Brain
7.55
USD
Book Details
Author(s)Richard M. Restak
PublisherBantam Books
ISBN / ASIN5550656213
ISBN-139785550656211
Sales Rank2,610,179
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
Here is an unforgettable, one-of-a-kind odyssey through the fascinating world of the human brain.... Complete with more than 15- full-color and black-and-white illustrations, this highly readable book captures the exciting spirit of PBS television's eight-part series, "The Brain." Here is the story of man's marvelous quest to understand the workings of a mircle: the human brain, nearly three pounds of tissue that can store more information than all the libraries in the world-can trigger our most violent rages and our loftiest ideals...and is still so mysterious that it remains mankind's ultimate frontier. Like the acclaimed television series which inspired it, The Brain explores the provocative findings of right brain/left brain research, as well as recent experiments which show: How the brain of a professional musician will process music in an entirely different way from that of an unsophisticated listener How our daily lives depend on the carefully orchestrated symphony of rhythms and drives that induce sleep, sexual feelings, aggression, and-when things go awry-depression and even suicide. The wonders of learning and memory, and how, although brain cells continually die, somehow the memories can last a lifetime. The impact of the workplace on the brain, and how some people become "addicted" to stress The ways that vision and movement work together so that a blind man can use the sense of touch to "see" objects across a room. The intriguing phenomenon of "multiple personalities," which may, in some form, be part of our own everyday experience. Recent developments in technology have made it possible to examine the brain as never before. In this book you will see state-of-the-art images which show how the brain behaves when an object comes into view-how metabolically "active" areas-seen in brilliant orange-shift from the visual cortex to the back of the brain to the frontal lobes, where, in one instant, we finally "know" what we have seen.

