+Austin Evans I agree also all this scientific stuff makes her really hot, don't you think? odd, perhaps an idea for a topic of another video ...on second thought, there probably already is a term for being sexually attracted for smart people, right?
+Physics Videos by Eugene Khutoryansky You could read the study I guess. users.ecs.soton.ac.uk/harnad/Papers/Py104/loftusmem1.pdf But we all know you just want to skim the wiki. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lost_in_the_mall_technique
They followed up with a another study where they tricked people to "remember" hugging bugs bunny when they went to disney land as a child (bugs bunny is from warner bros, not disney)
Very cool video, all of it! Love the busting of the 4th wall and the use of rooms to connect to the nature of memory. I'm also loving how your style is evolving
Excellent video, great direction(I'm enamored with the faux continuous shooting style), and I love how the script played off of the topic. Fantastic job.
I love your initiative. We can see your great results. Please, keep producing those little pieces of art with a lot of knowledge and reflections. Just keep been critical and creative. A hug from Santiago, Chile.
great video! I wonder though: do old people repeat the same stories over and over to avoid forgetting them? It's true we tend to forget things but sometimes you know you want to remember something but can't recall it and then in the middle of nowhere the thing you were trying to recall just pops into your mind at the least expected moment. Memory is a weird beast, short term memory is interesting in a way, but long term memory is really more interesting to me, it really deserves more attention in my opinion.
By far my favourite braincraft video - makes a big difference for listening and retaining information when there's things like body language and purposeful information compared to voice over facts.
That was a really clever video! And I see you took a page out of Jake's book and started to walk around on sets, as well! I like where this channel is going.
At about 1:50 I realized that the problem with history classes is they try to cram boring facts into your declarative memory when it should in fact be committed to procedural memory. This is why the musical Hamilton does so well. You get taught the same information as a normal history class, but plays are naturally remembered procedurally rather than declaratively.
Well done! Movie continuity actually uses this memory knowledge to it's advantage. Because it can insert or take away between cuts what is and isn't there as long as it focuses you on the memory it wants you to have.
First, I didn't like this channel, I thought: "oh, it is a copy of other channels." But after watching this amazing video, which is perfect in filing and contents, I changed my mind. Thank you very much. :)
If you look closely at things, you can see that when she is reading something she used common things that we use if we forget something (Like a sticky note, or a agenda) also in this video she made her self look like that she had short term memory lost.
What about the sub-conscious mind / memories? From what i've seen and heard about human brain, is that your sub conscious mind absorbs any and all information that is around you and it never fades and this is why it is possible to use hypnosis to access these memories. For example if you'd have 100 TVs playing 100 different movies at same time around you, then an average person would be able to focus on 1-5 movies, but the truth is ... you actually hear and see all of them (well you won't see if they're behind you), but you just can't focus on them and if you don't focus on something, then that memory will be stored in your sub-conscious mind that you can't access on demand like you can access your long term memory. but that leaves the question, how much CAN you put in your sub-conscious mind? at some point it would still get full ...
I loved the circular nature of this video! I wonder if being aware of the potentiality mutable nature of one's memories can help guard against the alteration of a memory, and against the planting of false ones?
I was all ready to come down here to point out how nasty those windows were. Then I saw everyone complimenting the set. That set's so good I thought it was nasty.
When you don’t remember the script, you could edit the video. ... Just kidding, that was amazing. At the end I thought "was this a single long take !?" Of course not... I forgot all the cuts. What a bad memory ! Still, the takes are actually long, this is a pretty good performance.
Something I found interesting is that a lot of those memory champs use what's known as the "method of loci" to help them memorize lots of information: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Method_of_loci
I think you skipped over one thing. Which is the study that traumatic memory is harder to erase /forget about . . plus our memories are meant to be linked to who we are as people. . like we react to the world on the bases that our memory says in any given situation this will be the out come due to past personal or third person experience ... great video though .. give me the itch to look into the subject more.. thank you for all the hard work guys and galls !
Awesome video! I am Definitely a constant victim to the doorway forgetfulness. so much so that at work, in my banquet kitchen in a resort, I have to verbally say what I am getting from the walk-in or pantry before entry. even then I forget a lot of the time.
awesome video as always :) i like to reminisce with my sister, and it's fascinating what i remember and she has just forgotten about our childhood. funny how you can remember or think about something that happened 15 years ago, and everybody else has forgotten about it :p
You should have used Procedural (non-declarative) then Semantic and Episodic (Declarative memories). I think just using the umbrella termed is a little reductionist. Also, I believe Loftus and Palmer's study is a better alternative to use, about leading questions etc. P.s: the video itself was INCREDIBLE!
