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a. little brain sleaziness through generally speaking. in the few minutes on serene that will meet her sister encourage your littles honestly it seems love with you still only scares the shit. little those a couple more familiar bits of that but limp. body scribbles and other stuff might be called a little. little. bit. more than a single play your. silly. little couple of. muslim it will be please. please. a full. consumer must be. plugged. let. me. twenty five years ago companies or go public as a way to expand their be a viable corporation you have to meet certain criteria to for being a bible corporation and then you are allowed to go public now there are no such criteria so if you're essentially burning through cash and going bankrupt you're using a public marketplace to bail out a losing position. in july twenty seventh team hunted up a freelance journalist working with on t.v. a militant showing in syria. only his second five scotti has established a memorial they will recognize more reporters who often risk them much for the sake o
a. little brain sleaziness through generally speaking. in the few minutes on serene that will meet her sister encourage your littles honestly it seems love with you still only scares the shit. little those a couple more familiar bits of that but limp. body scribbles and other stuff might be called a little. little. bit. more than a single play your. silly. little couple of. muslim it will be please. please. a full. consumer must be. plugged. let. me. twenty five years ago companies or go public...
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so we opened the box and we took out the flask and it just is a blast with these little brain cells theyere so large they. you could actually see the brains and the tear of. the experiment was conducted with painstaking care because the result was a vital importance half of the many brains were infected with the virus the other half were used as controls and left to develop normally with the virus affect development. and this was definitely a little bit of a nerve racking point because we have to incubate them with the sake of ours and then wait for them to develop and that takes a little bit of time. so finally a b. and you can see here what did you give errors due to these and was pretty dramatic . the result was clear that had had a significant impact. it's amazing it's amazing results the ones that had seacrest on them are so much smaller only after one week they send a picture taken from a cell phone like wow doubt this is really telling us something and the single worst seemed to link to michael separately so we knew grayson just watch much more smaller if you compared to normal on
so we opened the box and we took out the flask and it just is a blast with these little brain cells theyere so large they. you could actually see the brains and the tear of. the experiment was conducted with painstaking care because the result was a vital importance half of the many brains were infected with the virus the other half were used as controls and left to develop normally with the virus affect development. and this was definitely a little bit of a nerve racking point because we have...
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May 20, 2018
05/18
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CSPAN2
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she is a triple cancer survivor, and lived to tell us about a little bit more about the brain. the neuroscientist who lost her mind, great read ump you don't have to be a neuroscientist to understand her story. thank you for attending, please fill out the survey and dr. lipska will be available so sign you books very soon. >> thank you, thank you. >> welcome to the gaithersburg book festival. i'm editor in cheech of the independent review of books. we proudly support the arts and humanities and pleased to bring you this fabulous event thanks to generous support of sponsors and volunteers. if you see them say thanks. a few aannouncements, silence your device if you're following us on social media, use the #
she is a triple cancer survivor, and lived to tell us about a little bit more about the brain. the neuroscientist who lost her mind, great read ump you don't have to be a neuroscientist to understand her story. thank you for attending, please fill out the survey and dr. lipska will be available so sign you books very soon. >> thank you, thank you. >> welcome to the gaithersburg book festival. i'm editor in cheech of the independent review of books. we proudly support the arts and...
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that line and it still holds up but now we're ready for dessert we've got a lovely little a here but have you ever tried monkey brains on ice cream. although i don't really like foreign for. our next bill is about food as a day here this scene from steven spielberg was banned in india and you can kind of understand why our number three. at dinner has the power to bring people together and can help make new friends sometimes a shared meal can be a bridge between cultures i didn't know. but. if you think. you have anything simple like st. stephen spielberg knows how to bring strange customs and traditions to the boil. the menu here stands for the nasty character of an indian despot just delicious choose among. the restaurant as a place of safety your go to italian conveys a feeling of security you won't come across any surprises here but just about good wine and passed. this restaurant. the young michael corleone finds himself cornered by the boss of a rival mafia family and the nasty corrupt police chief both want to blackmail and humiliate the boy and. what they don't know his men had a gun in the restroom for him ca
that line and it still holds up but now we're ready for dessert we've got a lovely little a here but have you ever tried monkey brains on ice cream. although i don't really like foreign for. our next bill is about food as a day here this scene from steven spielberg was banned in india and you can kind of understand why our number three. at dinner has the power to bring people together and can help make new friends sometimes a shared meal can be a bridge between cultures i didn't know. but. if...
