Fascinating indeed! Interesting to learn the mirror box treatment - the TV show "House" actually used this in an episode, and I wondered at the time if that was a real thing or if the character House was (again) being god-tier brilliant. I did know the show tried to base MOST of its medical plot points on real science, so it's nice to see that confirmed.
You could probably do a whole video solely on speech center troubles, or cases of brain injury that SHOULD have killed the person and didn't. Though I think y'all already covered Phineas Gage in a Biographics.
If you want know more about mirror box therapy, check out "The Tell-Tale Brain" by V. S. Ramachandran. He pioneered mirror box therapy and made many new insights into how our brains work, or don't work.
The fact we can conceive infinity in our finite minds is pretty amazing.
Why does the brain have to be so complex?
My step dad is suffering from dementia and is slowly losing his memory. You can tell him something, and (about) 5 minutes later, he's forgotten what you said. His long term seems to be intact - he remembers his daughter (from previous marriage).
I just don't know how long it will be, before me and my mom are complete strangers to him. 😢 Until then, we are both spending as much time as we can with him. After that, 💔 we will do what we can, when we get to that point 😭.
I'm fascinated in the human brain. I'm always interested in new discoveries in this subject. Thank you for an entertaining video.
I was probably 12 or 13. One of my pet cats lost one of his front legs after being hit by a car. I remember teasing him and being met with a retaliatory swipe at my eye from his stump. It's possible he would have caused real damage if the limb was still there, which I'm sure he intended, and I probably fully deserved! Thank goodness in that instance for phantom limb syndrome!
I think the reason why opposite side control is so you can present the non critical controls to a threat and still fight even if the brain on that side is damaged.
Interesting theory. Where did you hear this? Just curious
IIRC, the answer is found in the "fish" stage of evolution and is a result of the brain effectively turning upside down in relation to the rest of the body. So in some sense the right half does control the right side and vice versa, but the signal is twisted 180 degrees somewhere along the way and the right half is on the left now. It's around this time that we likely got our laryngeal nerve detour from brain->loop-around-heart->larynx because at that time for those animals that's what they had that worked out best and things only got complicated later on when their descendants inherited the results and had to work off of less-than-ideal plans.
@@andyyang3029 just thought it up in the moment.
@@andyyang3029 also mate. I’m the first.
This was really good y'all. Thanks for the excellent content 💙
Love this video! The human body is fascinating
I'm going for brain surgery in September and of course, being a need, have read so many books in a sort of prep for it. I highly recommend "the brain that changes itself"
So when I close my eyes to focus on listening to something more intently, that might actually be doing something??? Fascinating!
I enjoyed this so much! I'm a huge Alice Sheldon & Harlan Ellison fan. My Mom got me into Ellison, and I got her into Alice Sheldon!
Audible has a good selection of Ellison's collections recently, I think I have 13 of his books (short stories galore!) available to listen to, and I do very often. That number includes his general fiction & the things he wrote about being in a gang too.
I have enjoyed many of your videos, but by far, this one the most.
Simon gets so gesticulatory in his casual wear on this channel. I am a fan.
Thank you for this amazing information about the brain. It is interesting and I was unaware of the many facts mentioned. I believe that there is much more to be learned about the brain and the rest of the body. All of the functions of the brain are fascinating.
My brain is my favorite side project. :D Great vid
"The human brain is the most complex thing in the universe." Quote the human brain.
Brain Boy gives us straight brain facts, thank you sir
Great video. Always been fascinated by the jelly in our head
Oh, this was was FASCINATING, no BS. These vids are why I subscribe to this channel. 😉👍✌️
🤯this is why I watched Simon Whistler no matter what channel it is I've been trying to get my wife to watch him because I watch five or six of his videos a day and it's just like wow what a learning experience and she went to school in Rexburg Idaho and I feel she can greatly benefit from watching videos like this since her IQ I guess is about 87 which makes it hard to communicate and teacher stuff when my IQ is 145 Simon you are a godsend and please don't ever stop making videos
I suffered a TIA (mini stroke) a few years ago. I was also diagnosed with bipolar disorder when I was about 12-13.
After I had the TIA, I noticed a drastic improvement in how well I was able to register the symptoms of my bipolar disorder (in particular, the duration of which I experienced extreme anger or anxiety). While some of this can be explained with experience and age, the change was too great to be attributed to those factors alone.
I also noticed that I have a harder time with containing "happy crying" but I can quickly revert to normal.
Of course I have two brains! I have two heads too! Sometimes I think with the one in my hat, sometimes I think with the one in my pants. Something to do with blood pressure I think...
