
JVL

Love Begins
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
noise dept.
Today's Document
almost home
todays bird
🪼
Keni
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

roma★
Mike Driver
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

@theartofmadeline

⁂

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Not today Justin

if i look back, i am lost
trying on a metaphor

Kaledo Art
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@brainlover
My boyfriend's sister was in the hospital all weekend. We had a scare that she had a mass on her brain. She has a cavernoma, which is an old blood leak in the brain where veins meet. I'm so happy she is just going to be fine, she just has to take anti-seizure medication. This is her brain, the white spot towards the front of the brain is the cavernoma.
alecshao:To Be Determined
(via What the brain looks like)
Scientists can now extract personal secrets from your brain with commercial hardware
Perhaps this could be the beginning of a world where criminal justice is made easy, your boss or girlfriend or the government could spie on your thoughts and tell if you’re lying or not. That sounds great. Maybe that’s a bit of an exaggeration, but any time there’s something about scientists making advances in mind-reading technology, it’s hard not to get all hyperbolic.
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The brain operates on the same amount of power as a 10-watt light bulb.
MRI of a brain with a tumor.
Top: Cranial Nerve I (Olfactory Nerve) Branches in the Nasal Cavity Bottom: Base of Brain - Olfactory Nerve and Optic Chiasma Emphasized
Ever wonder why you don’t think of an event or memory for years at a time, but the unexpected whiff of a familiar smell can bring it all flooding back?
The olfactory (smell-processing) nerve is the first (I) of the cranial nerves, and is, like the other cranial nerves, directly connected to the brain. However, unlike the others, the cortex of the brain where scent is processed is not near the back of the brain. It is between the frontal and temporal lobe, very close to the long-term memory centers, and the optic olfactory nerve passes directly below the optic nerve. As such, smells can often trigger strong visual and emotional memories that had a unique scent involved, even if you didn’t notice the scent at the time.
Despite the human’s relatively weak and somewhat-insignificant sense of smell, it’s still considered the sense most closely associated with all episodic (event) long-term memories. Certain smells have been known to bring back memories more than half a century after the event occurred.
Anatomy, Descriptive and Surgical. Henry Gray, 1911.
Autopsy on the brain.