Brainscapes: The Warped, Wondrous Maps Written in Your Brain—And How They Guide You

Brainscapes: The Warped, Wondrous Maps Written in Your Brain—And How They Guide You

  • Downloads:3184
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2021-07-04 03:19:06
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Rebecca Schwarzlose
  • ISBN:B08B3CFXCD
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Reviews

Armen Shirvanian

My interview with Dr。 Rebecca Schwarzlose about Brainscapes on The Armen Show Podcast:http://www。armenshirvanian。com/podcas。。。 My interview with Dr。 Rebecca Schwarzlose about Brainscapes on The Armen Show Podcast:http://www。armenshirvanian。com/podcas。。。 。。。more

GONZA

This book was interesting, but also a little bit boring because maybe the topic didn't lend itself much to popularization and the author is not really Oliver Sacks。 That said, there are some things that are pretty well known, that I was familiar with from my psychology of perception and neuropsychology exams and then there are some new things that deserve careful consideration。For many but not for all。 Questo libro é stato interessante, ma anche un pochino noioso perché forse l'argomento non si This book was interesting, but also a little bit boring because maybe the topic didn't lend itself much to popularization and the author is not really Oliver Sacks。 That said, there are some things that are pretty well known, that I was familiar with from my psychology of perception and neuropsychology exams and then there are some new things that deserve careful consideration。For many but not for all。 Questo libro é stato interessante, ma anche un pochino noioso perché forse l'argomento non si prestava molto alla divulgazione e l'autrice non é proprio Oliver Sacks。 Detto questo ci sono cose piuttosto note, che mi erano conosciute dai tempi dei miei esami di psicologia delle percezione e neuropsicologia e poi ci sono alcune novitá che meritano un'attenta considerazione。Per molti ma non per tutti。 I received from the Publisher a complimentary digital advanced review copy of the book in exchange for a honest review。 。。。more

Andrea Wenger

This book is slow to start。 The author spends a lot of time (15% of the book) trying to convince the reader that the brain contains maps, and explaining what maps are, and how that relates to brains。 I'm pretty sure that readers are already on board with the concept of brain maps if they pick up a book where the first sentence of the description is "Your brain is a collection of maps。"After that, the book gets better。 It's pretty dense, with lots of fascinating and detailed information。 I wouldn This book is slow to start。 The author spends a lot of time (15% of the book) trying to convince the reader that the brain contains maps, and explaining what maps are, and how that relates to brains。 I'm pretty sure that readers are already on board with the concept of brain maps if they pick up a book where the first sentence of the description is "Your brain is a collection of maps。"After that, the book gets better。 It's pretty dense, with lots of fascinating and detailed information。 I wouldn't call it easy to read—if anything, the author's tendency to overexplain made it harder to read。 Yet overall, the prose is pretty clear, and the subject matter interesting。Thanks, NetGalley, for the ARC I received。 This is my honest and voluntary review。 。。。more

lark benobi

Science writing for a lay audience is a challenge because unless you're Stephen Hawking you're tasked with making complicated concepts understandable enough and entertaining enough that your readers don't feel lost or bored and give up。 For me, though, Brainscapes errs too far on the side of the enthusiastic and the anecdotal。 I felt reminded far too often, as I read, that what I was learning about the brain was something I should be very excited about。 I would have preferred to have been led to Science writing for a lay audience is a challenge because unless you're Stephen Hawking you're tasked with making complicated concepts understandable enough and entertaining enough that your readers don't feel lost or bored and give up。 For me, though, Brainscapes errs too far on the side of the enthusiastic and the anecdotal。 I felt reminded far too often, as I read, that what I was learning about the brain was something I should be very excited about。 I would have preferred to have been led to discover my own wonder。 This is a Mary Roach kind of science book, and will likely appeal to her readers, but I'm more of a Konrad Lorenz kind of science reader。 。。。more

Lee

This was an interesting book, presenting how the brain "maps" processes (ex: sight, smell) and backedup by the research projects that helped to reveal this information。 This book is well written for anyone with a general interest in how our senses work。 This was an interesting book, presenting how the brain "maps" processes (ex: sight, smell) and backedup by the research projects that helped to reveal this information。 This book is well written for anyone with a general interest in how our senses work。 。。。more

