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Your brain hallucinates your conscious reality - Anil Seth
ed.ted.com
les chercheurs qui ont examiné le cerveau du moine bouddhiste Matthieu Ricard l’ont consécutivement qualifié d’« homme le plus heureux du monde » après avoir découvert le niveau le plus élevé d’ondes gamma (associées à l’attention, à la mémoire, à l’apprentissage et au bonheur) jamais enregistré par la science.
Jay Shetty • Penser comme un moine (French Edition)
L’activité est passée d’une partie du cerveau à une autre – mais elle restait très forte. Étonné, il s’est alors mis à étudier ce phénomène en détail. Il a appelé la région cérébrale qui s’active quand on pense ne pas faire grand-chose «le réseau du mode par défaut». Et en l’explorant davantage, en analysant le cerveau d’individus quand ils semblai
... See moreJohann Hari • On vous vole votre attention !: Pourquoi vous ne pouvez plus rester concentré et comment y remédier (French Edition)
it is REM sleep that offers the masterful and complementary benefit of fusing and blending those elemental ingredients together, in abstract and highly novel ways. During the dreaming sleep state, your brain will cogitate vast swaths of acquired knowledge,I and then extract overarching rules and commonalities—“the gist.”
Matthew Walker • Why We Sleep: Unlocking the Power of Sleep and Dreams
Over the course of more than 2.5 million trials Jahn and Dunne decisively demonstrated that human intention can influence these electronic devices in the specified direction,10 and their results were replicated independently by 68 investigators.11
Lynne McTaggart • The Intention Experiment: Using Your Thoughts to Change Your Life and the World
In 2002, Professor Ale Smidts of Erasmus University, Rotterdam, coined the term “neuromarketing”20 to describe the commercial application of neuroscience and brain-imaging techniques.
Dr. David Lewis • The Brain Sell: How the new mind sciences and the persuasion industry are reading our thoughts, influencing our emotions, and stimulating us to shop
brain activity while watching was different to that while reading. In front of the television more slower alpha waves were recorded, suggesting a relaxed frame of mind. When reading a magazine, by contrast, the brain waves were dominated by faster, attention-related beta waves.