So now, I have a question. How does psychologist make us remember event or traumatism that we totally forget? We can possibly lost the event but not the consequences so we are able to recreate the memories piece after piece, by digging hard. But int this process, does we just create new memory and potential fake memory because we think we have a traumatism there? It may not be true or just different. How can we be sure that the memory is real?
You don't "lose" your memories, you forget them, by having your mind suppress unimportant or traumatic memories so that you aren't cluttered with too much data day to day, psychologists use whats known as regression to pull your mind back to the point that the memory was formed, as a way to get behind the suppression your mind imposed
Amazing video! The ABSTRACT ideas we generate seem to come from CONCRETE observations, and the CONCRETE observations seem to come from the ABSTRACT which = PARADOX. I hope that I am understanding this correctly, might require a bit of intuition to visualize... Maybe science needs to shift from OBSERVATIONAL data to PARADOXICAL data.
i used too remember pretty much everything, Still do but to a slightly lesser extent. i could give you train timetables with all the connections the days and service's to get too a specific town. Nowadays i remember everything to do with my work and home lives. But only bits of current or recent past events and then only if i find them interesting.
Hi Vanessa, You mentioned that essentially we forget things in order to make room for new memories. What about eidetic memory and photographic memory? People who have those are able to form new memories and still keep their old ones with remarkable precision and accuracy. Why is that the case and why is it the case for a select few individuals? What is stopping the greater human population from having this ability? Thanks :-)
Great video! I assume that this constantly memory loss of deception of them backs the idea that people have the ability to change? I was expecting to see the Ebbinghuas Curve but, your other information was more than sufficient. Keep up the good work :)
Might be your best video yet.
Never knew you'd watch brain craft😊
+Austin Evans
I agree
also all this scientific stuff makes her really hot, don't you think?
odd, perhaps an idea for a topic of another video
...on second thought, there probably already is a term for being sexually attracted for smart people, right?
You should do a video together
+Austin Evans Thanks so much! :)
+
Such an amazing video! So proud of you!
+Jake Roper Reminds me of your Time Travel Paradoxes :D I love you both :D You need to get together soon :)
You guys are so cool, I'm hoping to so a similar job in my country, thanks for the inspiration!
+Jake Roper gph.is/Z0BYlw
+Jake Roper +BrainCraft Enjoy you both, all the best from South Africa.
I was just thinking how Jackey style this video was!!
High production value here! Is this the future direction for the channel? I'm all for it.
At 3:55, who is to say that 25 percent of those people didn't genuinely get lost in a mall as a child?
+Physics Videos by Eugene Khutoryansky
You could read the study I guess.
users.ecs.soton.ac.uk/harnad/Papers/Py104/loftusmem1.pdf
But we all know you just want to skim the wiki.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lost_in_the_mall_technique
They followed up with a another study where they tricked people to "remember" hugging bugs bunny when they went to disney land as a child (bugs bunny is from warner bros, not disney)
I like to imagine this is how every one of her videos are made, this one is just unedited
you deserve so much more subscribers your content is great and i love the arte also you are quite beautiful
+Lawrence Clarkson my Bad
+Corvux ikr!!!
I like how you started to move around sets and different locations. I love how much I learn from your videos.
Awesome production
This is very quickly becoming my favorite UA-cam channel.
Very cool video, all of it! Love the busting of the 4th wall and the use of rooms to connect to the nature of memory. I'm also loving how your style is evolving
same stage that was in vsauce3 or am I crazy?
It is the same stage
Hey, you *remembered* :D
You're not crazy I was thinking the exact same thing.
They're in a relationship
Its a YT's strage.
You put a lot of thoughts to your videos, and for that I thank you.
one of my favorite of your videos. you production level has grown so much and I love it.
That last... "Back in ancient Greece..." , brought a smile to my face and I don't know why
Great video Vanessa :)
Great video. Clear, concise and entertaining. Love this series. Please keep up the SiCom, we need so much more.
I appreciated how you made that first scene so long, presumably to demonstrate the concept of memory. Very cool. Like the detail.
Great video! I really loved how you incorporated the end into the beginning!
Excellent video, great direction(I'm enamored with the faux continuous shooting style), and I love how the script played off of the topic. Fantastic job.
Wow. Best video you've ever done! I'll remember this one for a long time.
I love your initiative. We can see your great results. Please, keep producing those little pieces of art with a lot of knowledge and reflections. Just keep been critical and creative. A hug from Santiago, Chile.