Ahri

Brainscapes - love the title。 :) This book was a great read for me personally, but I am a psychology buff。 I would say that this book would be better read by those that have a little more knowledge/insight into Psychology 101 first before diving into this book so that concepts and ideas are a little more familiar。 This is definitely not a book for those that are seeking a lighthearted, nonfiction book to peak their interest - this is more along the lines of a scientific book with descriptions on Brainscapes - love the title。 :) This book was a great read for me personally, but I am a psychology buff。 I would say that this book would be better read by those that have a little more knowledge/insight into Psychology 101 first before diving into this book so that concepts and ideas are a little more familiar。 This is definitely not a book for those that are seeking a lighthearted, nonfiction book to peak their interest - this is more along the lines of a scientific book with descriptions on animal experimentation, which can be triggering/intense for some readers if you weren't aware beforehand what was coming。 A solid 4 star book。 Thank you Netgalley, author, and publisher for providing an ARC of this book! 。。。more

Anne

An informative book, especially for those that are new to the topic。 The author takes us through how the brain uses maps to interpret information from our senses, and other concepts such as time and number。I was a little disappointed as due to the blurb provided about social media and brain manipulation, I was expecting a different book。 There are just a few pages on this towards the very end of the book。 The books main focus is on the senses and how they operate。I would also say that if you hav An informative book, especially for those that are new to the topic。 The author takes us through how the brain uses maps to interpret information from our senses, and other concepts such as time and number。I was a little disappointed as due to the blurb provided about social media and brain manipulation, I was expecting a different book。 There are just a few pages on this towards the very end of the book。 The books main focus is on the senses and how they operate。I would also say that if you have studied psychology at school or beyond then a lot of the studies will be familiar to you as she takes the reader through the classic studies of first discoveries。 There are also lots of animal experiments which some readers might not want to read。Thank you to Netgalley, the publisher and author for a free copy in exchange for an honest review。 。。。more

Jim Razinha

I received a digital review copy of this from the publisher Houghton Mifflin Harcourt through NetGalley。 I set aside another brain book that I finally devoted the time to read (Daniel Kahneman's Thinking Fast and Slow) when this became available。Our brains make literal maps of everything: visual, auditory, tactile, gustatory, olfactory, movement, and many special maps that combine senses and intentions to help us relate to the world。 Scientists have also found evidence of crossover neurons in ma I received a digital review copy of this from the publisher Houghton Mifflin Harcourt through NetGalley。 I set aside another brain book that I finally devoted the time to read (Daniel Kahneman's Thinking Fast and Slow) when this became available。Our brains make literal maps of everything: visual, auditory, tactile, gustatory, olfactory, movement, and many special maps that combine senses and intentions to help us relate to the world。 Scientists have also found evidence of crossover neurons in maps, complicating things further - neural responses representing movement in the tactile map and what appear to be touch responses in the movement map。 The maps sort out and economize the thinking and non-thinking。 You can thank brain maps for the speed and clarity of your senses, not to mention the fact that you have the headspace to harbor five senses instead of one or two。 I'd read Michio Kaku's 2014 The Future of the Mind: The Scientific Quest to Understand, Enhance, and Empower the Mind when it came out and he referred to some of the technologies at the time to "read" minds and mimic telekinesis (meaning, controlling consciously with minds)。 Technology continues to improve with respect to our access and understanding of these maps to the point that scientists have been able to help some suffering from paraplegia to restore rudimentary control over some limbs, even provide extremely limited visual cues to the blind。This is an easy and yet not so easy read。 Schwarzlose writes conversationally but the material may be unfamiliar to most, even readers of the subject。 Be warned, though; there are cavalier descriptions of animal experimentations (and not just your average laboratory rats。 "In other words, yes, it is possible to open up the brain and see the map in V1, but only with a great deal of effort。" is a tamed summary。) This should not be a surprise as how did scientists gain knowledge before the recent advances? Still, she closes with a good observation, which may seem obvious but too often isn't: "Any book worth reading should change how the reader experiences the world, even if only by a little。On findings of concentrations in the touch maps:In other words, we feel more than we need to with our faces because our distant ancestors walked on four feet, like the pig, and survived better with faces packed with tough receptors。 In this way, our perception of touch is shaped not just by our human bodies and human needs, but by the bodies and needs of the creatures from which we evolved。More vestigial evidence of of that darned evolution。On music training and its effect on movement, tactile and auditory maps:But that does not mean that the brain maps of child musicians are superior to those of their non-musical peers。 Piano lessons do not buy your child a better brain。 Instead those lessons(or rather the hours of practice that they promote) buy you a brain that is better suited to piano playing and other tasks that require dexterity of the hands。Take that, Baby Mozart hawkers!On the evolution of attention。。。 attention makes us better at perceiving particular targets, but worse at perceiving almost everything else。 Think of the basketball bounce counting experiment and the surprise visitor (my example, not hers。) Attention is a necessarily finite resource。There is no reason why a mind couldn't perceive and process all of that [a "firehose of panoramic sensory experience"] information simultaneously。 And yet it is patently clear that our minds [as opposed to a hypothetical alien with the ability] cannot。 Why is that? To answer that question, recall the tough tradeoffs inherent in brain evolution。 Your brain mustn't be too big or heavy, or demand too much fuel。 Brain maps are one of nature's solutions to this problem - a way to reap the most from a finite brain。 On the understanding of the mapsKnowledge about a representation is a powerful thing。 That;s because once you know how something is represented, you can eavesdrop on or manipulate what is being represented。This raises questions as to how and ethics。 Schwarzlose observes that some forms of "mind reading" are already possible or will be in the near future。 Also, most of those technologies if even possible, are impractical。 She does discuss the heath, privacy, and autonomous impacts to people。The development of brain maps is crucial during our developmental stages (even in the womb) and Schwarzlose makes the case against hands-off parenting/child rearing:All we can do is try to give children the enrichment and interaction that will help them develop diverse maps, because these neural foundations will give them the greatest ease and versatility for building cognitive ladders throughout life。 A note for the publisher on the digital formatting: the entire book had dropped letters in words, with spaces in place of them。 It was odd, occurring on my ADE reader app on my iPad, in NetGalley's reader app also on my iPad, and on my Kindle。 And it was pervasive throughout the text。 。。。more

