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(Recommended)Popular Videos : [TED] Your brain on video games | Daphne Bavelier
 
This time, I will review the popular YouTube videos.
These days, even if it's good to watch on YouTube, sometimes people skip it or don't watch it if it's too long.

When you watch Youtube, do you scroll and read the comments first?

To save your busy time, why don't you check out the fun contents, summary, and empathy comments of popular YouTube videos first and watch YouTube?

(Recommended)Popular Videos : [TED] Your brain on video games | Daphne Bavelier

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FktsFcooIG8

 

 

Summary Comments : [TED] Your brain on video games | Daphne Bavelier

Th******:

When I was 6 years old, my mom gave me Doom and Wolfenstein 3D. The O.G.
I am now Teacher with a Master's Degree and a Wife.
I am 31. She is 31. She plays video games. My mom, sister, wife and I have played the Borderlands series together L4D2, Killing Floor, Me3/Andromeda Multiplayer, all of Halo... etc. Yeah... my mom is 61. She plays Diablo 3 and *Starcraft*.
Yeah, not Asians either
So, yeah, my mom got me typing and doing command lines since when I was 6.
So yeah, complex strategy, quick thinking, reflexes, cooperation and cost/benefit analysis in real time.
Active consumption v . Passive consumption. Screw watching TV all day.


 

 

Playtime Comments : [TED] Your brain on video games | Daphne Bavelier

Da*******:

4:05
5-15 hours a week gamers
Me who plays 5-15 hours a day


sm**********:
The video: 17:58 of straight fax

The comments: 5 tO 10 hOuRs Is PaTHeTiC

Jo*********:

2:42 - the best words I've heard on a TED talk


Cr**********:

1:07 My boyfriend and I will be these old people on the couch. Those people who disliked the video will have a very sad old age x))


Sp********:

5:35
"I want you to shout out the color of the ink"
Me: C H A I R


CR******:
6:44 i stictly agree with this

XB*****:

4:30 god shes so right
i readed a little microchip's text without a magnified glass


Th**********:
1:08 that stock image is hilarious

 


 

Top Comments : [TED] Your brain on video games | Daphne Bavelier

So**************:

Finally, I thought she was going to talk about how shootings are connected to video games, but she spoke the opposite. Thank god, damn you boomers who run the media.


Lu*****:

I honestly thought this would be another "Video games are bad, make them illegal" type video, but this is honestly a well thought out video, and pretty Insightful.


Fi*********:
I respect this woman

Wh**********:
I told you mom.

iM********:
Makes my eyes worse? I can literally spot someone on a screen from METERS AWAY XD I AM THE SCOUT OF ANYTEAM

Re*******:
Mainstream science: video games rot the brain.
Gamer: You underestimate my power

Ni**:

Thanks, i'm gonna go back now playing 5 hours League of Legends on a day.


Ry********:
Moms be like: I’m going to pretend I didn’t see that.

Le*********:

her:multitasking


me:ultimate custom night 50/20 mode


Ch***:
"I'm a brain scientist, and as a brain scientist i'm actually interested in the brain."

Sa******:
Doctor: The average gamer plays about 12 hours a week

Me: you mean 12 hours a day?

Doctor: what?

Me: what?

Za***:

Protect this person at all costs


Ki************:

Drinking game : Take a shot every time she says "Step into the lab"


Ja*********:
my teachers usually show me TED talks but I feel like they decided to skip this one :)

Ru******:

Stealth games taught me the value of patience.Hitman series(my favourite),thief,Splinter cell series etc.If any gamer wants to play
serious and more mature stealth games try Death to spies and it's sequel Death to spies moment of truth(best stealth game ever).


Fr********:

what did she say? "video games are good if you play 15 hours per week"
what did we hear?"video games are good"


Se**************:

It's almost as if hand-eye coordination, reaction time, critical decision making, and decisive action are good qualities. Who'd have thought.


Ta****************:

I think Activision employed her do this cause she gave all the good aspects of playing cod lol


Jo******:
What videogames left me: I couldn't understand so learned English, I developed taste for computers so I became an engineer, I was depressed so I went deep into RPG and avoided suicide. Yeah I definitely recommend videogames, will improve more than your sight.

Bl***:

I'm really surprised, I was expecting this lady to just be hating on video games, trying to say it's addictive or whatever. Happy to be proven wrong.


