Ví dụ về việc sử dụng Our brain's trong Tiếng anh và bản dịch của chúng sang Tiếng việt
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It's our brain's ability to focus on the negative for survival.
This happens because listening to music can drown out our brain's cries of fatigue.
Our brain's blind spots are actually not entirely bad- they do serve a purpose.
Sleep is so important because it is the only time our brain's glymphatic system is active.
The secret lies in our brain's ability to create new neural connections from learning.
Looking at these early stages indevelopment is the best opportunity to understand our brain's evolution.”.
In our view, sensory perception leads to our brain's representation that we call reality, or Maya.
So just being in a sweet shop andthinking about sweets can activate our brain's dopamine.
That's because some of our brain's open-loop circuits are designed to detect smiles and laughter, making us respond in kind.
When our behaviour is rewarded with things such as food ormoney, our brain's“valuation system” activates.
The Circadian rhythm is regulated by our brain's response to how long you have been awake, as well as, the changes between dark and light.
In 1994, Miller found that the workings of the human brain depends on communication between our brain's 100 billion neurons.
Our brain's connections are always changing and can adapt to new situations, helping us forming new habits, learning new things,….
Queerer than can in principle be supposed, or just queerer than we can suppose,given the limitations of our brain's evolutionary apprenticeship in Middle World?
Org, our brain's temperature-regulating cells turn off during REM sleep, causing your body temperature to be determined by your bedroom temperature.
In the not-so-distant past, Zor-Diderman pointed out, our brain's defences against thoughts of death were balanced out by the reality of death around us.
Twila Camp describes this interconnected information system as a virtual city that everyone owns andexplains how it's organized in a way that mimics our brain's natural way of thinking.
B vitamins play a large role in the production of our brain's happiness chemicals serotonin and dopamine and can be found in green vegetables, beans, bananas, and beetroot.
That's particularly important as we age, as research finds that our capacity to generatenitric oxide diminishes as we get older, along with our brain's energy metabolism and neuron activity.
What typically begins as our brain's ability to register short durations- from minutes to seconds- is transformed into an understanding of the flow of time across the lifespan.
Odors, which may appear to be a property of the air we breathe,are in fact our brain's representation of the chemical signatures that our noses sense.
It offsets our brain's tendency to fall into autopilot, which explains why we can't come up with good solutions after continuously staring at a bug for hours.
Forget what you thought you knew about human memory,because a new study suggests that our brain's capacity is 10 times larger than previously believed.
When we are in a deep sleep our brain's activity ebbs and flows in big, obvious waves, like watching a tide of human bodies rise up and sit down around a sports stadium.
Others believe the drive to seek out aesthetic experiences evolved toencourage us to learn about different aspects of the world- those that our brain's have not equipped us to deal with at birth.
It forms when we learn to read and strengthens connections between our brain's language and speech regions, as well as a region that has become known as the‘visual word form area'.
Our brain's ability to process them is shared by other primates, but the human brain is also able to respond to these cues proactively using“Gestalt principles”- rules that enable the mind to automatically perceive patterns in a stimulus.
Highlighting the work of social psychologist Roy Baumeister,Seppälä points out that our brain's"tendency to give more weight to the negative may have helped our species survive by highlighting potential dangers.".
Thanks to those clever neuroscientists, we now know that the word"new" holds it's power due to it's appeal to novelty:things that are new activate our brain's reward center, whereas novelty tends to die off quickly in material purchases(much faster than"experiential" purchases).