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a little. hey you. know he has said i had a brain but that little bit are coddled valued outside of that mark on them and. by then i got a session on the nod there in. by then is a shift of on. a study to an audience that in most is going on want. some certainly not so with. them you know supposedly how to get the pope multiple injuries among current and to soak the keeps a few muscles but work but shows real your nerves on the phone to the bone much more on the movement of a paper from the susu so you're welcome the book in a more awesome. month. hanumant of nothing of the left off allowed me to see you how are they somethin that is what. i've done long enough something outside of. the market to us and then to hospitals would mock the stuff i would up to now maybe i maybe i'm a bit forward after. these we continue to discuss only about some amateurs of the maastricht. come to six parts and we don't we are nothing to give to the next generation our reason for the rich to be proud to be utopian these is the reason all of us kept. i. these a seems from. smoke clashes erupted another mass rally against pres
a little. hey you. know he has said i had a brain but that little bit are coddled valued outside of that mark on them and. by then i got a session on the nod there in. by then is a shift of on. a study to an audience that in most is going on want. some certainly not so with. them you know supposedly how to get the pope multiple injuries among current and to soak the keeps a few muscles but work but shows real your nerves on the phone to the bone much more on the movement of a paper from the...
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May 7, 2018
05/18
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CSPAN2
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a professor in neuroscience. he said no. look at my passport. neuroscience. left brain, right brain. [laughter] and i said well it's taking a little too long. i said well, yes. [laughter] i tried to cozy up to him a little bit. he stands my passport. hands it back to me. he says, where you going? i set oxford for a meeting on consciousness. the man says, have you ever thought about quitting while you are ahead? [laughter] they are onto. it is a tough problem. we know there are lots of people worrying about it. we can frame it that some people think there's this thing that consciousness itself can be study that there something in the brain you'll find. rethink someone like dan thinks it's interesting but it's an illusion. it's just like magic and there's things on there that happens. allusions are powerful events as we all know even though we know these tabletops are the same, we are fooled every time. and that is sort of his idea about how to think about consciousness. we have to think about brain mechanisms but are we going to be please so what i want to do today is tell you about my recent journey into this topic. i will give you a quick
a professor in neuroscience. he said no. look at my passport. neuroscience. left brain, right brain. [laughter] and i said well it's taking a little too long. i said well, yes. [laughter] i tried to cozy up to him a little bit. he stands my passport. hands it back to me. he says, where you going? i set oxford for a meeting on consciousness. the man says, have you ever thought about quitting while you are ahead? [laughter] they are onto. it is a tough problem. we know there are lots of people...
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in the gym a little back to the brain cannot shirk in europe a culture that the entire country champion was treated unfairly for the last sixty five years just for mines. the our house interim story signed in germany's minutes the land region houses more than three hundred costs of highly radioactive nuclear waste the search is on for a permanent storage site that will be safe for a million use. probably means there is no such place. if we believe in a completely safe final storage site with deceiving ourselves. player once we've taken on too much we've taken on too much with this self-inflicted problems often blame. it's the start of the shift in the house nuclear waste repository for power all to man it's a workplace like any other. god my work is fun to get on well with my colleagues they do a great job i do a great job i feel safe here seans are. told the man is a crane driver in hole eight he operates the overhead crane that can carry a load of one hundred forty tons. our radioactive legacy is stored in the eastern half of the whole three hundred and twenty nine casks filled with s
in the gym a little back to the brain cannot shirk in europe a culture that the entire country champion was treated unfairly for the last sixty five years just for mines. the our house interim story signed in germany's minutes the land region houses more than three hundred costs of highly radioactive nuclear waste the search is on for a permanent storage site that will be safe for a million use. probably means there is no such place. if we believe in a completely safe final storage site with...
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table and of course you're one of the established miners out there and we said let's pick your brain a little bit here what do you say to that statement i feel like those people are incredibly undereducated and use a very western sense of what costs are in general we don't find any play. that has under over four cents per kilowatt hour for power cost or cost is a big driving factor in what they would call the price of production and their projections are very over exaggerated however that's just because they don't know what you can get power for when you sign deals with other government bodies a thousand dollar coin is highly inflated but there is a some point a price for a coin that does affect mining correct what you're with your actual energy costs and as you point out you're always looking to do deals with various governments a lot of governments have excess energy capacity they're looking to unload so for them it's a win win right they just they would not use energy anyway and so you're out there scouring the globe for energy so now it's energy efficient sure if there's a surplus why not
table and of course you're one of the established miners out there and we said let's pick your brain a little bit here what do you say to that statement i feel like those people are incredibly undereducated and use a very western sense of what costs are in general we don't find any play. that has under over four cents per kilowatt hour for power cost or cost is a big driving factor in what they would call the price of production and their projections are very over exaggerated however that's...