I learned to control switching sides of my brain. When I'm on my right side, I am and creative, and things starting chaotic. When I switch to my left side, I feel calm and quiet.
Odd that they learned braille blindfolded, but then forget it when the blindfold is off.
Because the part of the brain allowing them to learn it more quickly returned to its original function ;)
It's like having storage on a device. Vision is a large app, so they had to remove the braille to make room for it again lmao.
0:00: 🧠 The brain is the most complex object in the universe, composed of neurons that transmit signals to each other.
3:42: 🧠 Our incredible memory is what makes humans truly unique, and different types of memories are handled by different regions of the brain.
7:17: 🧠 Patients with split brain exhibit different abilities depending on the side of the brain that processes information.
10:59: 🔑 The mirror box is an ingenious invention that tricks the brain into perceiving a missing limb, providing relief from phantom pain or discomfort.
14:42: 🧠 The brain's ability to adapt and compensate for rare conditions like echinotopsia, a motion blindness disorder, is remarkable.
Recap by Tammy AI
Have you done a vedio on the 'Hard Problem of consciences'? (How millions of distinct cell's somehow create an illusion of a single individual). I'm sure it would be captivating.
Simon you should do a video on the emerging science of the connection between autoimmunity-clinical infection - inflammation and mental health disorders, this area challenges the psychology vs physician dogma. Examples Encephalitis, PANS & PANDAS, oh and the film Awakenings.
Oh my! Especially well done!
"10 times this unbelievable estimate" is ridiculous, the actual size of a brain is roughly 10^20 bytes
10:35 I prefer to think of it as my brain having been retired along with the rest of my body...lol
"Our incredible memory is what makes humans truly unique."
Except, yano, for elephants. And other creatures that we simply haven't figured out a way to test.
Humans may well be the only animal who cares so deeply about being the only animal who does something.
That said, the brain is a tremendously amazing apparatus, and this was a great video.
The human brain is a unique object in the world, it's the only thing to ever name itself.
Ya, my brain hates itself I've decided.
Our brain is so complex that we can understand how complex it is 🤯
Wonderful video. VS Ramachandran is brilliant.
What an amazing video, i don't comment alot but this was really cool
Optic ataxia can occur because what your eye perceives goes to different parts of your brain: One area that identifies *what* an object is and one that identifies *where* it is. Optic ataxia occurs when there is something wrong with the 'where it is' part (either at that part of the brain or somewhere else along the pathway from the eyes to that area). This means that people with damage to this area/pathway are able to identify an object, but they can't properly discern where it is so have difficulty coordinating their body to interact with objects.
The opposite is also possible, where a patient can't identify *what* an object is, but is able to tell *where* it is (I'm not sure what the term for this condition is). This one I think is weirder as a lot of people with this are able to still interact with objects without being able to tell what it is (the example that was in my text book was using a lock, a person may not be able to identify it as a lock, but their hand will still get the feeling to try and do the twisting motion that is required to use the lock. They can still 'see' it, they just don't know what it is).
Another interesting thing I learned was about 'proprioception', this is a sense we have that allows use to know where our limbs are without needing to look at them (eg, if I shut my eyes I can know where my arm is if I were to raise it above my head, or if I were to open and close my hand, etc). We looked at the case study of a man who was injured and lost the ability to feel where all of his limbs were. Doctors thought he would be bed ridden and essentially unable to move for the rest of his life, but with months of effort he taught himself to move and walk again by looking at his limbs and imagining moving them. This means to walk and do activities he has to actively think about them rather than doing them subconsciously, but it's still amazing that he was able to regain any movement at all.
As for the brain re-purposing areas; many people who are blind or become blind are able to do a form of echolocation (some to an insane level, look up Ben Underwood, who has unfortunately passed away but had an amazing use of echolocation). The part of their brain that is usually used for vision is generally re-purposed to allow for this.
The brain is truly amazing!!
Great episode!
On one of Simon's older videos, he talks about the Top Ten facts about the brain.🧠
Great episode!!!!! Let’s share in this blessing with the shiny ones are oh divine providence I ask not for more riches bit more wisdom to help make better choices with the gift we were all given at birth the ability to take control and direct our minds to whatever ends it may desire
As a tall person I can attest that living with head trauma is challenging in haunting ways.
Sure sometimes you remember the color and texture of a childhood blanket lost decades ago, then you forget the name of your coworkers.
This is so fascinating!!
When my grandmother had a stroke when she was 91 years old. I went to see her in the hospital she was speaking Swedish because she was born and raised iean Sweden. It took me asking her to speak English a couple of times before she started talking in English. The nurse came into the room and said that my grandmother was speaking gibberish, and I told the nurse that she was wrong she was speaking Swedish.