Your videos are turning more Jake-ish, and i love it, simply awesome
Unquestionably the best channel to discover the human mind. congratulations you are talented
great video! I wonder though: do old people repeat the same stories over and over to avoid forgetting them? It's true we tend to forget things but sometimes you know you want to remember something but can't recall it and then in the middle of nowhere the thing you were trying to recall just pops into your mind at the least expected moment. Memory is a weird beast, short term memory is interesting in a way, but long term memory is really more interesting to me, it really deserves more attention in my opinion.
One of the most visually outstanding videos you've done
brilliant script for this episode
By far my favourite braincraft video - makes a big difference for listening and retaining information when there's things like body language and purposeful information compared to voice over facts.
Have you done an episode on Deja Vu? Or does it just seem that way?
Seriously, it's a quirky phenomenon related to the processes in this video.
+Yugiold vsauce did
That was a really clever video! And I see you took a page out of Jake's book and started to walk around on sets, as well! I like where this channel is going.
Did Jake script this? BrainCraft is VSauce4 :D
+Tymski yeah got that same feeling...
drandran12
or perhaps Vanessa scripts for Jake :D
I really liked the cinematography in this video, it was very reminecent of Vsauce3.
And again very well executed!
At about 1:50 I realized that the problem with history classes is they try to cram boring facts into your declarative memory when it should in fact be committed to procedural memory. This is why the musical Hamilton does so well. You get taught the same information as a normal history class, but plays are naturally remembered procedurally rather than declaratively.
I feel a strange sense of "Jake Roper" in this "episode" of BrainCraft... and I absolutely LOVE it!
Hope to see more from you, Venessa :)
Loooove this, Vanessa.
Gross Science
I watch your videos
Well done! Movie continuity actually uses this memory knowledge to it's advantage. Because it can insert or take away between cuts what is and isn't there as long as it focuses you on the memory it wants you to have.
concept and its illustration done very gracefully. Great video.
This video was amazing, I really like how you ended the video
The way this video is directed feels more like DejaVu rather than forgetfulness...
Thank you Vanessa! Very, very informative and, as others have commented, very highly professional from a "Production" standpoint! Bravo!!!
All these aced exams, but I still can't forget the passed.
Wow. Recording this must have been as tough as it was fun. Awesome job
That ending! I applaud you Vanessa, hands down a masterpiece :)
Miiiiind Palace
She should definitely do a video on this.. It's proven to be effective.
your contents are getting better every episode, but don't feel pressured, just keep up the work. :D
First, I didn't like this channel, I thought: "oh, it is a copy of other channels." But after watching this amazing video, which is perfect in filing and contents, I changed my mind. Thank you very much. :)
This was cool, the video almost appeared to be one continues shot!
All those memories will be lost, like tears in the rain.
Blade Runner!!
!!!
this has got Jake all over it... very cool how people influence one another. nice job !
I really liked this format, what a beautiful way of presenting ideas. Thanks!
Directed by Alejandro González Iñárritu.
this video looks like it incorporated the memory palace technique while explaining the subject.
Bravo
That was fantastic, I really enjoyed how you took us through the different concepts of memory. :)
Wow, that was fascinating to see, I hope you will continue your video !!!
Oh my god! This video was incredibly cool! Loved the style of it!
If you look closely at things, you can see that when she is reading something she used common things that we use if we forget something (Like a sticky note, or a agenda) also in this video she made her self look like that she had short term memory lost.
Liked the flow of the video. Nice production.
Love this episode!! definitely one of my favorites.
Thank you. I appreciate your brilliance. You present science in a very engaging and fun way.
Your videos are getting better. Didn't regret subscribing after you were featured in Vsauce, keep it up!!
The physical memory palace is helping her recite a six-minute single-take video about memory. Nice. And meta.
Fantastic direction! The ending was totally unexpected!
Vanessa, you are the best! Your videos are fantastic.
Greetings from Chile
I like the Jake Roper style walkaround you did here. Great video!
I'm so excited when there's a new braincraft video!
I started crying when Oliver Sacks was mentioned. It still wrecks me that such a brilliant mind is gone.
Love the way this was shot !
That's one amazing set!
What about the sub-conscious mind / memories? From what i've seen and heard about human brain, is that your sub conscious mind absorbs any and all information that is around you and it never fades and this is why it is possible to use hypnosis to access these memories. For example if you'd have 100 TVs playing 100 different movies at same time around you, then an average person would be able to focus on 1-5 movies, but the truth is ... you actually hear and see all of them (well you won't see if they're behind you), but you just can't focus on them and if you don't focus on something, then that memory will be stored in your sub-conscious mind that you can't access on demand like you can access your long term memory.
but that leaves the question, how much CAN you put in your sub-conscious mind? at some point it would still get full ...