Erin Clemence

Special thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for a free, electronic ARC of this novel received in exchange for an honest review。 Expected publication date: June 15, 2021 Our brains are a myriad of maps; maps that tell us how to process sensory information, how to relate to the world, how to relate to others, and various other everyday behaviours we aren’t even conscious of。 “Brainscapes” by neurologist Rebecca Schwarzlose is an examination of these maps, presented in a layperson way, thro Special thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for a free, electronic ARC of this novel received in exchange for an honest review。 Expected publication date: June 15, 2021 Our brains are a myriad of maps; maps that tell us how to process sensory information, how to relate to the world, how to relate to others, and various other everyday behaviours we aren’t even conscious of。 “Brainscapes” by neurologist Rebecca Schwarzlose is an examination of these maps, presented in a layperson way, through direct examples, scientific studies, and illustrations。 I am a bit of a brain “nerd”; I love to read about how the brain works and I am obsessed with its pure power, so I jumped at the chance to pick up this novel。 Schwarzlose does use commonplace language throughout this novel (with the exception of when she details scientific equipment or research and commonplace language cannot be used, but then she explains and describes in a way that a reader can understand) but it is NOT an easy read to say the least。 There is a lot of information in this novel, and it’s not something that can be read in a day。 Schwarzlose talks about the brains role in sensory processing, how our brains are the same and how they are different (from both each other and others in the animal kingdom)。 There is a lot of fascinating information in this novel, especially when comparisons to animals were drawn, when we could see how they processed the world in regards to how we processed the world, and where, in fact, we were very similar。 However, there is a lot of heavy, scientific bulk to this novel, too。 Those who are more science-minded would enjoy parts of it and those who are more interest-motivated (like myself), would enjoy parts of it。 It is a novel for everybody, and yet not one section is completely for one group of people。 “Brainscapes” is a unique and engaging way to look at our human brain, how it has evolved over time, and how and why it processes things the way it does。 Regardless of where you lie on the scientific spectrum, this novel will leave you in (even more) awe of the magnificence of the human brain and its capabilities。 。。。more