Goal
31 posts
đ¶And She wasđ¶
đ¶Flying high above the Earth đ¶
and she gone
Look up âProgramming and MetaProgramming in the Human Biocomputerâ by John C. Lilly, M.D.
âThe brain is not a blind, reactive machine, but a complex, sensitive biocomputer that we can program. And if we donât take the responsibility for programming it, then it will be programmed unwittingly by accident or by the social environment.â
â Timothy Leary
Perhaps the fungi network acts as the đ§ of the Green. The psychoactive effects of some mushrooms on animals is intriguing.
Everyone is excited about mushrooms this year. A friend says itâs because they thrive amidst decay and death, making new life under the rot. Iâd never noticed before this summer that the forest is half rot, half life. All the fallen trees, twisting slowly into the ground, all the mushrooms growing on the downed trees, and speckling the trunks with their Turkey Tails and Chicken of the Woods and Shelf Mushrooms. I used to think of the woods as a slowly changing place, turned by seasons, but itâs constantly in motion. If I could get closer, closer, maybe I could hear the leaves sprouting and disintegrating, the fungus spreading underground, and bark cells multiplying.
Out at Echo Lake, I notice all the birches that take root in the rotting stumps, making their homes from decay. How strong those curved roots are, how cunning to find purchase here, in what might look useless. I notice trees perched on cliffs, clinging with curled roots to the dirt, and impossibly arched trunks that reach out over rivers or other trees. My favorite is the pine tree that tilts further and further toward the lake each year but is somehow still alive.
Watch this, say the trees and mushrooms and ferns. Thereâs still so much living to do here.
Watch how we hang on.
Looks more like one of the âMushroom Elvesâ that mystics đ§ââïž see when they drink the right potion.
Red hair, tall and from the North. Sounds Neanderthal. Perhaps a common culture across N. America and Europe during the Ice age.
Thisđ.
We really do live in a society lads
Great advice!
Awesome discovery, this is very important.
Humans are born with brains âprewiredâ to see words
Humans are born with a part of the brain that is prewired to be receptive to seeing words and letters, setting the stage at birth for people to learn how to read, a new study suggests.
Analyzing brain scans of newborns, researchers found that this part of the brain â called the âvisual word form areaâ (VWFA) â is connected to the language network of the brain.
âThat makes it fertile ground to develop a sensitivity to visual words â even before any exposure to language,â said Zeynep Saygin, senior author of the study and assistant professor of psychology at The Ohio State University.
The VWFA is specialized for reading only in literate individuals. Some researchers had hypothesized that the pre-reading VWFA starts out being no different than other parts of the visual cortex that are sensitive to seeing faces, scenes or other objects, and only becomes selective to words and letters as children learn to read or at least as they learn language.
âWe found that isnât true. Even at birth, the VWFA is more connected functionally to the language network of the brain than it is to other areas,â Saygin said. âIt is an incredibly exciting finding.â
Saygin, who is a core faculty member of Ohio Stateâs Chronic Brain Injury Program, conducted the study with graduate students Jin Li and Heather Hansen and assistant professor David Osher, all in psychology at Ohio State. Their results were published in the journal Scientific Reports.
The researchers analyzed fMRI scans of the brains of 40 newborns, all less than a week old, who were part of the Developing Human Connectome Project. They compared these to similar scans from 40 adults who participated in the separate Human Connectome Project.
The VWFA is next to another part of visual cortex that processes faces, and it was reasonable to believe that there wasnât any difference in these parts of the brain in newborns, Saygin said.
As visual objects, faces have some of the same properties as words do, such as needing high spatial resolution for humans to see them correctly.
But the researchers found that, even in newborns, the VWFA was different from the part of the visual cortex that recognizes faces, primarily because of its functional connection to the language processing part of the brain.
âThe VWFA is specialized to see words even before weâre exposed to them,â Saygin said.
âItâs interesting to think about how and why our brains develop functional modules that are sensitive to specific things like faces, objects, and words,â said Li, who is lead author of the study.
âOur study really emphasized the role of already having brain connections at birth to help develop functional specialization, even for an experience-dependent category like reading.â
The study did find some differences in the VWFA in newborns and adults.
âOur findings suggest that there likely needs to be further refinement in the VWFA as babies mature,â Saygin said.
âExperience with spoken and written language will likely strengthen connections with specific aspects of the language circuit and further differentiate this regionâs function from its neighbors as a person gains literacy.â
Sayginâs lab at Ohio State is currently scanning the brains of 3- and 4-year-olds to learn more about what the VWFA does before children learn to read and what visual properties the region is responsive to.
The goal is to learn how the brain becomes a reading brain, she said. Learning more about individual variability may help researchers understand differences in reading behavior and could be useful in the study of dyslexia and other developmental disorders.
âKnowing what this region is doing at this early age will tell us a bit more about how the human brain can develop the ability to read and what may go wrong,â Saygin said. âIt is important to track how this region of the brain becomes increasingly specialized.â
Awesome đ.
it beginsâŠ.
Look for âMutant 59 The Plasric Eatersâ, I read it in the 70âs.
hi! i couldn't find much on the internet so i hope it's ok if i ask you. I've heard that there are now microbes that have learned to eat plastics and could prove to be very beneficial to fighting plastic pollution, but I was wondering if may be it could backfire on us? If maybe at some point they become so efficient at it that they threaten even the plastic we actually need. I don't know, may be I'm just being paranoid, but could that be a possibility somewhere in the future?
