Тёмный

The Neuroscience of Intelligence, Creativity, and Genius || The Psychology Podcast 

The Psychology Podcast
Подписаться 50 тыс.
Просмотров 8 тыс.
50% 1

Today it’s great to have Dr. Rex Jung on the podcast. Dr. Jung is an assistant professor of neurosurgery at the University of New Mexico, and a clinical neuropsychologist in private practice in Albuquerque, New Mexico. A graduate of the University of New Mexico, he has practiced neuropsychology in Albuquerque since 2002. His clinical work now centers around intraoperative testing of patients undergoing awake craniotomy to remove tumors within eloquent brain tissue - work with particular relevance to the study of individual differences. He has contributed to over 100 research articles across a wide range of disciplines, involving both clinical and normal populations, designed to assess brain-behavior relationships. He is the Editor of the Cambridge Handbook of the Neuroscience of Creativity. His work has been featured on CNN, BBC, NOVA, The New York Times, The Atlantic, and National Geographic.
In this episode we discuss:
Rex’s earlier work on the neuroscience of intelligence
The distributed brain model of intelligence
Rex’s investigation of Scott’s brain
How the brain can compensate for disability
How our intelligence can change over time
Limitations of IQ tests for measuring intellectual potential
The limits of neuroplasticity
The genetics of intelligence
The creative brain
How the neuroscience of creativity is sometimes the inverse of the neuroscience of intelligence
The “default network” of mental simulation
The human capacity to “simulate or try out ideas before you buy them”
The beautiful architecture of the brain
The neuroscience of genius
Rex’s work on awake craniometries (neurological testing while a patient is awake and a tumor is being removed)
--------------------------------------------------------
For the full show notes and links relevant to this episode, go to:
scottbarrykauf...
Subscribe to The Psychology Podcast:
itunes.apple.c...
www.stitcher.c...
See past episodes and join in the Discussion:
scottbarrykauf...
Facebook:
www.facebook.c...
Twitter:
/ psychpodcast
#ThePsychologyPodcast

Опубликовано:

 

28 сен 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 11   
@jonathanhall9820
@jonathanhall9820 4 года назад
Scott, don't you think you're being a bit short-sided with Robert Plomin's take on gene-environment interaction? He specifically says genetics are not deterministic. His book, Blueprint, is a quarter-century response to the severe suppression of nature in the nature/nurture debate. He's very pedantic, precise and unbiased (not to be confused with optimistic) in the way he describes the scientific data on the topic. Great episode though. Really enjoy your work.
@lechatleblanc
@lechatleblanc 3 года назад
The creative process... A true one by a true genius... Cannot be put into words.... And cannot be reduced to scientfific description
@1231mn
@1231mn 7 месяцев назад
One English… helps illustrate one’s intelligence… because talking like this makes me 80 IQ…
@Mister.Psychology
@Mister.Psychology 3 года назад
The statement about "the IQ test doesn't predict anything in real life" is not correct. It's very misleading. If the best test we have didn't predict anything at all in real life then why would you want MORE tests? You'd just stop testing then as you would not find any correlations anywhere between any test and real life outcomes. You really cannot sell people on creating more tests if you just assume stuff like this.
@lechatleblanc
@lechatleblanc 3 года назад
Iq tests are made up ....u can't predict shit from a fucking test.... Humans r too complex for that... Prime example.. The guy was put In special Ed classes as a kid!!!! Pretty sure he wouldn't score well on am IQ test and yet he is a leading scientist now
@jacobsame4512
@jacobsame4512 3 года назад
IQ tests gives useful results inside this industrial system, but in a human system which doesn't yet exist, it's a bullshit test.
@xcoldbloom
@xcoldbloom 2 месяца назад
thanks for the warning, im not gonna watch this video. clearly, he doesn't know what he's talking about.
@deantait8326
@deantait8326 4 года назад
Physiology is a big reason we're in this mess. A bunch of narcissistic, safe zone needy, everyone is okay, I want it now clients. IMO; There are virtually no honest psychologists. If they were honest to their clients, they'd go broke. I'm okay, your okay..... probably not. My toughest class was physiological psychology. Where's my Canadian buddy? BTW I'm not putting you guys into this class of psychological counseling. But...? PC and IQ...... Oil and water?
@euphoria3276
@euphoria3276 4 года назад
How would they go broke can you explain?
@w1cked001
@w1cked001 6 месяцев назад
@@euphoria3276as someone who’s been to therapy so I’m not poo pooing it. I think people in USA at least are raised in the younger generation to be very psychologically fragile. Dr Haidt has a good book on it
@DJSTOEK
@DJSTOEK 2 года назад
🖤
Далее
Daniel Kahneman || A Remarkable Life, Fast and Slow
1:58:21
Mindscape Ask Me Anything, Sean Carroll | July 2021
3:49:01
Трудности СГОРЕВШЕЙ BMW M4!
49:41
Просмотров 1,5 млн
Watermelon magic box! #shorts by Leisi Crazy
00:20
Просмотров 16 млн
"Когти льва" Анатолий МАЛЕЦ
53:01
The Neuroscience of Intelligence: Dr. Richard Haier
1:24:21
How DNA Makes Us Who We Are with Robert Plomin
1:49:29
Просмотров 16 тыс.
Lectures: Exploring the Psychology of Creativity
50:41
Трудности СГОРЕВШЕЙ BMW M4!
49:41
Просмотров 1,5 млн