jeudi 20 juin 2013

Fascinating Facts You Never Knew About the Human Brain


Fascinating Facts You Never Knew About the Human Brain

The human brain has amazed and baffled people throughout the ages. Some scientists and doctors have devoted their entire lives to learning how the brain works. It is no wonder that people enjoy learning facts about this incredible organ in the human body. Below, you will find facts about the brain including how it works, how it develops, what it controls, how it affects sleep, dreams, and memory, and more, which may be helpful.

Physical Attributes:

  • These facts will teach you interesting bits of information about the physical make-up of the human brain.
  • Weight. The weight of the human brain is about 3 lbs.
  • Cerebrum. The cerebrum is the largest part of the brain and makes up 85% of the brain’s weight.
  • Skin. Your skin weighs twice as much as your brain. 
  • Gray matter. The brain’s gray matter is made up of neurons, which gather and transmit signals. 
  • White matter. The white matter is made up of dendrites and axons, which create the network by which neurons send their signals. 
  • Gray and white. Your brain is 60% white matter and 40% gray matter. 
  • Water. The brain is made up of about 75% water. 
  • Neurons. Your brain consists of about 100 billion neurons. 
  • Synapses. There are anywhere from 1,000 to 10,000 synapses for each neuron. 
  • No pain. There are no pain receptors in the brain, so the brain can feel no pain. 
  • Largest brain. While an elephant’s brain is physically larger than a human brain, the human brain is 2% of total body weight (compared to 0.15% of an elephant’s brain), meaning humans have the largest brain to body size. 
  • Blood vessels. There are 100,000 miles of blood vessels in the brain. 
  • Fat. The human brain is the fattest organ in the body and may consists of at least 60% fat.
  • The Developing Brain
  • Starting from within the womb, fetal brain development begins the amazing journey that leads to a well-developed brain at birth that continues to grow for 18 more years. 
  • Neurons. Neurons develop at the rate of 250,000 neurons per minute during early pregnancy. 
  • Size at birth. At birth, your brain was almost the same size as an adult brain and contained most of the brain cells for your whole life. 
  • Newborn’s growth. A newborn baby’s brain grows about three times its size in the first year. 
  • Stopped growing. Your brain stopped growing at age 18. 
  • Cerebral cortex. The cerebral cortex grows thicker as you learn to use it. 
  • Stimulation. A stimulating environment for a child can make the difference between a 25% greater ability to learn or 25% less in an environment with little stimulation. 
  • New neurons. Humans continue to make new neurons throughout life in response to mental activity. 
  • Read aloud. Reading aloud and talking often to a young child promotes brain development. 
  • Emotions. The capacity for such emotions as joy, happiness, fear, and shyness are already developed at birth. The specific type of nurturing a child receives shapes how these emotions are developed. 
  • First sense. The first sense to develop while in utero is the sense of touch. The lips and cheeks can experience touch at about 8 weeks and the rest of the body around 12 weeks. 
  • Bilingual brains. Children who learn two languages before the age of five alters the brain structure and adults have a much denser gray matter. 
  • Child abuse and the brain. Studies have shown that child abuse can inhibit development of the brain and can permanently affect brain development.

Brain Function: 

