PLEASE GOD THERE IS NOTHING I NEED MORE IN MY LIFE THAN A T-REX COOING LIKE A PIGEON

PLEASE GOD THERE IS NOTHING I NEED MORE IN MY LIFE THAN A T-REX COOING LIKE A PIGEON

PLEASE GOD THERE IS NOTHING I NEED MORE IN MY LIFE THAN A T-REX COOING LIKE A PIGEON

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More Posts from Science-is-magical and Others

7 years ago
DO NOT GIVE OR GET ANY VACCINATIONS FOR YOURSELF OR  YOUR KIDS………..

DO NOT GIVE OR GET ANY VACCINATIONS FOR YOURSELF OR  YOUR KIDS………..


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8 years ago
A Human Brain Has Around 86 Billion Neurons, And The Communication Between These Neurons Are Constant.
A Human Brain Has Around 86 Billion Neurons, And The Communication Between These Neurons Are Constant.
A Human Brain Has Around 86 Billion Neurons, And The Communication Between These Neurons Are Constant.
A Human Brain Has Around 86 Billion Neurons, And The Communication Between These Neurons Are Constant.
A Human Brain Has Around 86 Billion Neurons, And The Communication Between These Neurons Are Constant.
A Human Brain Has Around 86 Billion Neurons, And The Communication Between These Neurons Are Constant.
A Human Brain Has Around 86 Billion Neurons, And The Communication Between These Neurons Are Constant.

A human brain has around 86 billion neurons, and the communication between these neurons are constant. The sheer scale of these interactions mean a computer (an EEG) can register this electrical activity, with different frequencies indicating different mental states.

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7 years ago

The Neuroscience of Drumming

The Neuroscience Of Drumming

According to new neuroscience research, rhythm is rooted in innate functions of the brain, mind, and consciousness. As human beings, we are innately rhythmic. Our relationship with rhythm begins in the womb. At twenty two days, a single (human embryo) cell jolts to life. This first beat awakens nearby cells and incredibly they all begin to beat in perfect unison. These beating cells divide and become our heart. This desire to beat in unison seemingly fuels our entire lives. Studies show that, regardless of musical training, we are innately able to perceive and recall elements of beat and rhythm.

It makes sense then that beat and rhythm are an important aspect in music therapy. Our brains are hard-wired to be able to entrain to a beat. Entrainment occurs when two or more frequencies come into step or in phase with each other. If you are walking down a street and you hear a song, you instinctively begin to step in sync to the beat of the song. This is actually an important area of current music therapy research. Our brain enables our motor system to naturally entrain to a rhythmic beat, allowing music therapists to target rehabilitating movements. Rhythm is a powerful gateway to well-being.

Neurologic Drum Therapy

Neuroscience research has demonstrated the therapeutic effects of rhythmic drumming. The reason rhythm is such a powerful tool is that it permeates the entire brain. Vision for example is in one part of the brain, speech another, but drumming accesses the whole brain. The sound of drumming generates dynamic neuronal connections in all parts of the brain even where there is significant damage or impairment such as in Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD). According to Michael Thaut, director of Colorado State University’s Center for Biomedical Research in Music, “Rhythmic cues can help retrain the brain after a stroke or other neurological impairment, as with Parkinson’s patients ….” The more connections that can be made within the brain, the more integrated our experiences become.

Studies indicate that drumming produces deeper self-awareness by inducing synchronous brain activity. The physical transmission of rhythmic energy to the brain synchronizes the two cerebral hemispheres. When the logical left hemisphere and the intuitive right hemisphere begin to pulsate in harmony, the inner guidance of intuitive knowing can then flow unimpeded into conscious awareness. The ability to access unconscious information through symbols and imagery facilitates psychological integration and a reintegration of self.

In his book, Shamanism: The Neural Ecology of Consciousness and Healing, Michael Winkelman reports that drumming also synchronizes the frontal and lower areas of the brain, integrating nonverbal information from lower brain structures into the frontal cortex, producing “feelings of insight, understanding, integration, certainty, conviction, and truth, which surpass ordinary understandings and tend to persist long after the experience, often providing foundational insights for religious and cultural traditions.”

It requires abstract thinking and the interconnection between symbols, concepts, and emotions to process unconscious information. The human adaptation to translate an inner experience into meaningful narrative is uniquely exploited by drumming. Rhythmic drumming targets memory, perception, and the complex emotions associated with symbols and concepts: the principal functions humans rely on to formulate belief. Because of this exploit, the result of the synchronous brain activity in humans is the spontaneous generation of meaningful information which is imprinted into memory. Drumming is an effective method for integrating subjective experience into both physical space and the cultural group.