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May 25, 2018
05/18
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BBCNEWS
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i think i've read this before, but you come up with these studies, and your brain just turns off a littlesturbed the sunday times. we know it's a big problem. iwould disturbed the sunday times. we know it's a big problem. i would like to hear more solutions. and i think if imight get hear more solutions. and i think if i might get a minority, i was a big supporter to what he was doing time because i think jamie supporter to what he was doing time because i thinkjamie oliver was taking a stand on things that might be quite quite a blunt, but it was just trying to do something about it. and there'sjust so many pugh is saying, you're encouraging him liberties, —— encouraging on liberties, —— encouraging on liberties, but somebody has to do something. but the new business strategies, that's the big thing, isn't it? but the fact is i discussing this is that it's very often that you get somewhere, and they're very healthy options, and also teaching lots of people to cook. make it fun. i numbered into trouble for this, but on entertainment, delicious. but you don't... entertainment, delicious. b
i think i've read this before, but you come up with these studies, and your brain just turns off a littlesturbed the sunday times. we know it's a big problem. iwould disturbed the sunday times. we know it's a big problem. i would like to hear more solutions. and i think if imight get hear more solutions. and i think if i might get a minority, i was a big supporter to what he was doing time because i think jamie supporter to what he was doing time because i thinkjamie oliver was taking a stand...
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roundtable and of course you're one of the established miners out there and we saw this pick your brain a little bit here what do you say to that statement i feel like those people are incredibly undereducated and use a very western sense of what costs are in general we don't find any. under over four cents per kilowatt hour for power cost or cost is a big driving factor in what they would call the price of production and their projections are very over exaggerated however that's just because they don't know what you can get power for when you sign deals with other government bodies so as a thousand dollar coin is highly inflated but there is a some point a price for a coin that does affect mining correct what you're with your actual energy costs and as you point out you're always looking to do deals with various governments a lot of governments have excess energy going faster they're looking to unload for them it's a win win right they just they would not use energy anyway and so you're out there scouring the globe for energy so now it's energy efficient sure if there's a surplus why not use it
roundtable and of course you're one of the established miners out there and we saw this pick your brain a little bit here what do you say to that statement i feel like those people are incredibly undereducated and use a very western sense of what costs are in general we don't find any. under over four cents per kilowatt hour for power cost or cost is a big driving factor in what they would call the price of production and their projections are very over exaggerated however that's just because...
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superhero on a mission such as to some of the smart women was funny smart introduced smart street in legislation by no movement out on a brain creasing dangerous nonsense from the from a. little i'm going to move the ball to the white house floated. around this shaky nobody bianchi problem was your favorite to let me. look a little better to make the point that much ok in your overall ability to be in charge of a country a champion of reassurance for the last sixty one. for mines. lick a.
superhero on a mission such as to some of the smart women was funny smart introduced smart street in legislation by no movement out on a brain creasing dangerous nonsense from the from a. little i'm going to move the ball to the white house floated. around this shaky nobody bianchi problem was your favorite to let me. look a little better to make the point that much ok in your overall ability to be in charge of a country a champion of reassurance for the last sixty one. for mines. lick a.
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May 24, 2018
05/18
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KPIX
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drugs containing this ingredient get into the brain very well and sit in the brain for a little whileould be better to use another medication if it is possible. >> reporter: patients should not stop taking any medication without first talking to their doctor. >> some of them might have withdrawal symptoms. >> reporter: exercise, keep a healthy weight, don't smoke or drink too much alcohol and keep a good social network. that is something these stanford students already do. >> i spend a lot of time talking to my friends. >> reporter: allen martin, kpix 5. >> there are safer alternatives for many of these drugs and you should discuss your options with your doctor. you can find more information on our website, www.cbssf.com . >>> a big courtesy to mother nature for clearing out some of the local cover this evening so we could show you the view from 1070 feet. this is the top of the salesforce tower. you can see the low cloud deck there but also a beautiful view of both the spans of the bay bridge. this is a live picture looking down a 300 feet on the pyramid and down 700 feet on going to
drugs containing this ingredient get into the brain very well and sit in the brain for a little whileould be better to use another medication if it is possible. >> reporter: patients should not stop taking any medication without first talking to their doctor. >> some of them might have withdrawal symptoms. >> reporter: exercise, keep a healthy weight, don't smoke or drink too much alcohol and keep a good social network. that is something these stanford students already do....
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May 26, 2018
05/18
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CSPAN2
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she is a triple cancer survivor, and lived to tell us about a little bit more about the brain. the neuroscientist who lost her mind, great read ump you don't have to be a neuroscientist to understand her story. thank you for attending, please fill out the survey and dr. lipska will be available so sign you books very soon. >> thank you, thank you. [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] >> you're watching book tv on c-span2 with top nonfiction books and authors every weekend. book tv, television for serious readers. >> and this memorial day weekend, it's 3 days of book tv. on our after words program, former national intelligence director james clapper offers insights on u.s. intelligence committee, interviewed by democratic senator jim hines of connecticut. former israeli prime minister talks about his career and the future of the israeli-palestinian conflict and historian recounts how austrian doctor asperger's with work of autism can conflicted by death of children in third right. and hillary clinton on importance of free speech and democracy. novelist david about
she is a triple cancer survivor, and lived to tell us about a little bit more about the brain. the neuroscientist who lost her mind, great read ump you don't have to be a neuroscientist to understand her story. thank you for attending, please fill out the survey and dr. lipska will be available so sign you books very soon. >> thank you, thank you. [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] >> you're watching book tv on c-span2 with top nonfiction books and authors every...
