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  • [Intro]

  • It's a notion that's been propagated by movies, magazines, and motivational speakers and repeated

  • by well-meaning folks and shysters alike. They tell you that you're only using 10% of

  • your brain. If you're only able to access a fraction of your brain-power, just imagine

  • what you could do if you tapped into all that unused potential!

  • Read other people's thoughts, play the stock market, crush cans with your mind, and levitate.

  • Not to rain on your brain parade, but that 10% stuff is so far off that it would be laughable

  • if it weren't so widespread, and I kinda can't believe I'm still talking about it!

  • So like many myths, it's hard to pinpoint exactly where it began. There's no definitive

  • source, though some have linked it back to the American psychologist William James and

  • even Albert Einstein, who both suggested, in so many words, that we were only using

  • part of our mental potential.

  • But the fact is, we is pretty much every part of our brains. A lot of it is active most

  • of the time, whether you're reading a book, or listening to music, or walking around town

  • or even sleeping.

  • How can we be so sure? For one thing neuro-imaging techniques like PET scans and MRIs actually

  • let us see the brain in action. These images show as that nearly every region of the brain

  • lights up during even simple tasks, like walking and talking.

  • While we don't use all of our brain at once, just like we don't engage every single muscle

  • at the same time, those scans prove that over the course of any given day you use just about

  • all of your brain.

  • It also stands to reason that if 90% of your brain was useless, you could remove large

  • portions of it, as you might an appendix or tonsil, and carry on as usual.

  • Brain damage and disease wouldn't be as much of a concern if only 10% of the organ was

  • actually functional. But in reality, there isn't a single area of the brain that can

  • be damaged or diseased without resulting in some kind of physical or mental consequence,

  • small or big.

  • You may have heard of the case of Phineas Gage, the 19th-century railroad worker, who

  • wound up with a spike through his head because of an accident. It didn't actually stay in

  • his head, it went all the way through and then kept going for quite a while. It didn't

  • kill him, somewhat surprisingly, and he still had his memories and his skills. But many

  • of his friends reported that he had changed personalities. Now we don't actually know

  • a ton about Gage, because a lot of people used him to try and prove a lot of different

  • of points over the years, but there's little doubt that you can have a rod go through your

  • brain and not have some things messed with.

  • Then there's Clive Wearing, the British pianist, who had a viral infection that destroyed his

  • hippocampus, the part of the brain that controls the storage of memories. As a result he's

  • no longer able to recognize anyone but his wife, and he can't retain a memory for more

  • than 30 seconds at a time.

  • Every part of your brain has a function, and you need it in order to keep being you.

  • And finally, we know that our brains are working all the time because we have to constantly

  • feed them, literally. The average human brain accounts for about 3% of a person's bodyweight,

  • but it demands at least 20% of the body's energy to keep all those neurons firing. We're

  • talking hundreds of food calories every day just so your brain can remind your heart to

  • beat, or help you solve for X, or remember where you left your phone. Our constant need

  • for food, especially foods rich in fats and sugars, has a lot to do with our brains. And

  • it wouldn't make much evolutionary sense for us to expend so much energy feeding a useless,

  • wet lump.

  • So in the end, while telekinesis would be pretty awesome, our brains are already capable

  • of truly incredible things. In fact, if anything, we only understand a fraction of what's going

  • on up there, so instead of insulting its function, be thankful for all that your brain does,

  • which is more than you know.

  • Thanks for watching this SciShow Dose. If you'd like to help us keep informing people

  • of when they're wrong, you can go to subbable.com/scishow and become a contributing member. And if you

  • want to just keep getting smarter with us, pleeeease go to youtube.com/scishow and subscribe,

  • and rate 5 stars.

[Intro]

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