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(Recommended)Popular Videos : [TED] Electrical experiments with plants that count and communicate | Greg Gage
 
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] Electrical experiments with plants that count and communicate | Greg Gage
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pvBlSFVmoaw

 


 

Playtime Comments : [TED] Electrical experiments with plants that count and communicate | Greg Gage

Ra***********:
3:40 Its called CHHUYI MUYI in local language in India it means A touch down plant.

Pi*****************:
8:55 Thank me later

Od*********:

2:14: Observe a simp in his natural habitat


Jo********:
@8:55 is when it happens. the stuff before is just random stories. Kinda like a nurse going to school 4 years just so they can work a 12 hour job sticking a needle into a person or wraping a device around its arm to measure stuff. so sad cause it could be rushed to skip all the useless stuff and go for the gravy.

B*:

This is interesting, how that can be possible? 9:00


Wa********:
4:33 it's a impulse signal

Cl***:

3:38 its a shy plant


Bl*********:

At 7:15 I wish he'd just touched the receptor once more instead of doing 2 in 1 there... I realise he wants to make sure it closes for the demonstration... But it would have been a better experiment using 2 touches within 20 seconds, to show it really does count in between..


Th*****:

2:59 neurons in heart cause ecg! What I learned in med school is fun?


RA*****:

3:45 in india we call it chhuimui


 

 

Top Comments : [TED] Electrical experiments with plants that count and communicate | Greg Gage

Am************:

This gets me thinking about how easy it probably would be for us to miss Actual alien life


Ch*********:
There's a very good documentary on the same subject called "What Plants Talk About". It's avaliable here on youtube

Ag*******************:

Where do I get the tiny little EKG pads for the plants??? I want to try this with mushroom mycelial networks.
I have a hypothesis that the mycelium networks model on, if not directly represent, human neural connections...


Op****:

I probably learnt more in these 9 minutes than I did from a whole year of biology


St************:
I think, maybe the plant closes down in heavy rainstorms.

at************:
who else here apologizes to plants when they accidentally hurt a them?

Ra***********:

If someone asked me. :- what is perfect according to you ?
My ans is :- nature


wa**************:

"im vegetarian i dont kill to keep myself alive...."

Sorry, You was saying?


Ni***********:
I never learned this in school. School was such a waste of time here is America. They only teach you their agenda and what THEY want you to learn. This is awesome!

Er******:
I'm getting way too attached to my weed plants lmaoo

lu****:
WE AVATAR NOW BOYS ALL THE PLANTS ARE CONNECTED

Ni*********:
I have a mimosa growing in my backyard, the plant retracts its leaves when I pulled some weeds a meter away from it.

Jo*********:

I remember when I was a kid my father would tell me, plants can hear us. That explains why he sometimes talk to them. By the way, he is an Agriculturist.


Be*********:
I have seen wild mimosa it's amazing
The brain releases DMT when it dies, I believe it's to put you at peice,
Plants also contain DMT, could there be a reason for this?

Ef*****:

Youtube has something other than games and clowns kids


Jo***********:
My weed plants and I always have the best conversations ....they are my favorite people

pe**********:
The Venus Flytrap counts stimuli before closing in order to compensate for rain drops

US*******:
I am old and one summer day, resting and pondering things in the shade of my porch, I felt this "odd" urge to thank the potted flowers for being so fragrant and beautiful. Then,I saw a butterfly with tattered wings visiting these flowers. I then thanked the butterfly in the same spirit as the flowers.
I felt good about the whole experience and felt connected to living things and nature as a whole. The whole experience induced me to wonder if I touched on something deeply profound and devine.
I am sure I did....it was an experience much deeper than church and it's rituals.
You are the first to know of that day.
Thanks for reading my account.

Ca*********:
when even a plant doesnt want to be your friend D:

So********:
Have you ever seen a rose plant
It has thorns in it
Let me tell you a real case about that
There was a scientist I don't know their name
But he grew a rose plant
He always used to spend time with that plant
He talked to that plant
And you guess what magic happened
The plant grew thornless
Plants have Emotions Too

EG**************:

This is how every Biology class should start in grade school. Thank you for sharing this amazing discovery.


