Tagged with “rsa” (12) activity chart

  1. How Does Experience Influence the Brain?

    Pioneering neurogenesis researcher and professor of psychology at Princeton University, Professor Elizabeth Gould comes to the RSA to discuss how experience literally shapes and alters the physical structure of the brain.

    The realisation that the surroundings and environments of mammals not only influence their emotional well-being, but also the neuronal constitution of their brains, is one of the most momentous discoveries of modern psychology and neuroscience. Gould’s research shows how stressful experiences in both early and adult life inhibit the survival of existing neurons and the creation of new ones, and has demonstrated that enriched environments and societies result in marked increases in neuron production. This breakthrough has profound and dramatic implications for social progress and understanding, and can add to our appreciation of the impact of poverty, social exclusion and stress on individuals and communities.

    Does increased social activity and interaction boost the creation of new neurons, and if so, how? How do these discoveries relate to memory and learning? What are the links between neurogenesis, brain plasticity and mental wellbeing?

    —Huffduffed by boxman 2 years ago

  2. Storytelling: How narratives shape our reality, ideas and behaviour

    Christian Salmon unveils the mechanics of a ‘storytelling machine’ which dominates the discourses of consumption, citizenship, and society at large.

    —Huffduffed by boxman 2 years ago

  3. The End of Discovery

    Emeritus Professor of Physics Russell Stannard asks whether or not we are approaching the absolute limits of what we can know about ourselves and the world.

    —Huffduffed by boxman 2 years ago

  4. Whole Earth Discipline

    Join ecologist Stewart Brand as he presents a bold and creative set of solutions for producing a more sustainable society.

    —Huffduffed by boxman 3 years ago

  5. The Anatomy of an Action: self and responsibility after neuroscience

    Is free will an illusion? Patrick Haggard and our expert panel debate the profound implications of the classic Libet experiment.

    —Huffduffed by boxman 3 years ago

  6. Left Brain, Right Brain: Human nature and political values

    Matthew Taylor will explore how brain and behaviour research is increasingly being incorporated into political and policy debate.

    —Huffduffed by boxman 3 years ago

  7. The Art of Meditation

    “The world’s happiest man" philosopher Matthieu Ricard explains how we can train our minds in habits of well-being.

    —Huffduffed by boxman 3 years ago

  8. You Are Not A Gadget

    Digital guru Jaron Lanier delivers a call to arms against digital collectivism and proposes more productive ways technology might interact with our culture.

    —Huffduffed by boxman 3 years ago

  9. How Many Friends Does One Person Need?

    Renowned evolutionary anthropologist Professor Robin Dunbar explains how the very distant past underpins all of our current behaviours, and how we can best utilise that knowledge.

    —Huffduffed by boxman 3 years ago

  10. RSA Design & Society - Playing the City

    Kevin Slavin, urban consultant and co-founder of New York computer games studio Area/Code presents a powerful argument for games as social systems with people at the centre; for the “software” of cities as what runs on the “hardware” of buildings and streets; for an “urban sport” that can educate behaviour by leaking from computers into the social world; and above all, for designers today to build the systems that will propagate and feed us, not the things we will consume.

    —Huffduffed by boxman 3 years ago

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