2). Most humans are able to impute a considerable amount of information into the sketchiest of representations of human figures. The human brain is able to work with incomplete representations and our brains are particularly well-tuned to spotting humans. There is strong evidence that a new-born...
I don't really believe in astronomy, except as a complicated description of part of the course of human and possibly animal sensation. I apply my perspective not merely to space but also to time. In time the world will cool and everything will die; but that is a long time off still ...
The capabilities of the human brain … If you take a look at the following picture , let me tell you If you take a look at the following picture , let me tell you ... it is not. If you take a look at the following picture , let me tell you If you take a look at the follow...
"The Human adventure is just beginning..." "Ten years ago, a television phenomenon became a part of life, shared in 47 different languages, read in 469 publications, and seen by 1.2 billion people. A common experience remembered around the world. Now Par
Two studies are reported that compare the descriptions given by children with and without autism of animated stimuli depicting mechanical launching effects... DM Bowler,E Thommen - 《Autism》 被引量: 127发表: 2000年 Intentional Minds: A Philosophical Analysis of Intention Tested through fMRI Experime...
On the one hand, mise en scène describes the limits of human experience by indicating the external boundaries and contexts in which people live. On the other, it reflects the powers of the characters and groups that inhabit it by showing how people can have an impact on the space in which...
“iHuman” “Indian Space Dreams” “Irmi” “The Infiltrators” “Jimmy Carter: Rock & Roll President” “John Lewis: Good Trouble” * “Kate Nash: Underestimate the Girl” “A Kid from Coney Island” “Kingdom of Silence” *
For instance, weaker patterns of mirror neuron activity have been found in response to viewing pictures when compared to viewing videos of hand actions [20]. However, different modes of video display have elicited similar patterns of mirror neuron activity including, but not limited to, animated ...