Ja****:

clive baxter proved plants have consciousness 30 years ago


An*****************:

That Mimosa plant is called as "Putri Malu" or Shy Princess in Indonesia, CMIIW


gr*******:
Now vegans will eat air once they’ll know that plants and water have consciousness

Ju*****:

Turning plants into a series circuit


Ke**************:
Wonderful inspirational tool to get people interested in science.

Ar********:
This are the types of talks that I love on TED.

We********:
Wow my grandmother was known as the town flowerlady. She believed (by her intuition) that flowers liked to be touched and she would sing to them with what she called love in her heart. She swore it made her flowers grow bigger and Fuller. I know some thought she was a crazy flower lady, but after seeing this video I know she was right!!. People Loved her flowers as well. And she also believed that when love is transfered from human to plant, it also spreads love around it. "Grammy you were an old soul with a understanding all your own. I miss your beautiful gardens, I miss you singing amongst the flowers. You were right."

Pr*********:

FOR ANYONE WHO WANTS TO KNOW HOW THIS HAPPENS

It happens becoz of potassium ion movement. When the external touch stimulus is applied, or any such disturbances then some voltage gated channel opens. Potassium ion moves away from the disturbed part and because of the ion, since of its solute potential and change in osmotic concentration water also move out of the disturbed site (here leaf) . So when the concentration of water decrease in leaf, cells are no longer turgid, they become flaccid and shrink. So lthe leaf curls up and close.

Similar kind of mechanism for closing and opening of stomata. Potassium ion movement.

In case of humans, when external stimulus is applied the sodium ions move inside the axon from extracelluar fluid, which causes the depolarisation of the axolemma. And the charges are conducted through saltation, until they reach the end of neuron, the teldendria. For further conduction to another neuron some neurotransmitters are released into the synapse, and the next neuron dendrites have receptor for this

Any science student here


De*********:
I have a Mimosa Putica (also called the touch-me-not) plant and my friends freak out every time they see it move. I played a joke on one of my friends one day and while I was talking to them I brushed up against the plant and it moved. They saw it and yelled “ your plant just moved” I told them they were crazy. But they kept insisting it moved. I finally gave in and told them about the plant .
In case anyone is interested in growing one of these, the seeds for this plant can be purchased on Amazon for a few dollars. They come in different colors and the also grow pretty purple flowers. Happy gardening everyoneDee

 


 

[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] Depression, the secret we share | Andrew Solomon

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

[TED] Every kid needs a champion | Rita Pierson

[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 language shapes the way we think | Lera Boroditsky

[TED] How to escape education's death valley | Sir Ken Robinson

[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] How we must respond to the coronavirus pandemic | Bill Gates

[TED] Learning from dirty jobs | Mike Rowe

[TED] Making peace is a marathon | May El-Khalil

[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 brain-changing benefits of exercise | Wendy Suzuki

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

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

[TED] The incredible inventions of intuitive AI | Maurice Conti

[TED] The power of vulnerability | Brené Brown

[TED] The puzzle of motivation | Dan Pink

[TED] The secret to desire in a long-term relationship | Esther Perel

[TED] The secrets of learning a new language | Lýdia Machová

[TED] The story of 'Oumuamua, the first visitor from another star system | Karen J. Meech

[TED] The transformative power of classical music | Benjamin Zander

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

[TED] Which country does the most good for the world? | Simon Anholt

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

[TED] Why are these 32 symbols found in caves all over Europe | Genevieve von Petzinger

[TED] Why city flags may be the worst-designed thing you've never noticed | Roman Mars

[TED] Why does the universe exist? | Jim Holt

[TED] Why good leaders make you feel safe | Simon Sinek

[TED] Why is our universe fine-tuned for life? | Brian Greene

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

[TED] Your brain on video games | Daphne Bavelier

 


 

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