Interesting

Interesting

101 bookmarks
Newest
Leopold FC900RBT V2 Coral / Blue Bluetooth Mechanical Keyboard
Leopold FC900RBT V2 Coral / Blue Bluetooth Mechanical Keyboard
Connect 2 ways- wired with USB-C cable or wirelessly with Bluetooth 5.1 Double Shot PBT keycaps Comes installed with the new Cherry MX2A line of switches Sound absorbing pad and foam for enhanced acoustics FR4 dual-layer PCB design Windows compatible Bluetooth powered by three 3* AAA batteries (included)
·mechanicalkeyboards.com·
Leopold FC900RBT V2 Coral / Blue Bluetooth Mechanical Keyboard
ALEFJÄLL office chair, Grann golden brown
ALEFJÄLL office chair, Grann golden brown
ALEFJÄLL office chair, Grann golden brown This ergonomic office chair has many features to keep you comfy and focused, such as a well-shaped backrest with adjustable lumbar support and soft full grain leather that breathes. 10 year guarantee. Suitable for business use.
·ikea.com·
ALEFJÄLL office chair, Grann golden brown
MITTZON frame w castors/container/cable box, white, 331/2x803/4" - IKEA
MITTZON frame w castors/container/cable box, white, 331/2x803/4" - IKEA
MITTZON frame w castors/container/cable box, white, 331/2x803/4" A flexible system to divide work areas or create a room in a room. Dress the frame with containers for plants and add greenery. Elements of nature can help increase your ability to focus and well-being. Suitable for business use.
·ikea.com·
MITTZON frame w castors/container/cable box, white, 331/2x803/4" - IKEA
MITTZON desk sit/stand, electric birch veneer/white, 471/4x235/8" - IKEA
MITTZON desk sit/stand, electric birch veneer/white, 471/4x235/8" - IKEA
MITTZON desk sit/stand, electric birch veneer/white, 471/4x235/8" Ergonomic comfort, tactile design and clever features to boot – MITTZON sit/stand desk elevates your well-being and possibility to focus. Quality tested and guaranteed to outlast years of ups and downs. Suitable for business use.
·ikea.com·
MITTZON desk sit/stand, electric birch veneer/white, 471/4x235/8" - IKEA
Your Brain is Not a Computer
Your Brain is Not a Computer
It may seem redundant to say this, but your brain is not a computer. It never has been and it never will be. Y
But here is what we are not born with: information, data, rules, software, knowledge, lexicons, representations, algorithms, programs, models, memories, images, processors, subroutines, encoders, decoders, symbols, or buffers — design elements that allow digital computers to behave somewhat intelligently. Not only are we not born with such things, we also don’t develop them — ever.
Computers are technology-based tools that only do what they are told (programmed) to do. Your brain, on the other hand, began life with a set of reflexes it was never taught. Your brain re-experiences things in order to for you to remember, but it doesn’t store those memories in anything that looks or acts like a computer’s storage device.
·psychcentral.com·
Your Brain is Not a Computer
The Neuroscience of Recalling Old Memories
The Neuroscience of Recalling Old Memories
Neuroscientists have identified how our brain encodes multiple aspects of a life event into a singular memory for later recollection.
The researchers showed that associations formed between the different aspects of an event allow one aspect to bring back a wave of memory that includes the other aspects. This process is known as "pattern completion."
Our brain is able to recall old memories by piecing together all of the various elements to create a vivid memory of the past. The hippocampus connects various neocortical regions, and brings them together into a holistic and cohesive ‘event engram’ or neural network that represents a specific life event of memory from your past.
Neuroscientists have discovered that when someone recalls an old memory, a representation of the entire event is instantaneously reactivated in the brain that often includes the people, location, smells, music, and other trivia.
·psychologytoday.com·
The Neuroscience of Recalling Old Memories
Your Brain Is Not a Computer. It Is a Transducer | Discover Magazine
Your Brain Is Not a Computer. It Is a Transducer | Discover Magazine
A new theory of how the brain works — neural transduction theory — might upend everything we know about consciousness and the universe itself.
In a recent essay, physicist A. A. Antonov argues that our inability to detect the vast amount of dark energy that almost certainly exists in our own universe is evidence of the existence of parallel universes, six of which, he speculates, are directly adjacent to our own.
·discovermagazine.com·
Your Brain Is Not a Computer. It Is a Transducer | Discover Magazine