Diagnosing a zombie: brain and behavior (Part two) - Tim Verstynen & Bradley Voytek

284,561 views

2012-10-24 ・ TED-Ed


New videos

Diagnosing a zombie: brain and behavior (Part two) - Tim Verstynen & Bradley Voytek

284,561 views ・ 2012-10-24

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:00
Transcriber: tom carter Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar
0
0
7000
00:16
(Zombie noises) Doctor 1: So, here we are again.
1
16201
6032
00:22
You know, I've been thinking. Why is this thing so angry?
2
22233
4484
00:26
Doctor 2: Maybe he's just hungry.
3
26717
2083
00:28
D1: (Laughs) I'm not going in there to feed it.
4
28800
2684
00:31
No, this seems like something very primal.
5
31484
4100
00:35
D2: This is kind of a hard one,
6
35584
1583
00:37
because we don't really have any biological definitions for emotions like anger.
7
37167
4667
00:41
Sure, brain imaging studies have shown that some brain regions are more active when people are angry,
8
41834
5699
00:47
but these are almost always correlational.
9
47533
2700
00:50
When it's warmer outside, people wear less clothing,
10
50233
2369
00:52
but if I strip down to my birthday suit, it doesn't make it sunny.
11
52602
3500
00:56
D1: (Laughs) It's like having someone run on a treadmill and saying
12
56102
2999
00:59
"Look at how much more his arms move when he runs faster!
13
59101
3932
01:03
The arms must be where running happens."
14
63033
2868
01:05
D2: That's why working with people with brain lesions is so important to neuroscience.
15
65901
3617
01:09
It adds some causal evidence that a brain area might be required for a behavior.
16
69518
4816
01:14
Same with brain simulation studies.
17
74334
1967
01:16
If stimulating a brain area causes a behavior,
18
76301
3333
01:19
then that's good evidence that the brain region is involved in that behavior.
19
79634
3832
01:23
So like studies with cats in the 1950s
20
83466
3035
01:26
showed that stimulating a small almond-shaped area deep in the brain called the amygdala
21
86501
4149
01:30
leads to aggressive or predatory behaviors.
22
90650
3066
01:33
These things look pretty aggressive to me.
23
93716
2135
01:35
D1: Right. But other studies have shown that stimulating different parts of the amygdala
24
95851
3850
01:39
can actually suppress predatory behaviors.
25
99701
2300
01:42
So it's kind of a complicated little brain structure.
26
102001
2650
01:44
D2: Yeah. And fMRI studies have found that the amygdala is active in violent criminals.
27
104651
4366
01:49
D1: Whoa, whoa, whoa. Careful there.
28
109017
2284
01:51
Just because criminals have the same active brain regions as people who are angry,
29
111301
3583
01:54
doesn't mean that they're inherently aggressive.
30
114884
2551
01:57
That's like saying because I kiss with the same face hole that I use to burp,
31
117435
3549
02:00
then these two things are related.
32
120984
2267
02:03
It's a false equivalence.
33
123251
1683
02:04
D2: Huh! Never thought of it like that. That's a good point.
34
124934
2549
02:07
D1: You know, the amygdala is part of the Papez circuit.
35
127483
3600
02:11
This system was discovered by James Papez, who used the rabies virus to lesion different areas in the cat's brain.
36
131083
5683
02:16
He found that the amygdala was physically connected to another region called the hippocampus --
37
136766
4267
02:21
a little seahorse-shaped area that is needed to turn short-term memories into long-term memories.
38
141033
5583
02:26
It's thought that this connection between the amygdala and hippocampus
39
146616
3085
02:29
links emotion and memory together,
40
149701
1883
02:31
so that you remember really emotional stuff better than boring everyday things.
41
151584
4283
02:35
D2: Yeah, like Patient H.M. In the 1950s, surgeons removed both his left and right hippocampuses
42
155867
5349
02:41
to treat his epilepsy.
43
161216
1650
02:42
But after the surgery, he couldn't remember any new information for longer than a few minutes.
44
162866
4751
02:47
Zombies appear to be pretty forgetful, wouldn't you agree?
45
167617
3417
02:51
D1: (Laughs) Absolutely. Between the amygdala-related aggression,
46
171034
3436
02:54
and memory deficits from the hippocampus,
47
174470
2650
02:57
Papez may have actually accidentally created the first zombie cat.
48
177120
4282
03:01
D2: Aw, come on now, let's not get carried away.
49
181402
3250
03:04
But now we do have some testable hypotheses.
50
184652
3417
03:08
I'd put money on its aggression and memory problems being linked to abnormalities
51
188069
3683
03:11
in its amygdala and hippocampus, respectively.
52
191752
2951
03:14
D1: Great! So all we need to do now is figure out how to experimentally test this.
53
194703
3866
03:18
Do you think it'll let us examine its brain to verify our hypothesis?
54
198569
4368
03:22
D2: Uh, you know, I think I might be more comfortable not knowing the answer to this one.
55
202937
5116
03:28
D1: Hmm. Maybe we could get a graduate student to do it for us?
56
208053
6117
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7