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Neurons and What They Do ~ An Animated Guide

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How Neurons Work Made Simple - An Animated Guide

This video series is presented for educational and enlightenment purposes only. The series was created by the Cassiopeia Project.

The Cassiopeia Project - making science simple!

The Cassiopeia Project is an effort to make high quality science videos available to everyone. If you can visualize it, then understanding is not far behind.
For more information visit: http://www.cassiopeiaproject.com

✔What Is a Neuron?
http://psychology.about.com/od/biopsychology/f/neuron01.htm

✔Neurons that fire together wire together!
http://www.drdomm.com/neurons-the-fire-together-wire-together/

✔How Nerves Work
http://science.howstuffworks.com/life/human-biology/nerve5.htm

✔The first real-time, non-invasive imaging of neurons forming a neural network
http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/179223-the-first-real-time-non-invasive-imaging-of-neurons-forming-a-neural-network
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Transcript of the video:

What do we know about the inner workings of the human mind?
Surely everything that humans do from designing skyscrapers to composing
symphonies... is not the product of simple cellular interactions. And yet it might
be...because everything that humans do (or think or feel) is the result of the basic
units of brain structure - the neurons.

The human brain contains more than a hundred billion neurons. Just like a single
ant could never build an anthill, a single neuron can't think or feel or remember. A
neuron's power is a result of its connections to other neurons. Each neuron is
connected to as many as a thousand of its neighbors. These trillions of
connections provide the playing field upon which the complex activity of the brain
takes place. Each neuron can turn its neighbors on or off depending on the
signals it sends, and the resulting stable patterns of neuron firing represent
memories...and images... and thoughts.

We don't yet understand the relationship between neural activity and mental
experience. We don't know what the precise pattern of a memory or an image or
a thought looks like. We don't yet know how to read the cerebral "code" of the
neurons. But progress is being made. We can now watch exactly how various
stimuli and memories cause the firings of hundreds of neurons. Perhaps these
techniques will allow us to work our way UP from the activity of a few neurons to
see the structure that emerges from the whole.
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Education
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