Seminars
- 1. Vision of the Future (Part 1) - Dec 2005
- 2. Vision of the Future (Part 2) - Dec 2005
- 3. Change Your Mind: Memory and Disease - Dec 2005
- 4. Expand Your Mind: Getting a Grasp on Consciousness - Dec 2005
- 5. Fighting Cancer with Nanoparticle Medicines - May 2008
- 6. Protein Recycling: Its Role in Human Biology and Disease - Dec 2008
Seminars on Medicine - Vision of the Future (Part 2) - Dec 2005
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Seminar 2 - Vision of the Future (Part 2) - Dec 2005
The speakers are Eric R. Kandel who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 2000 and James Watson who is a joint winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1962.
A contrary James Watson offers a dose of skepticism around the direction of brain research described by his colleagues. In the words of his old partner Francis Crick, "we haven’t found the double helix of the brain and don’t know how to think about it." Some "gigantic problems" exist, says Watson: How is perceptual information stored; what does it look like; and how does information get pushed from one part of the brain to another? Key to cracking these questions, in Watson’s opinion, will be a deep understanding of brain evolution. He also recommends delving further into the genetic basis of mental disease, which might uncover an underlying defect in neurogenesis -- the growth of new brain cells. Perhaps all mental disease will ultimately be characterized as a "deep learning defect." Watson is much concerned with "why we lose the ability to learn as we get older." He believes it must be because "the brain is finite—we can only have so much stored." But while he plays tennis and reads books partly in the hope that they will expand his mind, Watson also looks to biology for a way "to speed up neurogenesis in adults, and raise IQ." Eric R. Kandel was awared the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 2000. He is University Professor, and Fred Kavli Professor and Director, Kavli Institute for Brain Sciences, Columbia University. For proposing the double helical structure of DNA, James Watson and Francis Crick, together with Maurice Wilkins, were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1962. James Watson is the Chancellor, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.
Eric R. Kandel, James D. Watson
Vision of the Future (Part 2) (Massachusetts Institute of Technology: MIT World) http://mitworld.mit.edu Date accessed: 2009-02-24 License: Not applicable |