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stop a visit to a lab at the genome institute scientists here cultivating stem cells used to produce miniaturize simplified versions of the human brain. clumps of gray matter just a little larger than a grain of rice but we cube potential. i could see all. the dimension of the. so-called paving the way to new discoveries in health care we want to see how he never changes at least to the easiest state and we want to see how the toxins sort of precipitate the disease state because once we can create all of these things in the lab or treat we can think about stopping disease progression and if we can do that it gives us the lead in to how we can think of developing therapeutics for talking to these patients for example you know open up tremendous opportunities in how we can tackle human diseases. parkinson's disease is still incurable and until now research into it focused on controversial animal experiments. it's difficult to carry out research involving humans. no one wants to test things on their brain if they don't know how it will turn out so producing miniature brains allows you to learn much faster and that greatly improves your chances of discovering a drug that wi
stop a visit to a lab at the genome institute scientists here cultivating stem cells used to produce miniaturize simplified versions of the human brain. clumps of gray matter just a little larger than a grain of rice but we cube potential. i could see all. the dimension of the. so-called paving the way to new discoveries in health care we want to see how he never changes at least to the easiest state and we want to see how the toxins sort of precipitate the disease state because once we can...
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May 26, 2018
05/18
by
BLOOMBERG
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a computing system that would mimic the brain, a numeral network. >> the basic idea is a collection of small units called euros. they are little units modeled on the way that the human brain thinks. they take the data and actually learned so that the neneuron can learn. ashlee: his hope was that you feed a numeral network a bunch of data, like the faces of men and women, and he would learn how to tell them apart. like humans do. but there was just one problem. it did not work very well. >> his numeral network was the urons. layer of nen and it was limited in what i could do, extremely limited -- neurons. his college wrote a book in the 1950's which showed the limitations and that the whole area of research, into a deep freeze. for a good 10 years, nobody wanted to work in this area. they were sure it would never work. ashlee: well, almost no one. geoff: it was just obvious to me that it was the right way to go. the brain is a big numeral network. so if stuff like this, it has to work. alssion is a big neur network. ashlee: what kept you wanting to pursue this when everyone else was giving up? geoff: i need that everybody else
a computing system that would mimic the brain, a numeral network. >> the basic idea is a collection of small units called euros. they are little units modeled on the way that the human brain thinks. they take the data and actually learned so that the neneuron can learn. ashlee: his hope was that you feed a numeral network a bunch of data, like the faces of men and women, and he would learn how to tell them apart. like humans do. but there was just one problem. it did not work very well....
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May 31, 2018
05/18
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ALJAZ
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a little believe. for. a minute or more. but their brain can think. now. or not part of. a direct challenge to the united nations and it was a war prevention comes from that this time the definition of legal and illegal forces becomes daily amount of skill and going to the force first legally raised for the defense of just seven months appears to function hand in glove with. the outlawed terrorist on. the well trained jewish forces began to put their plans into action. on february the fifteen thousand nine hundred forty eight fighters from the hug an armed power marco going to his ations attack the village of caesarea near haifa. a young man called youth sacra bean is believed to have been one of the field commanders in the assault. over one thousand palestinians were expelled from cancer as the village was torched to the ground. what the news forces did they. targeted five villages on the coast in the experiment with it to see whether it works and they expelled the inhabitants five villages under the eyes of the british soldiers who were there or still there to make fort
a little believe. for. a minute or more. but their brain can think. now. or not part of. a direct challenge to the united nations and it was a war prevention comes from that this time the definition of legal and illegal forces becomes daily amount of skill and going to the force first legally raised for the defense of just seven months appears to function hand in glove with. the outlawed terrorist on. the well trained jewish forces began to put their plans into action. on february the fifteen...
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of us as your brain is i'm a little. most of the mountain huts in the high tatters can only be reached via narrow mountain paths not even an off road vehicle could negotiate and flying in provisions by helicopter is a lot more expensive than taking them up on foot part owners want to keep their food and drink prices low. for three weeks this is for my back it stops the wooden frame from running too much person formers though it stops me feeling the cold and damp of the rocks when i sit down for a breather. this back protection is really practical at. around thirty to trust sherpas work in the mountain region supplying the hiking in ski lodges everything needed to run a mountain hot has to be carried up the men earn a mere seventy cents per kilogram for their arduous treks over hundreds of metres in altitude people down in the valley admire them for their strength and courage the tractrix sherpas also include several women you know when it will happen i'm about to leave for these going it's gonna hurt with a load of thirt
of us as your brain is i'm a little. most of the mountain huts in the high tatters can only be reached via narrow mountain paths not even an off road vehicle could negotiate and flying in provisions by helicopter is a lot more expensive than taking them up on foot part owners want to keep their food and drink prices low. for three weeks this is for my back it stops the wooden frame from running too much person formers though it stops me feeling the cold and damp of the rocks when i sit down for...