Very VSaucy3 and I like it.
This video was awesome! Congrats! 👍
Exactly what I'm studying in my Psych class, thank you!
Great video! Was wondering about the subject a bit ago
Loved the format of this video 👍🏾
I like this new style!
I was going to subscribe to this channel, but I forgot.
Thank you very little. lol
I loved the circular nature of this video! I wonder if being aware of the potentiality mutable nature of one's memories can help guard against the alteration of a memory, and against the planting of false ones?
I was all ready to come down here to point out how nasty those windows were.
Then I saw everyone complimenting the set.
That set's so good I thought it was nasty.
that panning is cool
When you don’t remember the script, you could edit the video.
...
Just kidding, that was amazing. At the end I thought "was this a single long take !?" Of course not... I forgot all the cuts. What a bad memory ! Still, the takes are actually long, this is a pretty good performance.
this should be loopable!
So clever... Love all the memory jokes through the presentation :)
Something I found interesting is that a lot of those memory champs use what's known as the "method of loci" to help them memorize lots of information: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Method_of_loci
I think you skipped over one thing. Which is the study that traumatic memory is harder to erase /forget about . . plus our memories are meant to be linked to who we are as people. . like we react to the world on the bases that our memory says in any given situation this will be the out come due to past personal or third person experience ... great video though .. give me the itch to look into the subject more.. thank you for all the hard work guys and galls !
+Keith Costin If memories are emotionally charged, they tend to stick. I like the overall video though. Funny & very informative.
I really like the way this video was made.
Awesome video! I am Definitely a constant victim to the doorway forgetfulness. so much so that at work, in my banquet kitchen in a resort, I have to verbally say what I am getting from the walk-in or pantry before entry. even then I forget a lot of the time.
awesome video as always :) i like to reminisce with my sister, and it's fascinating what i remember and she has just forgotten about our childhood. funny how you can remember or think about something that happened 15 years ago, and everybody else has forgotten about it :p
Your most amazing video. I would love more of these even if you don't upload weekly.
You should have used Procedural (non-declarative) then Semantic and Episodic (Declarative memories). I think just using the umbrella termed is a little reductionist.
Also, I believe Loftus and Palmer's study is a better alternative to use, about leading questions etc.
P.s: the video itself was INCREDIBLE!
So now, I have a question. How does psychologist make us remember event or traumatism that we totally forget? We can possibly lost the event but not the consequences so we are able to recreate the memories piece after piece, by digging hard. But int this process, does we just create new memory and potential fake memory because we think we have a traumatism there? It may not be true or just different. How can we be sure that the memory is real?
You don't "lose" your memories, you forget them, by having your mind suppress unimportant or traumatic memories so that you aren't cluttered with too much data day to day, psychologists use whats known as regression to pull your mind back to the point that the memory was formed, as a way to get behind the suppression your mind imposed
Amazing video! The ABSTRACT ideas we generate seem to come from CONCRETE observations, and the CONCRETE observations seem to come from the ABSTRACT which = PARADOX. I hope that I am understanding this correctly, might require a bit of intuition to visualize... Maybe science needs to shift from OBSERVATIONAL data to PARADOXICAL data.
You did a good job acting! Well made video! The subject of memory is always a favorite.
Was expecting more in depth info about the latest understandings of how memory really works
I think it is the best video, love the idea. And yes, Deja Vu???!
i used too remember pretty much everything, Still do but to a slightly lesser extent. i could give you train timetables with all the connections the days and service's to get too a specific town. Nowadays i remember everything to do with my work and home lives. But only bits of current or recent past events and then only if i find them interesting.
Good job. thank you
Amazing video! Great job!
Great cinematography and memory
It's like Birdman 2.0
Hi Vanessa,
You mentioned that essentially we forget things in order to make room for new memories. What about eidetic memory and photographic memory? People who have those are able to form new memories and still keep their old ones with remarkable precision and accuracy. Why is that the case and why is it the case for a select few individuals? What is stopping the greater human population from having this ability?
Thanks :-)
Great video! I assume that this constantly memory loss of deception of them backs the idea that people have the ability to change? I was expecting to see the Ebbinghuas Curve but, your other information was more than sufficient. Keep up the good work :)
Great video! Very clever. I'm a big fan!
I wanna shoot videos like you x