Li***********:
What she says: 5 to 10 hours a week

My little brother: “Three. Take it or leave it.”

wo****************:
The Dislikes are from parents that think video games cause violence

DR*********:

Me ready to smash that dislike button: "ALRIGHT BOOMER LET'S SEE WHAT YOU'RE GONNA SA-"

Daphne: "Videogames good"


Me: Oh


Sw**********:

"I'm a brain scientist, and I'm interested in the brain."

Ah yes, the floor here is made out of floor.


Ho*********:
"So we need a new brand of chocolate, a game that's fun and engaging"
Soooo, portal 1 and 2. Seriously bring it back, make more levels!

Jo*********:
"I'm a brain scientist, and as a brain scientist I'm actually interested in how the brain works."

Ma*****:

Nobody is born cool
Except of course: The lady presenting this presentation on how video games arnt bad


do***********:

My mom: stop playing video games it make you violent.
My mom seeing this video: Delete YouTube


Dr******:

Parents: Games are easy and are for kids.

Supreme Calamitas Death Mode: What did you just say?


Da********:
Action video games might train your kids physically, but they won't go nearly as far as exploration/platforming games.
Spyro, Crash, Prince of Persia, Bioshock, Resident Evil, Fallout, and Elder Scrolls all fit into this category.
Games that make you observe your environment, react to conflicts, and even problem solve how to platform for ledges to higher points.
Better yet; each game will always make you think twice, even though you've played several before it.
Resident Evil has detail based problem solving: Remember where certain locked doors were, and return to them once you have the corresponding key items.
Go from that to Spyro where you see a collectible sitting on a ledge, and you ask yourself "How do I reach that?" There's no key here, but it's problem solving all the same.
Teach your kids to invent solutions to problems, not excuses. I believe games are a good way to approach that.

Ha**********:
"If the Brain were so simple we could understand it, we would be so simple we couldn't!"

Credited to Lyall Watson

Describes a strange paradox where it becomes impossible to fully understand our Brain. Just think of it as a Carrot being strapped to the head of a donkey just outside his reach, no matter how fast and far he runs, the Carrot will always be traveling the same distance at the same speed without getting any closer.

The smarter we get, the more complex our Brains become, which means we need to get smarter, which in turn means our Brains need to get more complex....... ad infinitum.

Maybe you would think there is a "shortcut", that maybe we can use some "tricks" to circumvent this. However, this is also impossible because even if we manage to somehow reach the point of "full understanding" through some strange tricks, the moment our Brains receive the new Information, they will evolve to more complexity which will require the process to begin anew.

 

 

[TED] We gathered comments about popular videos and looked at them in summary, including play time, and order of popularity.

It's a good video or channel, but if you're sad because it's too long, please leave a YouTube channel or video link and I'll post it on this blog.

 


 

[TED] Channel Posting

[TED] 10 things you didn't know about orgasm | Mary Roach

[TED] 10 ways to have a better conversation | Celeste Headlee

[TED] A Saudi, an Indian and an Iranian walk into a Qatari bar ... | Maz Jobrani

[TED] A simple way to break a bad habit | Judson Brewer

[TED] Can you really tell if a kid is lying? | Kang Lee

[TED] Do schools kill creativity? | Sir Ken Robinson

[TED] Everything you think you know about addiction is wrong | Johann Hari

[TED] Fly with the Jetman | Yves Rossy

[TED] Grit: the power of passion and perseverance | Angela Lee Duckworth

[TED] How I climbed a 3,000-foot vertical cliff -- without ropes | Alex Honnold

[TED] How I held my breath for 17 minutes | David Blaine

[TED] How great leaders inspire action | Simon Sinek

[TED] How to fix a broken heart | Guy Winch

[TED] How to make stress your friend | Kelly McGonigal

[TED] How to spot a liar | Pamela Meyer

[TED] How to stay calm when you know you'll be stressed | Daniel Levitin

[TED] My escape from North Korea | Hyeonseo Lee

[TED] My journey to yo-yo mastery | BLACK

[TED] My stroke of insight | Jill Bolte Taylor

[TED] New bionics let us run, climb and dance | Hugh Herr

[TED] Questioning the universe | Stephen Hawking

[TED] Rethinking infidelity ... a talk for anyone who has ever loved | Esther Perel

[TED] Strange answers to the psychopath test | Jon Ronson

[TED] The danger of a single story | Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

[TED] The future we're building -- and boring | Elon Musk

[TED] The power of vulnerability | Brené Brown

[TED] The puzzle of motivation | Dan Pink

[TED] What really matters at the end of life | BJ Miller

[TED] Who are you, really? The puzzle of personality | Brian Little

[TED] Your body language may shape who you are | Amy Cuddy

 

 
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