  • From the invisible workings of the brain to more visible responses such as yawns or intelligence, find out how the brain functions with these facts. 
  • Oxygen. Your brain uses 20% of the total oxygen in your body. 
  • Blood. As with oxygen, your brain uses 20% of the blood circulating in your body. 
  • Unconsciousness. If your brain loses blood for 8 to 10 seconds, you will lose consciousness. 
  • Speed. Information can be processed as slowly as 0.5 meters/sec or as fast as 120 meters/sec (about 268 miles/hr). 
  • Wattage. While awake, your brain generates between 10 and 23 watts of power–or enough energy to power a light bulb. 
  • Yawns. It is thought that a yawn works to send more oxygen to the brain, therefore working to cool it down and wake it up. 
  • Neocortex. The neocortex makes up about 76% of the human brain and is responsible for language and consciousness. The human neocortex is much larger than in animals. 
  • 10%. The old adage of humans only using 10% of their brain is not true. Every part of the brain has a known function. 
  • Brain death. The brain can live for 4 to 6 minutes without oxygen, and then it begins to die. No oxygen for 5 to 10 minutes will result in permanent brain damage. 
  • Highest temperature. The next time you get a fever, keep in mind that thehighest human body temperature ever recorded was 115.7 degrees–and the man survived. 
  • Stress. Excessive stress has shown to "alter brain cells, brain structure and brain function." 
  • Love hormones and autism. Oxytocin, one of the hormones responsible for triggering feelings of love in the brain, has shown some benefits to helping control repetitive behaviors in those with autism. 
  • Food and intelligence. A study of one million students in New York showed that students who ate lunches that did not include artificial flavors, preservatives, and dyes did 14% better on IQ tests than students who ate lunches with these additives. 
  • Seafood. In the March 2003 edition of Discover magazine, a report describes how people in a 7-year study who ate seafood at least one time every week had a 30% lower occurrence of dementia.
  • Psychology of the Brain 
  • From tickling to tasting to decision-making, find out how the brain affects what you experience. 
  • Tickles. You can’t tickle yourself because your brain distinguished between unexpected external touch and your own touch. 
  • Imaginary playmates. A study from Australia showed that children with imaginary playmates between the ages of 3 and 9 tended to be first-born children. 
  • Reading faces. Without any words, you may be able to determine if someone is in a good mood, is feeling sad, or is angry just by reading the face. A small area in the brain called the amygdala is responsible for your ability to read someone else’s face for clues to how they are feeling. 
  • Ringing in the ears. For years, medical professionals believed that tinnitus was due to a function within the mechanics of the ear, but newer evidence shows that it is actually a function of the brain. 
  • Pain and gender. Scientists have discovered that men and women’s brains react differently to pain, which explains why they may perceive or discuss pain differently. 
  • Supertasters. There is a class of people known as supertasters who not only have more taste buds on the tongue, but whose brain is more sensitive to the tastes of foods and drinks. In fact, they can detect some flavors that others cannot. 
  • Cold. Some people are much more sensitive to cold and actually feel pain associated with cold. Research as shown that the reason is due to certain channels that send cold information to the brain. 
  • Decision-making. Women tend to take longer to make a decision, but are more likely to stick with the decision, compared to men, who are more likely to change their mind after making a decision. 
  • Exercise. Some studies indicate that while some people are naturally more active, others are naturally more inactive, which may explain why getting out and exercising is more difficult for some. 
  • Boredom. Boredom is brought on by a lack of change of stimulation, is largely a function of perception, and is connected to the innate curiosity found in humans. 
  • Physical illness. The connection between body and mind is a strong one. One estimate is that between 50-70% of visits to the doctor for physical ailments are attributed to psychological factors. 
  • Sadness and shopping. Researchers have discovered that those experiencing the blues are more willing to spend more money in an attempt to alleviate their sadness.

Memory:

  • Learn how scent, jet lag, and estrogen affect memory, plus plenty of other information, with these facts. 
  • Jet lag. Frequent jet lag can impair your memory, probably due to the stress hormones released. 
  • New connections. Every time you recall a memory or have a new thought, you are creating a new connection in your brain. 
  • Create associations. Memory is formed by associations, so if you want help remembering things, create associations for yourself. 
  • Scent and memory. Memories triggered by scent have a stronger emotional connection, therefore appear more intense than other memory triggers. 
  • Anomia. Anomia is the technical word for tip-of-the-tongue syndrome when you can almost remember a word, but it just won’t quite come to you. 
  • Sleep. While you sleep at night may be the best time for your brain toconsolidate all your memories from the day. 
  • No sleep. It goes to follow…lack of sleep may actuallyhurt your ability to create new memories. 
  • World Champion. A world champion memorizer, Ben Pridmore memorized 96 historical events in 5 minutes and memorized a single, shuffled deck of cards in 26.28 seconds. 
  • Estrogen and memory. Estrogen (found in both men and women) has been shown to promote better memory functions. 
  • Insulin. Insulin works to regulate blood-sugar in the body, but recently,scientists have discovered that its presence in the brain also helps promote memory.

