Talks

Neil Burgess:你的大腦怎麼告訴你身處何方?

Filmed Nov 2011 • Posted Feb 2012TEDSalon London Spring 2011
TEDSalon London Spring 2011
  • Embed
  • Download
  • FavoriteFavorited
  • Rate

You can share this video by copying this HTML to your clipboard and pasting into your blog or web page.

560 x 315
640 x 360
853 x 480
Subtitles:
Loading …

You either have JavaScript turned off or have an old version of the Adobe Flash Player. To view this rating widget you need to get the latest Flash player.
If your browser allows only "trusted sites" to execute Javascript, you should add the "googleapis.com" domain to your whitelist to allow our Flash detection to work properly.

TED Conversations

Got an idea, question, or debate inspired by this talk? Start a TED Conversation.

Comment on this Talk

72 total comments

This comment will be attributed to . Not ? Sign Out.

Characters remaining: 2000

progress indicator

This comment will be attributed to . Not ? Sign Out.

Characters remaining: 2000

你是怎麼記住你停車的地方?你怎麼確定自己正朝著正確方向前進?神經科學家Neil Burgess研究神經工程學,探究神經如何建構出我們周遭的環境以及如何連結我們的記憶和想像。

At University College in London, Neil Burgess researches how patterns of electrical activity in brain cells guide us through space. Full bio »

Translated into Chinese, Traditional by Sean Chuang
Reviewed by Meg Lee
Comments? Please email the translators above.

More talks translated into Chinese, Traditional »

Related playlists New View more »

  • Way, way out there 11
    Way, way out there
    Curated by TED Travel across the universe (or is it universes?) as star-gazing speakers share stunning images of Saturn's rings, haunting sounds from distant...
  • How does my brain work? 8
    How does my brain work?
    Curated by TED How exactly does the brain -- a 3-pound snarl of nervous tissue -- create inspired inventions, the feeling of hunger, the experience of beauty,...
  • To boldly go ... 7
    To boldly go ...
    Curated by TED Ski to the North Pole. Row across the Pacific. Swim on Mt. Everest(!). These adventurers have pushed themselves to the limits of human endurance,...

What to Watch Next

Play_icon

Daniel Wolpert: The real reason for brains

Play_icon

Gero Miesenboeck reengineers a brain

Play_icon

Rebecca Saxe: How we read each other's minds

What Your Friends are Watching

Related Tags

Creative Commons

We want you to share our Talks!

Just follow the guidelines outlined under our Creative Commons license.