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May 27, 2018
05/18
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KGO
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>> every time you challenge yourself to something and then you achieve that thing, your brain secretes a little. >> reporter: zichermann says he and developers like him designed games and apps to purposely activate those jolts of dopamine. but he has since had a change of heart and career. he's created an app to help users break the cycle of compulsion. >> and i'm using the exact techniques that i've used for the last decade to make things more addicting, to help people counteract the addictions they face. >> it all sound so devious, i kind of picture them twirling their mustaches, as we're kind of talking about this. >> reporter: psychology professors chris ferguson and patrick markey study video gaming and they say it's getting a bad rap. are all these families just making this up? >> no, we're not accusing them of lying. >> reporter: so, if they're not addicted to their video games, you're telling me that this is moral panic. >> the question is, is it the video games themselves that's causing the problem or is it something underlying, that's what we can't speak to, we don't know what is goin
>> every time you challenge yourself to something and then you achieve that thing, your brain secretes a little. >> reporter: zichermann says he and developers like him designed games and apps to purposely activate those jolts of dopamine. but he has since had a change of heart and career. he's created an app to help users break the cycle of compulsion. >> and i'm using the exact techniques that i've used for the last decade to make things more addicting, to help people...
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a bigger certainly better jersey look. i have. that i'll. tell you this year than all. the. little. high. i know you said i had a brain but that may not allow them to just tell you that outside of the not on the . by then got a session on the not at all. by then is a shift the long. haul ass done ninety seven percent going on one. song certainly not so it. can be and also it was if you have to go to the park multiple injuries among companies to sell them to yourself you hold most of the work but shows you know your marks on the phone to go down the hall on the feeling of accomplishment for most of the say yes but in the case of booking i wasn't sure if my. animated not a lot of elaborate on that the sheer hell of the somethin he'd look like that played on long enough something magic. that a salute to look my. way would acknowledge it maybe i do believe that. the us is top diplomats liaison to twelve point olds who may turn to iran but the hardline demands are being slammed at home and abroad as a batsman sues against a new nuclear deal. secretary from speech has not demonstrated how walking away from the juice it has
a bigger certainly better jersey look. i have. that i'll. tell you this year than all. the. little. high. i know you said i had a brain but that may not allow them to just tell you that outside of the not on the . by then got a session on the not at all. by then is a shift the long. haul ass done ninety seven percent going on one. song certainly not so it. can be and also it was if you have to go to the park multiple injuries among companies to sell them to yourself you hold most of the work...
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May 27, 2018
05/18
by
FOXNEWSW
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a little better. i believe that anybody brain, actual brain, would lead to that conclusion which can only lead me to believe that brains are not being used at all in the situation. greg: it's irrationally based decisions and all emotion derived. tyrus, you think this deal with north korea will be done? tyrus: yeah, i think it's already been done. i'm an entertainment any kind of our -- [laughter] and there's nothing worse than being brought into the stage and says we will not do this tonight. that is basically what he did. were not going to go if we get this and says, okay, wait, no, no, i do that to my kids all the time. well, go to bed. that is basically what he did and that's just one the one being the big boy in the room. we have what they want, they are starting in the sink is hurt and no one is willing to cross us to help them smuggle in a little chip for love squid from six months to china is not getting done so they need to have this meeting with us and the sad thing is it's at one point when people jump on one side or the other would love to see what would happen if trump came out and gave a speech
a little better. i believe that anybody brain, actual brain, would lead to that conclusion which can only lead me to believe that brains are not being used at all in the situation. greg: it's irrationally based decisions and all emotion derived. tyrus, you think this deal with north korea will be done? tyrus: yeah, i think it's already been done. i'm an entertainment any kind of our -- [laughter] and there's nothing worse than being brought into the stage and says we will not do this tonight....
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May 19, 2018
05/18
by
CSPAN2
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she is a triple cancer survivor, and lived to tell us about a little bit more about the brain. the neuroscientist who lost her mind, great read ump you don't have to be a neuroscientist to understand her story. thank you for attending, please fill out the survey and dr. lipska will be available so sign you books very soon. >> thank you, thank you. knotted [inaudible] conversation [inaudible conversations] >> you have been listening to neuroscientist, barbara lipska. talk about her book "the scientist who lost her mine mind. start starting shortly, a store about the opiode crisis. >> here's a look at the current best-selling nonfiction books, according to a group of independent booksellers. former fbi director's james comey's reflexes. after that it's mark manson's advice on leading a happier life, followed by former secretary of state madeline albright's warning but all the rice of fascist tactics. next is educated. a recount of a childhood in the idaho mountains. and after physicist, neil degrass tyson's as, and and then michelle mcnamara and her search for the golden state mur
she is a triple cancer survivor, and lived to tell us about a little bit more about the brain. the neuroscientist who lost her mind, great read ump you don't have to be a neuroscientist to understand her story. thank you for attending, please fill out the survey and dr. lipska will be available so sign you books very soon. >> thank you, thank you. knotted [inaudible] conversation [inaudible conversations] >> you have been listening to neuroscientist, barbara lipska. talk about her...