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8 years ago
Class In Session As Planet X Starts It Off With Our Favorite Dense Objects: 
Class In Session As Planet X Starts It Off With Our Favorite Dense Objects: 
Class In Session As Planet X Starts It Off With Our Favorite Dense Objects: 
Class In Session As Planet X Starts It Off With Our Favorite Dense Objects: 
Class In Session As Planet X Starts It Off With Our Favorite Dense Objects: 
Class In Session As Planet X Starts It Off With Our Favorite Dense Objects: 

Class in session as Planet X starts it off with our favorite dense objects: 

Neutron Stars!

http://www.space.com/22180-neutron-stars.html


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8 years ago
Photos Of Sakurajima, The Most Active Volcano In Japan, By Takehito Miyatake And Martin Rietze. Volcanic
Photos Of Sakurajima, The Most Active Volcano In Japan, By Takehito Miyatake And Martin Rietze. Volcanic
Photos Of Sakurajima, The Most Active Volcano In Japan, By Takehito Miyatake And Martin Rietze. Volcanic
Photos Of Sakurajima, The Most Active Volcano In Japan, By Takehito Miyatake And Martin Rietze. Volcanic
Photos Of Sakurajima, The Most Active Volcano In Japan, By Takehito Miyatake And Martin Rietze. Volcanic
Photos Of Sakurajima, The Most Active Volcano In Japan, By Takehito Miyatake And Martin Rietze. Volcanic
Photos Of Sakurajima, The Most Active Volcano In Japan, By Takehito Miyatake And Martin Rietze. Volcanic
Photos Of Sakurajima, The Most Active Volcano In Japan, By Takehito Miyatake And Martin Rietze. Volcanic

photos of sakurajima, the most active volcano in japan, by takehito miyatake and martin rietze. volcanic storms can rival the intensity of massive supercell thunderstorms, but the source of the charge responsible for this phenomenon remains hotly debated.

in the kind of storm clouds that generate conventional lightning, ice particles and soft hail collide, building up positive and negative charges, respectively. they separate into layers, and the charge builds up until the electric field is high enough to trigger lightning.

but the specific mechanism by which particles of differing charges are separated in the ash cloud is still unknown. lightning has been observed between the eruption plume and the volcano right at the start of an eruption, suggesting that there are processes that occur inside the volcano to lead to charge separation.  

volcanic lightning could yield clues about the earth’s geological past, and could answer questions about the beginning of life on our planet. volcanic lightning could have been the essential spark that converted water, hydrogen, ammonia, and methane molecules present on a primeval earth into amino acids, the building blocks of life.


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8 years ago
One Of The Best Ways To Get People To Do Something Is To Make It Fun. A Marketing Campaign Called ‘The

One of the best ways to get people to do something is to make it fun. A marketing campaign called ‘The Fun Theory’ found that when stairs next to an escalator were turned into giant, functional piano keys, the amount of people who took the stairs increased 66%, and when a trash can had sound effects that made it seem infinitely deep, people started picking up and throwing away litter just to hear it. Source


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7 years ago
After The Battle Of Shiloh In 1862, Many Civil War Soldiers’ Lives Were Saved By A Phenomenon Called

After the Battle of Shiloh in 1862, many Civil War soldiers’ lives were saved by a phenomenon called ‘Angel’s Glow.’ The soldiers, who lay in the mud for two rainy days, had wounds that began to glow in the dark and heal unusually fast. In 2001, 2 teens won an international science fair by discovering the soldiers had been so cold that their bodies created the perfect conditions for growing a bioluminescent bacteria, which ultimately destroyed the bad bacteria that could’ve killed them. Source Source 2 Source 3


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6 years ago
Quantum Computers Have Arrived.  
Quantum Computers Have Arrived.  
Quantum Computers Have Arrived.  
Quantum Computers Have Arrived.  

Quantum computers have arrived.  

First there was the mainframe, then came the personal computer, now we’ve reached a new monumental landmark in the history of technology. For the first time ever, IBM aims to bring universal quantum computers out of the lab and into the commercial realm. Projected to sift through vast possibilities and data, to choose the perfect option or discover unseen patterns, quantum computing is poised to drive a new era of innovation across industries. This means that some of the world’s most complex problems now have a chance of being solved. And as the quantum eco-system grows, a seemingly impossible kind of physics could start to make the most incredible things possible.

Learn More →


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8 years ago
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