Dreams and Sleep:

  • The amazing world of dreams and what happens during sleep is a mystery rooted in the brain. Learn interesting facts about dreams and sleep in this list.
  • Everyone dreams. Just because you don’t remember your dreams doesn’t mean you don’t dream. Everyone dreams!
  • Nightly average. Most people dream about 1-2 hours a night and have an average of 4-7 dreams each night.
  • Brain waves. Studies show that brain waves are more active while dreaming than when you are awake.
  • Lost dreams. Five minutes after a dream, half of the dream is forgotten. Ten minutes after a dream, over 90% is forgotten. Write down your dreams immediately if you want to remember them.
  • Blind people dream. Dreams are more than just visual images, and blind people do dream. Whether or not they dream in pictures depends on if they were born blind or lost their vision later.
  • Color or B&W. Some people (about 12%) dream only in black and white while others dream in color.
  • Virtually paralyzed. While you sleep, your body produces a hormone that may prevent you from acting out your dreams, leaving you virtually paralyzed.
  • Snoring. If you are snoring, you are not dreaming.
  • During a dream. If you are awakened during a dream, you are much more likely to remember the dream than if you slept until a full night’s sleep.
  • Symbolism. As those who invest in dream dictionaries can attest, dreams almost never represent what they actually are. The unconscious mind strives to make connections with concepts you will understand, so dreams are largely symbolic representations.
  • Adenosine. Caffeine works to block naturally occurring adenosine in the body, creating alertness. Scientists have recently discovered this connection and learned that doing the opposite–boosting adenosine–can actually help promote more natural sleep patterns and help eliminate insomnia.
  • Dream showings. Japanese researchers have successfully developed a technology that can put thoughts on a screen and may soon be able to screen people’s dreams.

Fun and Interesting Facts:


  • From juggling to a Brain Bank to cannibalism, read about these fun and interesting brain facts.
  • Airplanes and headaches. A study showed a correlation between flying and headaches and states that around 6% of people who fly get headaches brought on by the flight itself.
  • Juggling. Juggling has shown to change the brain in as little as seven days. The study indicates that learning new things helps the brain to change very quickly.
  • Disney and sleep. A study published in the journal Sleep Medicine describes how Disney creators used real sleep disorders in many of their animated pets.
  • Blinking. Each time we blink, our brain kicks in and keeps things illuminated so the whole world doesn’t go dark each time we blink (about 20,000 times a day).
  • Laughing. Laughing at a joke is no simple task as it requires activity in five different areas of the brain.
  • Yawns are contagious. Ever notice that you yawned after someone around you did? Scientists believe this may be a response to an ancient social behavior for communication that humans still have.
  • Brain Bank. Harvard maintains a Brain Bank where over 7,000 human brains are store for research purposes.
  • Outer space. The lack of gravity in outer space affects the brain in several ways. Scientists are studying how and why, but you may want to hold off on your next trip to the moon.
  • Music. Music lessons have shown to considerably boost brain organization and ability in both children and adults.
  • Thoughts. The average number of thoughts that humans are believed to experience each day is 70,000.
  • Ambidexterity. Those who are left-handed or ambidextrous have a corpus collosum (the part of the brain that bridges the two halves) that is about 11% larger than those who are right-handed.
  • Stressful job. According to a study by Bristol-Myers Squibb, accountants have the highest incidence of on-the-job headaches, followed by librarians, then bus and truck drivers.
  • Aristotle. Aristotle mistakenly thought that the functions of the brain actually took place in the heart.
  • Cannibalism. Some research shows that humans carry genes that help protect the brain from prion diseases, or diseases contracted through eating human flesh, leading medical experts to believe that ancient humans may have eaten other humans.
  • Shakespeare. The word "brain" appears 66 times in the plays of William Shakespeare.

    dimanche 16 juin 2013

    The first  real zombie

    The science fiction dreamed about it, you dreamed about it, the Americans made him(it)! They managed to develop a cell(unit) died always in function(office) … You said zombie? We explain you all this … It is about a world premiere, the researchers do not still mean there having made a success of their experience(experiment) and what the results(profits) surpass what they had imagined:

