2. Neuroanatomy

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Published 2021-10-27
MIT 9.13 The Human Brain, Spring 2019
Instructor: Nancy Kanwisher
View the complete course: ocw.mit.edu/9-13S19
YouTube Playlist:    • MIT 9.13 The Human Brain, Spring 2019  

Basic brief neuroanatomy review in preparation for dissection, including an introduction to the cortex, primary regions, and topographic maps.

* NOTE: Lecture 3. Master Class: Human Brain Dissection (in-class dissection—video not recorded)

License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA
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All Comments (21)
  • It's crazy that there are people out there who used this lecture to get their degree and become a neurosurgeon or something. And I'm using this lecture to keep me focused to wash my dishes. Also, bless MIT for making this course free. When I was a kid, I loved learning so much I played school during summer break. If I had a math workbook from the previous year, I would finish it. The school gave us an old science textbook to keep so I studied from it. I watched documentaries and CSPAN for fun. If I had this course available to me back then, I would've been the happiest kid around. I hope somewhere out there, there's a kid who is like I was and can learn as much as they want.
  • I would like to apply to MIT just to get the rejection letter to hang it on my wall. "Dear Mr. Cumberland: Upon reviewing your high school transcript, we at the MIT admissions office are perplexed as to how anyone could possibly make an 'F' in Art class? We would like to interview you and request you submit to a MRI scan of your brain so that our neurology department can settle a bet."
  • @rockallmusic
    For anybody like me who kept thinking "I wish I knew what these reading assignment papers were, they sound so interesting": you can find out the papers if you follow the link in the description "View the complete course", then navigate to "Browse course material" -> "Readings"
  • @chriserony
    Got my Bachelor's in Cognitive Science from UCSD. What I learned : 1. homunculus 2. "If you see a hippo on campus you'll never forget." 3. You will die without REM sleep 4. Shits always more complicated than you thought it was, never take a behavior study at face value 5. A confident memory does not at all mean an accurate memory 6. We know less about the brain than outer space & it's all from freak accidents and people with grand mal seizures because it's wildly unethical to study a live brain outside a body. Neuroscientists are the Sherlock Holmes of researchers with the detailed and refined amount of information they learn about the brain from a single case study. Edit: 7. Fire together, wire together
  • @lurkingfriend
    Nancy is so pleasant, it looks like she's really enjoying her time. (most of my teachers hated teaching, they only saw themselves as researchers)
  • @karensilver8853
    I'm delighted with this course. I worked in neuropsychiatry and a lot of what she's talking about hadn't even been "born" yet.
  • @dipankardey1044
    I am from engineering background, but has got curiosity to know how our brain works. As I'm a programmer I find it real interesting how do we map a logic for what's happening with different parts of the brain. Please keep sharing such courses, these courses are extremely helpful for people like us
  • @Skalbemann
    Holy shit! What an age to live in to have something like this just freely available!
  • @peretzo
    The woman is PHENOMENAL 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
  • @lseh4720
    Thank you MIT for putting this out for free and for hiring and retaining Professor Kanwisher. I almost want to go back to college. :-). Now, please giver her a raise, a BIG raise.
  • @snoodydoody2685
    What a great speaker. Also did anyone else think to themselves in the beginning of the video "Oh don't apologize for insulting my intelligence, I am actually stupid, and I didn't take 901 or 902. I took uh... 90Youtube to get in here..." lol jk
  • @solesovereign
    This class is truly fascinating. In many ways I wish I had applied myself a bit more in school to get into a school like MIT.
  • Hands down the most clearly explained neuroanatomy of our brains! Thank you, Prof. Kanwisher!
  • @HZAexNB
    I can't believe i watched the entire video enthusiasticly. The topic is good but the way she presented it is amazing, really.
  • @wesley6442
    I have enjoyed open course ware lectures for a good decade now, and I gained a lot of fascinating insight into electrical engineering, physics, quantum physics and many others. But I have never been so mesmerized but such an incredible topic such as neurobiology, I can't thank MIT enough for sharing this lecture with the world free of charge, I've never been so enthralled by a topic such as this, I am blown away at how incredibly fascinating it all is!
  • @Allbbrz
    She is delightful and she kept me awake from 4:30 to 5:30 in the morning. Really fascinating subject, the brain... she is too.