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本帖最后由 t4k7d2vx 于 2011-12-25 16:29 编辑
DanteLegend 发表于 2011-12-25 10:18 
问题不在教授,在某个能装而且智商低下的人连这篇报告的完整意义都不能领会,第二段说了爱因斯坦的大脑年 ...
不是能装,是2
教授费了半天劲作了一项根本没权威性的论文,连天朝土鳖大学生都不如
要我说,不光要找同年龄的,还要找生日相同的,性别相同的,都是犹太人,都是移民.... 这样的1000个大脑和爱因斯坦比较,才能稍微有点权威性
但凡是忽略以上事实的,都是叫兽
这样你满意否?白银会员{:000:}
顺便,附赠以前的bbc 报道
The secret of Einstein's immense intellect may finally have been uncovered - one area of his brain was significantly different than most people's.
The BBC's Sue Nelson: "Within seven hours of his death his brain was removed and preserved"
Albert Einstein, who discovered the theory of relativity, died in 1955, aged 76. His brain was then removed and preserved for scientific research.
Scientists at McMaster University, Ontario, Canada compared the shape and size Einstein's brain with those of 35 men and 56 women with average intelligence.
They think their findings may well explain his genius for mathematical and spatial thinking.
In general, Einstein's brain was the same as all the others except in one particular area - the region responsible for mathematical thought and the ability to think in terms of space and movement.
Albert Einstein
Extensive development of this region meant that Einstein's brain was 15% wider than the other brains studied.
Uniquely, Einstein's brain also lacked a groove that normally runs through part of this area. The researchers suggest that its absence may have allowed the neurons to communicate much more easily.
"This unusual brain anatomy may explain why Einstein thought the way he did," said Professor Sandra Witelson, who led the research published in the Lancet.
"Einstein's own description of his scientific thinking was that words did not seem to play a role. Instead he saw more or less clear images of a visual kind," she said.
Einstein allowed his brain to be studied after his death
The idea that differing abilities are determined by physical differences in the structure of the brain is currently of great interest to scientists.
"To say there is a definite link is one bridge too far, at the moment," said Professor Laurie Hall, a brain imaging expert from the University of Cambridge.
"So far the case isn't proven. But magnetic resonance and other new technologies are allowing us to start to probe those very questions."
The researchers hope that the study will encourage the donation of brain specimens from other gifted individuals.
individuals.
除了伯克利叫兽,还请白银会员让加拿大叫兽,英国剑桥叫兽等等智商低下
请为了人类事业捐出你的大脑吧 |
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