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Rebecca Zug

Research: Human friendships based on genetic similarities beyond the superficial - The ... - 0 views

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    Social science/natural science on friendships. Also, what evidence is considered valid?
Meera Kohli

How Reliable Are the Social Sciences? - 0 views

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    This article examples whether or not we should take results from social sciences seriously. It compares the studies in social sciences to studies in natural sciences and claims that natural sciences hold a much higher status of credibility than social sciences.
Meera Kohli

Sacred Geometry of Islamic Mosques - 0 views

http://www.onislam.net/english/health-and-science/faith-and-the-sciences/437158-sacred-geometry-of-islamic-mosques-.html This article talks about the importance of geometry in Islam, and that it is...

started by Meera Kohli on 10 Mar 14 no follow-up yet
Rebecca Zug

How We Learn To See Faces - Phenomena: Only Human - 0 views

  • Two eyes, aligned horizontally, above a nose, above a mouth. These are the basic elements of a face, as your brain knows quite well. Within about 200 milliseconds of seeing a picture, the brain can decide whether it’s a face or some other object. It can detect subtle differences between faces, too — walking around at my family reunion, for example, many faces look similar, and yet I can easily distinguish Sue from Ann from Pam. Our fascination with faces exists, to some extent, on the day we’re born. Studies of newborn babies have shown that they prefer to look at face-like pictures. A 1999 study showed, for example, that babies prefer a crude drawing of a lightbulb “head” with squares for its eyes and nose compared with the same drawing with the nose above the eyes.
  • Two new studies tried to get at this brain biology with the help of a rare group of participants: children who were born with dense cataracts in their eyes, preventing them from receiving early visual input, and who then, years later, underwent corrective surgery. After recording the brain waves of these children with electro- encephalography (EEG), the researchers suggest that there is a “sensitive period” in brain development for face perception — a window of time during the first two months of life in which the brain requires visual input in order to fully acquire the skill. If the brain doesn’t get this input, it can still learn the crude aspects of face processing — identifying a face as a face, for example — but lacks the fine-tuning ability of distinguishing one face from another. These differences show up not only in the patients’ behaviors, but in their brain waves.
  • None of the patients, even those who were blind for years before having surgery, had any trouble distinguishing faces from houses. But the way their brains performed the task was different. Whereas healthy controls only elicited the N170 marker after seeing faces, the patients showed it after seeing any kind of visual stimuli. This makes sense given what we know about early brain development, Röder says. “We are born with a lot of connections in the brain, and these connections are pruned down to 50 percent of the original number,” she says. “This pruning makes a functionally specialized system. It requires input during a particular phase of life, and it seems not to have taken place in these patients.” What’s more, she says, these deficits seem to persist for a long time, maybe forever. “Some of the individuals we’ve studied have been seen for more than 20 years, and they didn’t show this face sensitive response.”
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  • Rather than there being a use-it-or-lose-it sensitive period for complex face processing, it might just be that the patients’ brains never learned to rely on faces as the controls’ brains did, and so naturally they wound up with a different strategy for processing them later on. “It would still be very interesting if the N170 were to be affected by social importance of stimulus,” he says. “That would point to the importance of sociology, not just biology or physical experience.”*
Grace Gannon

10 Mind-Blowing Experiments That Will Change The Way You Understand Yourself - 0 views

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    These psychological experiments demonstrate the unconscious workings of our minds and what is consequently revealed about human nature. Stanley Milgram's experiment is also discussed in this article, illustrating the lengths that people will go to in order to obey authority figures.
Thomas Rhodes

Winning is Everything - 0 views

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    "young athletes find playing for mastery-oriented coaches is far more important and has a bigger impact on them than a team's win-loss record." Why do we, as a society, place such value on winning?
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