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May 27, 2018
05/18
by
CSPAN2
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eye 169
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and i think that viewing ourselves as our brains is not really going to help us have a nuanced view of how mental illnesses work. and then last, i'll talk a littleabout technology, how we approach technology that acts on the brain. that's a pretty hot area of research and it's often discussed in the media and i think this is another area where the cerebral mystique, this kind of complex of stereotypes that i've been arguing against is actually at play. so, when we think about what makes people do things, historically, in the history of psychology, as a field, there have been sort of two dominant views, one was a view that was popular at the beginning of the 20th century, advocated by people like william james, william james, the father of american psychology, and if we believe in fathers of stuff. and these people basically had pretty classical views of the mind in some ways. william james wrote this amazing book, "principles of psychology" that actually begins with chapters on the brain. so he's well aware of the brain as an important part of what makes us do stuff. on the other hand, both he and this guy wundt, fundamentally believed in the mi
and i think that viewing ourselves as our brains is not really going to help us have a nuanced view of how mental illnesses work. and then last, i'll talk a littleabout technology, how we approach technology that acts on the brain. that's a pretty hot area of research and it's often discussed in the media and i think this is another area where the cerebral mystique, this kind of complex of stereotypes that i've been arguing against is actually at play. so, when we think about what makes people...
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May 13, 2018
05/18
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a little bit midweek onwards. good afternoon. the former labour cabinet minister tessa jowell, who campaigned to raise awareness of brain cancer followings also instrumental in bringing the olympics to london in 2012. this morning mr blair praised her courage and dignity in publicly confronting her cancer, saying her efforts to raise awareness were a lasting tribute to a lifetime of public service. leila nathoo looks back at her life. the games of the 30th olympiad in 2012 are awarded to the city of london.
a little bit midweek onwards. good afternoon. the former labour cabinet minister tessa jowell, who campaigned to raise awareness of brain cancer followings also instrumental in bringing the olympics to london in 2012. this morning mr blair praised her courage and dignity in publicly confronting her cancer, saying her efforts to raise awareness were a lasting tribute to a lifetime of public service. leila nathoo looks back at her life. the games of the 30th olympiad in 2012 are awarded to the...
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May 16, 2018
05/18
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BBCNEWS
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that little illusion has led to a lot of discoveries about the brain.at the brain is designed for multisensory perception. it's also been used to are ——2 addressed —— to address things like aphasia, people have trouble with language, people around the as purges or autism spectrum, it's different with them, you can never know what these things show. and audio illusion. yanny and laurel, the debate continues. you have been watching newsday. stay with us. we will be asking: how will chinese companies be affected by tariffs on their goods? we find out shortly in asia business report. your guess just mentioned the mcgurk effect. bar orfar? your guess just mentioned the mcgurk effect. bar or far? it's mesmerising. and let's leave you with pictures some pictures of this three week old aardvark, which has made its public debut at prague zoo. the weather to the rest of the weakened the weekend really is looking very promising. as far as the short term is concerned, really chilly this morning. with clear skies, the temperatures dipped away and infact skies, the t
that little illusion has led to a lot of discoveries about the brain.at the brain is designed for multisensory perception. it's also been used to are ——2 addressed —— to address things like aphasia, people have trouble with language, people around the as purges or autism spectrum, it's different with them, you can never know what these things show. and audio illusion. yanny and laurel, the debate continues. you have been watching newsday. stay with us. we will be asking: how will...
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May 12, 2018
05/18
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CSPAN2
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a room. it's of doing the thing that you were doing in there, right? and it turns out that your brain actually accesses the memories the same way it accesses real life memories. it takes a little longer to access a memory of something you've done in v.r. than of trying to identify something you've seen in a photograph because it's buried in a different place, and it's a little deeper. and so you leave with kind of incredible memory of an experience, and it's a shared experience. finish and -- and so even games companies at this point, i think, have recognized that. and it's very rare to find even just a game that is just you by yourself. >> let's unpack that. i mean, there's a couple of great things there. you've written about a bunch of them here. i made a bunch of notes in the book myself as i -- >> i can vouch. i see a lot of underlines, check marks. i see an angry face? what's that about? [laughter] >> no, i don't think there's an angry face. >> no, there's no angry face. i hope there's not an angry face. >> the memory palace, you write about memory, and i think that's something that i've thought a lot about too, this idea that we store our memories best when they're prese
a room. it's of doing the thing that you were doing in there, right? and it turns out that your brain actually accesses the memories the same way it accesses real life memories. it takes a little longer to access a memory of something you've done in v.r. than of trying to identify something you've seen in a photograph because it's buried in a different place, and it's a little deeper. and so you leave with kind of incredible memory of an experience, and it's a shared experience. finish and --...
