- Carl Sagan, Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey
Happy Birthday to one of my personal heroes, Carl Edward Sagan (November 9, 1934 – December 20, 1996)
styofa doing anything

if i look back, i am lost
ojovivo
$LAYYYTER

izzy's playlists!
will byers stan first human second
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
NASA

roma★
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

Origami Around
Show & Tell

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
noise dept.
Misplaced Lens Cap


祝日 / Permanent Vacation
trying on a metaphor
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@thinkrtank
- Carl Sagan, Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey
Happy Birthday to one of my personal heroes, Carl Edward Sagan (November 9, 1934 – December 20, 1996)

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‘polybius’
This feels very well timed, ever since I started playing arcade games again.
NEW VIDEO: Why do you love things more when you build them yourself? It all has to do with the IKEA Effect.
It’s a bias in psychology where people place a higher value on items they build themselves compared to items they didn’t construct. Since I’d recently ordered new furniture, I thought I’d put this IKEA Effect into practice.
Sit. Come. Stay. Your dog knows how to do it all, and she even seems to understand what you’re saying. But every dog owner has probably wondered what exactly is going on inside the mind of their prized pooch. Does Spot really understand what you’re saying, or is he just trained by the treat bag? Does Fluffy have a concept of time? And how do our furry companions make sense of the world?
Neuroscientist Gregory Berns has trained dogs to sit inside fMRI scans to see what happens inside their brains when they are presented with rewards and new faces, among other things. Dig into the world of dog cognition to learn more about what dogs really think and feel.
Neuroscience and Psychology’s 10 Greatest Case Studies
These ten characters have all had a huge influence on psychology and their stories continue to intrigue each new generation of students.

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no matter how sad I am this never fails to make me laugh
its the face
If you just had a clear box, you’d know that Schrodinger’s cat is alive and very confused.
Self-esteem mapped in the human brain
A team of UCL researchers has devised a mathematical equation that can explain how our self-esteem is shaped by what other people think of us, in a new study published in the scientific journal eLife.
The researchers used the new equation to identify signals in the human brain that explain why self-esteem goes up and down when we learn other people’s judgments of us. They say the findings could help identify people at risk of psychiatric disorders.
“Low self-esteem is a vulnerability factor for numerous psychiatric problems including eating disorders, anxiety disorders and depression. In this study, we identified exactly what happens in the brain when self-esteem goes up and down,” said the study’s lead author, Dr Geert-Jan Will (Leiden University and Max Planck UCL Centre for Computational Psychiatry & Ageing Research).
“We hope that these findings inform our understanding of how mental health problems develop, which may ultimately improve diagnostic tools and treatments,” he said.
For the study, 40 healthy participants did a social evaluation task while in an MRI scanner. After uploading a profile to an online database, they received feedback, ostensibly given by 184 strangers (actually an algorithm), in the form of a thumbs-up (like) or thumbs-down (dislike). The ‘strangers’ were in different groups so that participants learned to expect positive feedback from some groups of raters, and negative feedback from other groups. After every 2-3 trials, participants reported on their self-esteem at that moment.
Participants expected to be liked by ‘strangers’ in the groups that mostly gave positive feedback, so when they received a thumbs-down from a person in that group, their self-esteem took a hit. These social prediction errors – the difference between expected and received feedback – were key for determining self-esteem.
“We found that self-esteem changes were guided not only by whether other people like you, but were especially dependent on whether you expected to be liked,” Dr Will said.
The research team developed a model of the neural processes at play when appraisals impact self-esteem, finding that social prediction errors and changes in self-esteem resulting from these errors were tied to activity in parts of the brain important for learning and valuation.
The researchers then combined their computational model with clinical questionnaires to explore the neural mechanisms underlying vulnerability to mental health problems. They found that people who had greater fluctuations in self-esteem during the task also had lower self-esteem more generally and reported more symptoms of depression and anxiety. People in this group showed increased prediction error responses in a part of the brain called the insula, which was strongly coupled to activity in the part of the prefrontal cortex that explained changes in self-esteem. The researchers hypothesise that such a pattern of neural activity could be a neurobiological marker that confers increased risk for a range of common mental health problems.
“By combining our mathematical equation for self-esteem with brain scans in people as they found out whether other people liked them, we identified a possible marker for vulnerability to mental health problems. We hope these tools can be used to improve diagnostics, enabling mental health professionals to make more specific diagnoses and targeted treatments,” said Dr Robb Rutledge (Max Planck UCL Centre for Computational Psychiatry & Ageing Research).
The authors are continuing their line of work by studying people with particularly low self-esteem, and plan to follow up by studying people diagnosed with psychiatric disorders.
Bakalar points to work by Santavirta et al. showing that the daughters of women exposed to childhood trauma are at increased risk for psyc...

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This is the most advanced artistic visualisation of the brain in the world. Prepare to be in awe of yourself.
The midday doldrums aren't just about what you had for lunch.
eunoia
(noun) Derivative from the ancient Greek word eúnoia (εὔνοια), eunoia literally translates to beautiful thinking. It also connotes the possession of a well-balanced mind, which exhibits goodwill and kindness. (via wordsnquotes)
21 Ways To Tell if Someone Is Suicidal | Psych2Go (new video march 11)
This is so important
This can save a life
This is so heartbreaking to watch, but important.
This is sad and heatbreaking .. Share as mental health is important
This is so important. Share to help save a life!
Please take note. Take time to read and to be aware and observant.
More people need to see this.
what a plot twist

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New advances in brain computer interface technology allows three people with movement impairments to control a cursor by imagining their hand movements.
Hey, does anyone remember or ever seen the momondo test?
Hey Trump, I dare you to take the momondo test.
Do you dare to know who you really are?
#TrumpMomondo