I mean that is a possibility, but Iâm not a biologist. Iâm not sure how likely it is.
Maybe my followers know better.
Eat the right mushrooms and you will understand the connection.
Imagine Dragons, âRadioactiveâ.
Growth is admitting I too possess toxic qualities & carry unhealed traumas I need to work on
Jody Scott, the author, created my catch phrase, âPassing for Humanâ. Good book.
The fact that I Donât Seem Autisticâą is mostly a sign that Iâm spending way too much time and resources pretending Iâm allistic so you donât get uncomfortable. Iâm not âhigh-functioningâ or âwell-adjustedâ, Iâm behaving. I had to go through years of abuse so you donât get embarassed when I flap my hands in public.
Donât use âYou donât look autistic to me.â as a compliment.
Science fiction, double feature.
The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975)
Harmonic resonances. Thought is Electric, creating an electromagnetic field at a specific frequency. Harmonic resonances strengthens/imparts data to the lower energy state. Have you ever âfeltâ someone staring at your back?
Parentsâ brain activity âechoesâ their infantâs brain activity when they play together
When infants are playing with objects, their early attempts to pay attention to things are accompanied by bursts of high-frequency activity in their brain. But what happens when parents play together with them? New research, publishing December 13 in the open-access journal PLOS Biology, by Dr Sam Wass of the University of East London in collaboration with Dr Victoria Leong (Cambridge University and Nanyang Technological University, Singapore) and colleagues, shows for the first time that when adults are engaged in joint play together with their infant, their own brains show similar bursts of high-frequency activity. Intriguingly, these bursts of activity are linked to their babyâs attention patterns and not their own.
The authors simultaneously recorded electroencephalography (EEG) data from 12-month-old infants and their mothers when they were playing separately or together with toys. âMost infants spend the majority of their waking hours in the company of others. But almost everything we know about early learning in the brain comes from studies looking at individual baby brains in isolation,â said Dr Wass, lead author on the study. âBy recording activity in a babyâs brain and their motherâs brain at the same time, we were able to see how changes in their brain activity reflected their own or each otherâs behavior while they were playing together.â
âWe know that, when an adult plays jointly together with a child, this helps the child to sustain attention to things,â he continued. âBut until now we havenât really understood why this is. Our findings suggested that, when a baby pays attention to things, the adultâs brain tracks and responds to her infantâs looking behavior - as if her infantsâ actions are echoed in the parentâs brain activity. And we also found that, where the parentâs brain is more responsive to the child, the child sustains their attention for longer.â
Dr Leong, senior author on the study, said, âOur project asks more questions than it answers. We donât know, for example, whether some parents are more responsive to their babies than others - and if so, why. And our study just looked at mums, so we donât know whether mums and dads may be different in how they respond neurally to their babies. Our findings are exciting, but there is a lot more to investigate about how, exactly, this type of neural responsiveness by parents may help young children to learn.â
Beautiful. Thank you đ! I find your art brilliant!
The shapeshifterâŠ
I have a big print of this piece at the end of my bed. I look at it every morning while I try to reload this programme. Somedays when I look at this piece it feels brand new, I scan around and look at each part and think hah! how did that happen? Otherdays I look at it and ache because itâs an image from the past that contains lots of different memories. I also feel like those judgemental eyes mock me, because I know I can do so much better but I have yet to make that leap and do so.
Theyâre screaming at me what the hell are you waiting for? But all I want to do is to fall asleep and forget any of it ever happened.
I have a funny relationship with this artwork and I guess myself, always at war and in awe.
Have a great weekend everyone!
#art #print #tiger #shapeshifter #digitalart #owl #eagle #peacock #dream
https://www.instagram.com/p/Bto20R9HHd3/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=102t6flanx38j
Beautiful
I know, right?
Itâs amusing yet disappointing and upsetting how often in my life Iâve agreed with someone, but they ended up never seeing it because I asked them questions or contradicted some minor detail and they were operating from a state of mind where anything other than profuse agreement is interpreted as opposition.
I am Groot.
the awakening ⊠BY EDWARD FOSTER
Inspiration
âYour divine essence is already spiritually enlightened. You are free from the bondage of mind-made, personal suffering. It is your choice to awaken from this human dream construct anytime by relaxing into the oceanic, unbounded awareness.â  ~Anon I mus (Spiritually Anonymous)
From the depths, the Moon beckons
âWhen the lake is utterly still (free of any ripples); it has no other choice but to reflect with perfect clarity.â  ~Anon I mus (Spiritually Anonymous)
*visit Anon I musâ website atÂ
https://wikisearcheranonimus.wordpress.com/
http://spiritualenlightenment4nobodies.com/
Thank you Mr. Gaiman, youâre writing has had a profound effect on my life.
Neil Gaiman by: Allan Amato
Awesome, for some reason, this brings tears to my eyes.
âThe Demiurgeâ by Vajra
I am Groot
| Artwork by ebeneart |
Logos on earth
What is the frequency range, I love this color the most.
green gif
Always lie.
tfw people ask some shit like âdid you miss me?â and you have to quickly decide whether to tell the truth and make them upset or lie and make them happy