    Dead cell(unit) showed itself more successful than when it was alive, we imagine the worst … The scientists of the National Laboratory of Sandia and the University of the New Mexico resorted(turned) to an original technique. They coated cells(units) of mammals with a solution of silica to train(form) a kind of permeable armor plating around the protein of the living cell, and allow so the researchers to confront the cell(unit) with temperatures and inconceivable pressures for a living cell. Warmed in 400°C,The cell(unit) evaporates literally and leaves in the silica a three-dimensional retort(replica) of the mineralized structures and the complex features of the body living that it was with an almost atomic precision, while protecting the spiral of the cellular DNA. Strangely, the died cell(unit) remains capable of making some of its former(old) functions(offices). Sometimes, she(it) makes a success of them even better than during sound living thanks to the properties of silica which allow him(her) to resist temperatures and pressures which she would never have been able to endure for example. The researcher Bryan Kaehr declares moreover:" Our cells(units) zombies throw(cast) a bridge(deck) between the chemistry and the biology by creating cells(units) which, not only are as alike as two peas in a pod to themselves but are also capable of working relentlessly "

    lundi 10 juin 2013

    The most productive time

    The most productive time

    A survey conducted in the UK and reported by the Daily Mail reveals that 2:55 p.m., employee activity is stalled. At this moment between the digestion of the meal and the evening rush, most respondents say they spend time on Facebook and plan the evening.
     It is a time when, in the middle of digesting a rather heavy meal in the canteen before the adrenaline rush of the end of the day, employees would be unable to provide any effort. To compensate for their lack of productivity, they kill time and expect a renewed energy zonant on Facebook and providing the course of their evening to come.
    2:55 p.m., the least productive time of the day
    Even the most conscientious employees would be affected by a lazy person when unnamed 2:55 p.m.. A British survey of 420 people by Offices.com London, reveals that this time T, the vast majority of employees behind the screen to view photos on Facebook, watch GIF LOLcats and plan an evening or vacation.
    This time occurs when the post-lunch torpor takes the human body. The heavy stomach, eyes unfocused, employees seem so absorbed in their computer screen while in truth, nothing moves. Because they are not graphics and spreadsheets that captivate and but Facebook photos of their friends. "Check his profile on social networks" is actually the most common given by the employees surveyed when asked what they do when not working answer. One of them confessed to his part: "I must confess that when the clock shows 15 hours, I began to prepare my evening At the same time, my productivity takes a hit.".
    A lack of sugar and energy
    So if you are a Boss and you are reading this you know what is the perfect time for the mission impossible

    mercredi 5 juin 2013

    Lewis Hine

    Lewis Hine





    Lewis Hine (1874-1940), who was best known for his use of photography as a means to achieve social reform, was first a teacher of botany and nature studies at the Ethical Culture School in New York. It was while he was teaching that he was given a camera by the head of the school. In his hand, the camera became a powerful means of recording social injustice and labor abuses. Hine's interest in social welfare and in reform movements led him in 1905 to begin his first documentary series; immigrants on Ellis Island. In 1908 he left teaching to become an investigator and photographer for the National Child Labor Committee (NCLC), and between 1908 and 1916 he traveled extensively photographing child-labor abuses. Hine would manage to gain access to the sweatshops and factories where children were employed, and then, if he could, photograph them at work. Hine inveigled his way into factories by posing as an insurance agent, bible salesman, postcard seller, or industrial photographer. Once inside, Hine quickly would go about his business of photographing the children working. Having been a teacher, Hine was comfortable talking with children and would attempt to get as much information as possible regarding their living conditions, the circumstances under which they were forced to work, and their name and age. If he was unable to determine a child's age by speaking to him, Hine would surreptitiously measure the child's height against the buttons on his vest and estimate the child's age by his height. If Hine was not able to gain admittance to a factory, he would wait outside the gates and photograph the children as the came to work. He visited children and families who worked at home and he wrote with impassioned sarcasm of the "opportunities for the child and family to enlist in the service of Industry.








    mardi 4 juin 2013

    The story Behind the Kolam ..!

    The story  Behind the Kolam ..!

