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... out for you. With scientific arguments, it is usual to try to make explicit any such unstated premises so that the underlying structure of the argument becomes clear as an hypothesis. Unstated premises ...
2. IMMMUN Appendix 1
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... to distinguish between different scents  ability to 'make-believe' (pretend) – the beginning of abstraction emotional awareness discrimination between fact, fiction, theory and hypothesis ...
... Its extensive bilateral and interclaustral connections support the hypothesis that the claustrum serves as a ‘synchrony detector’, coordinating information sharing and temporal binding throughout ...
... innovation, hypothesising, experimentation and creativity (not to mention entertainment). The idea of you being an ostrich makes sense only in this context. Conversely, the idea that you are not an ostrich ...
... and also the magnitude of this activity correlates positively with the accuracy of the memory-guided saccade that follows later.[77] These findings lend strong support for the hypothesis that such activity ...
... (N5). Regions of engagement include the left medial prefrontal cortex, left temporoparietal junction, and left posterior cingulate. These data support the hypothesis that processing of immoral stimuli ...
...  know the difference between facts and opinions, between theory and hypothesis, between good and bad evidence, and between a row and an argument understand why Sherlock ...
8. Sakiro's Hackipedia Volume 3
(Neurohacking/Resources)
... controversial issues when we want to show what we considered and how we arrived at our decisions. The term "hypothesis" in its broadest sense as a potential explanation or conclusion that is ...
... This is based on the hypothesis that we are all mad without society to keep us under control and 'civilized'. Why would a species evolve that way? The short answer is that it wouldn't. An open system ...
... play by the rules you'll be abandoned.' ...Before you point out any examples of successful, happy, real life, nonconformist people as evidence against this hypothesis, remember that it's only those who ...
11. Toxins in food - Aspartame - info 1981-2013
(Neurohacking/Lifestyle & Nutrition)
... released from any study, give meaning to the hypothesis,  “A picture is worth a thousand words.”     Following is Victoria’s gutsy account of why she did her experiment, ...
12. Alcohol - Intellect & alcohol use
(Neurohacking/Drugs & Chemicals)
... 'The Scientific Fundamentalist   Drinking alcohol is evolutionarily novel, so the hypothesis would predict that more intelligent people drink more alcohol than less intelligent people. The human ...
13. Emotion - methods for mood & anxiety disorders
(Neurohacking/Theory & Research)
... absence of the UCS"66.   A variety of behavioral observations support the hypothesis that extinction is a form of learning and not 'unlearning' or the forgetting of a conditioned association ...
14. Emotion - disorders of emotion
(Neurohacking/Theory & Research)
... of Health, Building 35, Room 1C1004, 35 Convent Drive, MSC 3714, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-3714, USA. bailu@mail.nih.gov   Abstract The 'neurotrophin hypothesis of depression' is based largely ...
... it’s a hypothesis and not a theory. Order in development Networks develop in the order they are numbered. The continuing development of all networks requires gene transcription triggered by ...
  Beyond Reasonable Doubt Setting up research experiments -the basics   First you decide what you want to find out. You form an hypothesis, which is your educated guess about your particular ...
... firing fields all at equal distances from their neighbors led to a hypothesis that these cells encode a cognitive representation of space [13]. The discovery also suggested a mechanism for dynamic computation ...
18. The Dawn Era Calendar
(FAQs/General Issues)
... days, by googling it. What you find, basically, is that in 1927 - and fate is not without a sense of irony, again - a Belgium catholic priest named Georges LemaĆ®tre emitted the hypothesis of the universe ...
... out for you. With scientific arguments, it is usual to try to make explicit any such unstated premises so that the underlying structure of the argument becomes clear as an hypothesis. Unstated premises ...
20. Glutamate & Empathy
(Neurohacking/Drugs & Chemicals)
... and parietal regions in autism. Am J Psychiatry 163: 2189–2192. Coyle JT (2006) Glutamate and schizophrenia: Beyond the dopamine hypothesis. Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology 26(4–6): ...
21. Learning - Memory & Timing
(Neurohacking/Theory & Research)
... old information. In two behavioral experiments and one functional MRI (fMRI) experiment, we tested the hypothesis that learning and remembering compete when both processes happen within a brief period ...
22. Methods & Technology Intro - Part I: Methods
(Neurohacking/Methods & Technology)
... in networks 1 & 5 (see tutorials). Questionairres & Surveys You start out with an hypothesis and you want some proof or disproof. For example, “I wonder if my diet could be responsible ...
23. Tobacco & Nicotine - nicotine as therapy
(Neurohacking/Drugs & Chemicals)
... rates of neurodegenerative disorders, and nicotine improves cognitive and motor functioning in people with Alzheimer disease and Parkinson disease. The prevailing hypothesis is that nicotine increases ...
24. Psychological methods - Meditation - benefits
(Neurohacking/Methods & Technology)
... and on verbal fluency. [19] Evidence (primarily from EEG studies [27]) supports the hypothesis that meditation training variously enhances creative incubation and illumination via transcendence and integration, ...
25. Intelligence - The Basics
(Neurohacking/Basics)
... Brain Hypothesis is Debunked   We now know that the brain’s left and right hemispheres actually process different parts of the same tasks, instead of with the sharp specialization that was ...
... when we're doing the “paste” half. (note this is only an hypothesis, not a fact -ed.) Professor Ro said future research will investigate what occurs when images are flashed by a strobe light ...
...    The Split-Brain Hypothesis: Do People Really have a Left Brain and a Right Brain? No they don't, although this is a very popular myth. The idea that different parts of the brain might be devoted ...
... course of BD; perhaps more so than static DNA variations. But this is just the tip of the iceberg...Epigenetics explains the technical aspects of the Programming Hypothesis and Matrix Theory, via plasticity ...
29. Autism - A Theory of Autism, by Rama & Lindsay Oberman
(Neurohacking/Disorders & Problems)
... dysfunctional. Andrew Whitten's group at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland made this proposal at about the same time we did, but the first experimental evidence for the hypothesis came from our ...
... complete strangers. The capacity to face the unknown in new experiences and learning, without fear and with eagerness to discover, is a hallmark of strong intelligence. The split brain hypothesis: It ...
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