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May 23, 2018
05/18
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FBC
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and -- and i've suggested before to the president that, you know, tweeting a little less wouldn't cause brainamage but he likes to tweet. and that's -- and that's his prerogative as an american. stuart: sir, you are the master of one-liners, you are a sound bite machine. sir, can you handle this one for us briefly? tell us about the bill that you've authored aimed at draining the swamp, give me one-liner? >> it's going to inform senators and congressmen if they have been meeting with somebody who has been convicted of trying to bribe a congressman. all it's going to do amend the lobbying disclosure act that say ifs you've been convicted of fraud or bribery or kickbacks, you have to disclose it. i was shocked to learn that when you register as lobbyist you don't have to disclose whether you've ever been convict offed fraud, for example and it's not -- this bill is not going to bring peace to our time but i think it fill it is gap that needs to be filled. stuart: okay, senator kennedy always a pleasure. >> thanks, man. stuart: yes, sir, thank you. president trump will be travel to go long islan
and -- and i've suggested before to the president that, you know, tweeting a little less wouldn't cause brainamage but he likes to tweet. and that's -- and that's his prerogative as an american. stuart: sir, you are the master of one-liners, you are a sound bite machine. sir, can you handle this one for us briefly? tell us about the bill that you've authored aimed at draining the swamp, give me one-liner? >> it's going to inform senators and congressmen if they have been meeting with...
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May 30, 2018
05/18
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CSPAN
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a mobile command terminal in their car. it is not just mental illness anymore. lena: now it is substance abuse, tonight brain injury. anne: all in 12 questions. we are tied the officers a little more information so that it is not just going into the emergency room or jail or their. just leave them where they are at not knowing exactly what can happen. we have both make structural standpoint is we took the old arrestee processing center, a place in which an individual is supposed to be processed through the system and a 24 hours, see the initial hearing. we have turned it now into what we call the rubin engagement center. tobelieve the first step is divert individuals who may be have committed a local crime but not really an issue, someone with a mental health or substance abuse disorder, there are emts and paramedics on staff. it is overseen by a medical director. if an individual gets dropped off, they turn around and walk away. does individuals that i've been there, we have had 1300 over the last year all of them have been connected. we have a 30 day facility to try to get sober, be it some sort of housing services to really get that low hanging fruit in sequential intercep
a mobile command terminal in their car. it is not just mental illness anymore. lena: now it is substance abuse, tonight brain injury. anne: all in 12 questions. we are tied the officers a little more information so that it is not just going into the emergency room or jail or their. just leave them where they are at not knowing exactly what can happen. we have both make structural standpoint is we took the old arrestee processing center, a place in which an individual is supposed to be processed...
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May 7, 2018
05/18
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KRON
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a little movie secret. the wine they drink on screen was never real. but this was. >> i got a brain freeze.professional. >> did you -- >> it got really frightening in there. i kept watching things. >> as we do, nischelle turner. >> what i wouldn't give for five minutes in a room with those ladies. >> iconic. you'd learn a lot. "book club" hits theaters may 18th. >> coming up, after more familiar faces return to "rowsn" why bev nearly dropped out of doing the reboot. >> i'm not going back. i don't want to be that old lady. >> it just floored me. >> keith urban, is he revealing too much about muse nicole? >> and everyone's talking about maniac in bed. was nicole here with you when you wrote it? >>> closed captioning provided by -- woman: i think of all the times when i've had to put on a brave face as i struggled to hide my symptoms of depression. i'm on an antidepressant. why do i still have depression symptoms? i didn't want to let people down, so i hid my real feelings behind a mask. enough! no more. that's when i talked to my doctor. really talked. i stopped saying, "oh, i'm fine," and to
a little movie secret. the wine they drink on screen was never real. but this was. >> i got a brain freeze.professional. >> did you -- >> it got really frightening in there. i kept watching things. >> as we do, nischelle turner. >> what i wouldn't give for five minutes in a room with those ladies. >> iconic. you'd learn a lot. "book club" hits theaters may 18th. >> coming up, after more familiar faces return to "rowsn" why bev nearly...
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May 13, 2018
05/18
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BBCNEWS
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a little bit midweek onwards. this is bbc news. the headlines at midday: dame tessa jowell has died at the age of 70. the former labour cabinet minister was diagnosed with a brain house of lords while campaigning for better cancer treatments. what gives a life meaning? it is not only how it is lived, but how it draws to a close. i hope that this debate will give hope to other cancer patients, like me. tributes have been paid to dame tessa jowell, who was a significant figure in the last labour government. former prime minister tony blair said she will be remembered by many for her political talent, as well as her support and friendship. she did everything with the same passion,
a little bit midweek onwards. this is bbc news. the headlines at midday: dame tessa jowell has died at the age of 70. the former labour cabinet minister was diagnosed with a brain house of lords while campaigning for better cancer treatments. what gives a life meaning? it is not only how it is lived, but how it draws to a close. i hope that this debate will give hope to other cancer patients, like me. tributes have been paid to dame tessa jowell, who was a significant figure in the last labour...