A friend in school once asked me if i thought our soul was controling our body like a sim game, but our animal consciousness is still alive and trapped inside
A long time ago I remember hearing that the "We only use 10% of our brain" claim to have been based on an observation that only 10% of our neurons were firing at a given time. The retort was that it wouldn't have been a good thing for all of them to be simultaneously firing.
I have no idea if it was true, but it sounded good.
"learn and adapt at a rapid pace" also humanity,"lets do the same shit we've been trying for the last 1000 years and see if we get the same result" sure Simon.Sure.
We routinely do both of these things. It is no surprise, definitely not impossible.
"The human brain is the only object in the known universe that can predict its own future and tell its own fortune. The fact that we can make disastrous decisions even as we forsee their consequences is the great, unsolved mystery of human behavior. When you hold your fate in your hands, why woule you ever make it a fist?"-Daniel Gilbert.
The mirror box only works on about 50% of patients and at best relieves about 40% of a patient's pain. Not bad, for a noninvasive treatment. But not great if you're not in the 50%.
15:17 I actually thought I really was lagging for a second there lol
It would be fascinating to see a video about aphantasia (people who can't see anything in their mind's eye) and hyperfantasia (the opposite, where people can see perfect photographs and movies play in their mind). It's really interesting, especially as an artist & creative person who has aphantasia & who has friends who have hyperfantasia or something somewhere between the two, yet aren't creative. It's wild
Somebody once did that phantom hand thing with me. It is amazing how quickly it fools your brain.
I know, I have what I call "The octopus" and "the otter" and I've spent most of my life working them out. Consider my brains to be bodybuilders/powerlifters.
Oh my gosh, I think I need to follow another channel that you have where you were discussing true crime… Amazing I found you here and I love this channel I am subscribed and thank you.🎉
So... We're basically just weird eyeball monsters floating around in these goofy bodies, blabbering at each other.
I'm frequently unable to see things that are in front of me, like on a table with nothing else there. I know they are there. I remember putting them there ... but I can't see them. I carefully touch the whole surface of the table ... but still can't find them. The moment I give up looking I see them. I videoed myself whilst having this experience. My hand carefully touched the whole surface of the table ... except for where what I was looking for was. Even when I brushed my hand across the table I lifted my hand over the object I was looking for. I sometimes wonder if I've got an "alternate self"... a "doppelgänger" ... that is playing tricks on me. I experience other "peculiarities of consciousness".
I've read a couple articles about people who were born missing part of their brains, and it wasn't realized until they were adults. I read an article about a Chinese woman who had mild developmental issues and some gait/balance issues, but nothing so great that you would think she was missing her entire cerebellum. Crazy stuff.
One day it may even be possible to find treatments for severe concussion or severe brain damage in general.
..As someone with drug resistant epilepsy that scared the hell out of me 😅
The corpus callosotomy is only used in extreme cases where patients are literally seizing to the point of brain damage, many times in a day. There's a great interview on SBSK with a young woman who had the procedure when she was really small. Her mother describes her condition before the surgery, she was barely able to function at all, and her mental development was severely stunted as a result.
I can see that you're able to watch a video on a fairly complex topic and make a completely coherent comment. I'm confident that no doctor would ever decide that the benefits would outweigh the risks in your case. I hope this makes you feel better. I realize it was just an offhand remark, but I know what medical anxiety can be like sometimes 🙃
@@ForestFire369 okay this genuinely made me feel better thank you so much. I seize multiple times a week and I do have slight brain damage as a result, and my neurologist basically told me 'idk what else to do' so it's always eating away at me
Stroke Patient here, Right Brain-- Young age 31 years old, complete Left Side Weakness-- can't feel anything left side... I also have left side neglect-- I ignore objects on my left side. I often hit walls and just THINGS on the left side that I didn't see ( or even feel until it knocks me over). It's bizarre. I do all sorts of things to try and bring back my awareness of my left but it's not easy. I do the mirror therapy often. Seems to help!
What a buzzing channel ❤
I don't feel so brilliant , but this episode I could identify cause of a stroke that has left me with nerve damage. Gee I wish Brilliant could teach health care guidance towards means of access . How is it that my left side was affected by my stroke including my eye socket pain/numbness 😅😅
with
The mirror box is fascinating idea.
I remember seeing an experiment, decades ago, in which participants wore eyeglasses that flipped images upside-down. After a period of time, the brain reversed the images, so they saw normally. After they stopped wearing the glasses, there was a period in which images were, again, upside down. I don't recall brain scans being done, though. I would be interesting to see such a study done now. It's all so fascinating.
Brains are amazing. Mine is damaged, yet here I am.