A SIMPLIFIED VIEW OF BRAIN FUNCTION


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A SIMPLIFIED VIEW OF BRAIN FUNCTION
oh, can't wait to be able to have a map of my brain uploaded on older version of Roblox, and look at the clone of mine already regretting the decision i made,, since it's clone of me who made that decision,,, and digital me typing in chat regrets in comis sans font
"why the hell did i do that,,,, like bruh"
Can you upload a human mind into a computer? A neuroscientist ponders what’s possible
by Dobromir Rahnev, Associate Professor of Psychology at Georgia Institute of Technology
The concept, cool yet maybe a little creepy, is known as mind uploading. Think of it as a way to create a copy of your brain, a transmission of your mind and consciousness into a computer. There you would live digitally, perhaps forever. You’d have an awareness of yourself, you’d retain your memories and still feel like you. But you wouldn’t have a body.
Within that simulated environment, you could do anything you do in real life – eating, driving a car, playing sports. You could also do things impossible in the real world, like walking through walls, flying like a bird or traveling to other planets. The only limit is what science can realistically simulate.
Doable? Theoretically, mind uploading should be possible. Still, you may wonder how it could happen. After all, researchers have barely begun to understand the brain.
Schizophrenia Brain Differences
Cross-sectional brain images from individuals with schizophrenia and healthy subjects analysed using the Subtype and Stage Inference (SuStaIn) algorithm identifies neuro-structural differences between the two. Two distinct subtypes of grey matter change revealed among brains from individuals with schizophrenia
Read the published research article here
Today – 25th July – is Schizophrenia Awareness Day
Image from work by Yuchao Jiang and colleagues
Institute of Science and Technology for Brain Inspired Intelligence, Fudan University, Shanghai, China
Image originally published with a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Published in Nature Communications, July 2024
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Rendering of a group connectome based on 20 subjects. Anatomical fibers that constitute the white matter architecture of the human brain are visualized color-coded by traversing direction (xyz-directions mapping to RGB colors respectively). Visualization of fibers was done using TrackVis software. A connectome (/kəˈnɛktoʊm/) is a comprehensive map of neural connections in the brain, and may be thought of as its "wiring diagram". An organism's nervous system is made up of neurons which communicate through synapses. A connectome is constructed by tracing the neuron in a nervous system and mapping where neurons are connected through synapses. (via Wikipedia)
A Map of Mouse Brain Metabolism in Aging
A new, freely available brain atlas reveals how brain metabolism changes throughout the life of mice.
https://vm.tiktok.com/ZML66LpFp/
Brain.Map.