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May 3, 2018
05/18
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MSNBCW
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have a legal background, i'll leave to the legal experts to talk about all the ways that they hurt themselves. but we share an equal amount of knowledge of the way trump works, knowing his brain a little vintage trump? are they flailing at this point? is the mueller probe so bad that they are flailing and trying to make the stormy daniels case and all these other crazy comments shiny objects to distract? that is the only thing i can think of because they seem like they are rif f'ing does. >> they are flailing so much. and willie, you can look at one trump studenter after another.f. >> they are flailing so much. and willie, you can look at one trump studenter after another. comparing the federal bureau of investigation to nazi stormtroopers. i mean, you compare this to we just had dr. ronny jackson in the news saying donald trump could live to be 200 years old. you his treasury secretary said that he was genetically superior to all other human beings. you can just take one quote after another quote after another quote and it is very clear that you have these people who previously had good reputations having the reputations destroyed by a man who as you said would not return the favor a
have a legal background, i'll leave to the legal experts to talk about all the ways that they hurt themselves. but we share an equal amount of knowledge of the way trump works, knowing his brain a little vintage trump? are they flailing at this point? is the mueller probe so bad that they are flailing and trying to make the stormy daniels case and all these other crazy comments shiny objects to distract? that is the only thing i can think of because they seem like they are rif f'ing does....
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May 30, 2018
05/18
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CNBC
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shorting them has been a no-brain are it's been about flat year to date or a little down.hose deals where you have to keep it in context know why you own bonds you don't own bonds because you want to make an outright bet >> people use these as hedges, i would think, of course >> yeah, you'd own the individual bonds you like against treasuries and use these to short -- to modulate your exposures. >> you have to think positioning plays a role here. it was becoming quite the crowded trade to bet against bonds. >> totally >> to bet against bonds and to bet in favor of oil. those two things are related oil cracked when bonds got a bid because when oil was going up every day it was hard because of the inflation story to actually get bullish on bonds that flipped around from the last week or so. >> all right we'll keep an eye on those bond etfs mike santoli, thank you. >>> "squawk on the street" will be right back with the dow moving higher here up 51 only losers right now are actually ge and apple. we'll be right back. >>> welcome back to "squawk on the street." i'm sara eisen h
shorting them has been a no-brain are it's been about flat year to date or a little down.hose deals where you have to keep it in context know why you own bonds you don't own bonds because you want to make an outright bet >> people use these as hedges, i would think, of course >> yeah, you'd own the individual bonds you like against treasuries and use these to short -- to modulate your exposures. >> you have to think positioning plays a role here. it was becoming quite the...
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a little behind me see me but i shifted buel. open and not by deed. you sure could dismiss your brains you know that. is what makes pay minimum opinion centers extreme events you can be good as a can feel secret. he let me be the last i did. not look at dog and see yourself these dual result was that he's gone and a very serious one. when detroit became to ireland they wanted to privatized the water utility. but there was no water utility. the water was sprayed in twenty seven local authorities so we were told or government by the troika to build all the areas government at. a company called irish water. which began installing meters. side to people's homes. the first protests took place. in that sketch of the city of clock loreal woman went out into mani and said you are not putting up be the outside my house. i told him they were coming to the station who didn't want the water meters and that was asked. what he and i were to there was a mass of supportive people here to stop them. and this was the first time that the irish people had taken a stand on any issue since a steady had begun says the troi
a little behind me see me but i shifted buel. open and not by deed. you sure could dismiss your brains you know that. is what makes pay minimum opinion centers extreme events you can be good as a can feel secret. he let me be the last i did. not look at dog and see yourself these dual result was that he's gone and a very serious one. when detroit became to ireland they wanted to privatized the water utility. but there was no water utility. the water was sprayed in twenty seven local authorities...
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May 13, 2018
05/18
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BBCNEWS
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a little bit midweek onwards. this is bbc news. i'm martine croxall. the headlines at 10.00am: dame tessa jowell has died at the age 70. the former labour cabinet minister was diagnosed with a brainonly how it is lived, but how it draws to a close. i hope that this debate will give hope to other cancer patients like me. one person has been killed and four others wounded in a knife attack in paris — authorities say they are treating the incident as a terror attack. also in the next hour: israel lifts the trophy at this year's eurovision song contest. singer netta takes top points with her song ‘toy‘, a song inspired by the metoo movement, but a stage invader during the uk's performance causes drama at the lisbon event.
a little bit midweek onwards. this is bbc news. i'm martine croxall. the headlines at 10.00am: dame tessa jowell has died at the age 70. the former labour cabinet minister was diagnosed with a brainonly how it is lived, but how it draws to a close. i hope that this debate will give hope to other cancer patients like me. one person has been killed and four others wounded in a knife attack in paris — authorities say they are treating the incident as a terror attack. also in the next hour:...