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Book : Brain Bugs How The Brains Flaws Shape Our Lives -...

Modelo 93342220
Fabricante o sello W. W. Norton & Company
Peso 0.27 Kg.
Precio:   $69,439.00
Si compra hoy, este producto se despachara y/o entregara entre el 19-05-2025 y el 27-05-2025
Descripción
-Titulo Original : Brain Bugs How The Brains Flaws Shape Our Lives

-Fabricante :

W. W. Norton & Company

-Descripcion Original:

“Excellent. . . . [Buonomano] reveals the intricate limitations and blessings of the most complex device in the known universe.” The Atlantic The human brain may be the best piece of technology ever created, but it’s far from perfect. Drawing on colorful examples and surprising research, neuroscientist Dean Buonomano exposes the blind spots and weaknesses that beset our brains and lead us to make misguided personal, professional, and financial decisions. Whether explaining why we are susceptible to advertisements or demonstrating how false memories are formed, Brain Bugs not only explains the brain’s inherent flaws but also gives us the tools to counteract them. 10 illustrations Review “[An] intriguing take on behavioral economics, marketing and human foibles.” ( Kirkus Reviews ) Writing a book about the hardware and software flaws of the human brain is an ingenious idea, and Buonomano has fully delivered on its promise. To a degree that is difficult for most of us to imagine, much less understand, our successes and failures, joys and sufferings, are the product of protein interactions and electrical changes taking place inside our heads. Brain Bugs is a remarkably accessible and engaging introduction to the neuroscience of the human condition. Sam Harris, author of the New York Times bestsellers The Moral Landscape, and The End of Faith In Brain Bugs, Dean Buonomano has brilliantly pulled off what few psychological scientists can do. In elegant and clear writing, he masterfully conveys the astonishing capability of the human mind, along with its flaws and limitations.Elizabeth Loftus, Distinguished Professor at the University of California, Irvine, and author of Eyewitness Testimony He takes readers on a lively tour of systematic biases and errors in human thinking, citing examples that are staples of psychology courses and other popular books. What is new, however, is Buonomano’s focus on the mechanisms of memory, especially its associative architecture, as the main causes of the brain’s bugs. Christopher Chabris, New York Times What makes the book all the more compelling is the lucidity with which Buonomano recognizes, amidst its weaknesses, the brains insurmountable strengths, feats artificial intelligence is ages from reaching--most notably, its remarkable penchant for pattern-recognition and what Buonomano calls the inherent and irrepressible ability of the brain to build connections and make associations. Maria Popova, The Atlantic One of the things I liked most about this book was the way it leaps from neuron to brain and then to person and on to society and back again, making useful comparisons all the way.Susan Blackmore, Focus Magazine About the Author Dean Buonomano is a professor of neurobiology and psychology at UCLA and a leading theorist on the neuroscience of time. His previous book, Brain Bugs: How the Brain’s Flaws Shape Our Lives, was a Wall Street Journal bestseller.
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