    Early every morning, before dawn, the woman of Tamil Nadu draw kolams on the ground using rice or chalk powder. Throughout the day, the drawings get walked on, smeared, or blown away by wind. Every morning, before a new one is drawn, the floor outside of the home is carefully swept and wet with water, creating an even and slightly muddy surface.Decoration is not the sole

    purpose of a Kolam. In olden days, kolams were drawn in coarse rice flour, so the ants would not have to walk too far or too long for a meal. The rice powder also invited birds and other small creatures to eat it, thus welcoming other beings into one's home and everyday life: a daily tribute to harmonious co-existence. It is a sign of invitation to welcome all into the home, not the least of whom is Lakshmi the Goddess of prosperity and wealth. The patterns range between geometric and mathematical line drawings around a matrix of dots to free form art work and closed shapes Folklore has evolved to mandate that the lines must be completed so as to symbolically prevent evil spirits from entering the inside of the shapes, and thus are they prevented from entering the inside of the home.It used to be a matter of pride to be able to draw large complicated patterns without lifting the hand off the floor or standing up in between. The month of Margazhi was eagerly awaited by young women, who would then showcase their skills by covering the entire width of the road with one big kolam

    check out the video:

    vendredi 31 mai 2013








    Does school kills creativity...?



    Everyone always think like that, also do grades in school accurately measure the intelligence of students ?In a response to that last question one of my friends says ironically "No, it does not: it only measures how well the person did on that paper and pencil test".
    People have many intelligence not just one general one, since they are good at some things and not others. These intelligences are very widely applied in real life and not limited to a paper and pencil test, covering a few issues. So if you are not good at math or science, you won't get lucky at all, and some choose to drop out school. Not a very intelligent choice (which is bad.. don't do it!!) but some people were ment to do it:





    Thomas Edison: is probably the most famous and productive inventor of all time, with more than 1000 patents in his name, including the electric light bulb, phonograph, and motion picture camera.He became a self-made multimillionaire.
    Thomas has dropped school at age of 10!



    Bill Gates: is a cco- founder of the software giant Microsoft and has been ranked the richest person in the world for a number of years. Gates dropped out of Harvad in his junior year after reading an article about the Altair microcomputer in Popular Electronics magazine.


    Albert einstein: Althought he was named Time magazines's "Man of the Century". Albert was not an "Einstein" in school. The nobel Prize-winning, famous of his theory of relativity and contributions to quantum and satistical meachanics, dropped out high school at age 15.

    but I think creativity rests within the person. School doesn't make up all of a child's day, so whether they want to expand they're creativity is solely up to them. In most schools, art Is a mandatory class. So to blame the schools for a lack of creativity is more of a way to push of the responsibility of generations of people who weren't interested in helping themselves and they're children become more creative.




    But at the end nobody knows, it's just thought! :)

    dimanche 26 mai 2013

    Palme d'or



    Le réalisateur français d'origine tunisienne Abdellatif Kechiche a remporté dimanche la Palme d'Or du 66e festival de Cannes pour le film français ''La vie d'Adèle''.


    Le réalisateur s'est vu décerner la palme avec ses deux actrices Adèle Exarchopoulos et Léa Seydoux. C'est une consécration pour ce réalisateur qui a souvent surpris par l'audace des sujets traités et la qualité de sa direction d'acteurs, ici actrices en l'occurrence. Abdellatif Kechiche, rappelons-le, est né à Tunis, le 7 décembre 1960. Arrivé à Nice avec ses parents à l'âge de 6 ans, il a commencé sa vie comme acteur dans le célèbre film de Nouri Bouzid, ''Bezness'', où il a tenu le rôle d'un gigolo qui mutiplie les conquêtes féminines dans les hôtels de la côte tunisienne (prix d'interprétation masculine au Festival de Namur en 1992).


    Comme réalisateur, on lui doit ''L'esquive'', en 2004, ''La graine et le mulet'' en 2007, ''Vénus noire'' en 2010.


    Reste à se demander si le ministre de la Culture Mehdi Mabrouk laissera projeter ''La Vie d'Adèle'', qui parle d'homsexualité féminine, dans le pays natal de son réalisateur, la Tunisie, aujourd'hui sous domination islamiste.


    Je pense pas ...