Mar16: Video #Libya Amazing 3D reconstruction of Leptis Magna and Sibratha »
Amazing 3D reconstruction of Leptis Magna and Sibratha #Libya http://is.gd/ivk5Vh /via @Gheblawi · Hide media · Reply · Retweet · Favorite · Buffer · More · Leptis Magna en Lybie, il y a 1800 ans · Il...
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Robby Ball
Mar 17, 2013 - News
Mar16: Video #Egypt Beating up protestor at MB headquarter الأمن يعتدي على متظاهر في محيط مقر الإخوان بالمقطم »
Video #Egypt Beating up protestor at MB headquarter الأمن يعتدي على متظاهر في محيط مقر الإخوان بالمقطم. Mona B @monita2064 · http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HurIhIJxepM&sns=tw … via @youtube Beati...
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Connor Parker
Mar 17, 2013 - Discussion
Scientists scanning the human brain can now tell whom a person is thinking of, the first time researchers have been able to identify what people are imagining from imaging technologies.
Work to visualize thought is starting to pile up successes. Recently, scientists have used brain scans to decode imagery directly from the brain, such as what number people have just seen and what memory a person is recalling. They can now even reconstruct videos of what a person has watched based on their brain activity alone. Cornell University cognitive neuroscientist Nathan Spreng and his colleagues wanted to carry this research one step further by seeing if they could deduce the mental pictures of people that subjects conjure up in their heads.
Work to visualize thought is starting to pile up successes. Recently, scientists have used brain scans to decode imagery directly from the brain, such as what number people have just seen and what memory a person is recalling. They can now even reconstruct videos of what a person has watched based on their brain activity alone. Cornell University cognitive neuroscientist Nathan Spreng and his colleagues wanted to carry this research one step further by seeing if they could deduce the mental pictures of people that subjects conjure up in their heads.
Brain Researchers Can Detect Who We Are Thinking About: Scientific American »
FMRI scans of volunteers' media prefrontal cortexes revealed unique brain activity patterns associated with individual characters or personalities as subjects thought about them
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