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Sep 1, 2010
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eric kandel. he is a nobel laureate, as you know by now. also a professor at columbia university and a howard hughes medical investigator and, as you also know, a great friend of this series and the man who has helped us once this miraculous organ. welcome. >> pleasure to be here as always. >> so as we go through this, as we have been gone from understanding visual perception and understanding the developing brain and the aging brain and now we come to emotion. tell me what we mean and how does the brain connect to emotion? >> well, as always, you outlined it extremely well. emotions are a family of subjective experiences, states of readiness that we all experience in response to significant people and situations in our lives and emotions are designed to enhance our opportunity for happiness and decrease our exposure to misery. it turns out that the first person to really consider the biology of emotion sr., in fact, our friend charles darwin, the greatest biologist of all time. in the course of his classic work on evolution he realized tha
eric kandel. he is a nobel laureate, as you know by now. also a professor at columbia university and a howard hughes medical investigator and, as you also know, a great friend of this series and the man who has helped us once this miraculous organ. welcome. >> pleasure to be here as always. >> so as we go through this, as we have been gone from understanding visual perception and understanding the developing brain and the aging brain and now we come to emotion. tell me what we mean...
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Sep 3, 2010
09/10
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eric kandel. as you know he is a noble laureate, a professor at columbia university and a howard hughes medical investigator. so i am pleased to sort of begin this conversation in this sense for reasons you will tell us, this is a different episode of our series. >> we're speaking about major psychiatric disorders. as you outlined we're going to custody pression, manic depressive disorder also called bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. we want to understand what we can do about them. these are as you indicated devastating disorders. they affect the way people think and feel and motivation. moreover one of the tragic aspects of these disorders is that they affect people early in their lives just as they're beginning to reach the peak of their productivity, the peak of their ability to enjoy themselves. schizophrenia typically begins in college or early 20's. these diseases often remain wi,h people for the rest of their life. therefore they're an extremely heavy burden for the patient and for the so
eric kandel. as you know he is a noble laureate, a professor at columbia university and a howard hughes medical investigator. so i am pleased to sort of begin this conversation in this sense for reasons you will tell us, this is a different episode of our series. >> we're speaking about major psychiatric disorders. as you outlined we're going to custody pression, manic depressive disorder also called bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. we want to understand what we can do about them....
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Sep 4, 2010
09/10
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eric kandel. as you know he is a nobel laureate, professor at columbia university and a howard hughes medical investigator the. i am pleased once again to have him here to help me understand all about the brain. so welcome back. >> thank you. are you doing very well understanding the brain. >> rose: and what a journey it is. so tell me about today, the disordered brain. >> well, last time we discussed psychiatric disorders. today we are going to cause neurological disorders. the bulk of the disorders of the brain so one of the first things you want to explore is how are they different from one another. what is the logic of neurological as compared to psychiatric disorders there are two fundamental differences. one in the nature of the sim poll-- symptoms and two an anatomical location. in terms of symptoms, there is overlap but from a simplified point of view you could say that psychiatric disorders deal with enhancements, exaggerations of our every day life. we all feel despondent periodically. w
eric kandel. as you know he is a nobel laureate, professor at columbia university and a howard hughes medical investigator the. i am pleased once again to have him here to help me understand all about the brain. so welcome back. >> thank you. are you doing very well understanding the brain. >> rose: and what a journey it is. so tell me about today, the disordered brain. >> well, last time we discussed psychiatric disorders. today we are going to cause neurological disorders....
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Sep 2, 2010
09/10
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eric kandel. as you know by now, he's a nobel laureate and professor at columbia university and a howard hughes medical investigator. he is, as you know, the mastermind behind this program and once again i'm pleased to have him here at this table to tell me what we're going to talk about this evening. welcome. >> thank you. pleasure to be here. >> rose: where are we going tonight? >> we're going to discuss emotions some more. emotions are feeling states that enrich our mental life. they lead us to seek out pleasure and to avoid pain and tonight we're going to begin by discussing fear and anxiety states and then go on to discuss aggression. >> rose: why are they important to our survival? >> in the presence of a danger, the most important thing is to get away, to freeze, to decide, you know, what sort of action to take and to take that action. this is more important than almost anything else for survival is to know what is predator and what is prey. >> rose: once again, you have brought with you a
eric kandel. as you know by now, he's a nobel laureate and professor at columbia university and a howard hughes medical investigator. he is, as you know, the mastermind behind this program and once again i'm pleased to have him here at this table to tell me what we're going to talk about this evening. welcome. >> thank you. pleasure to be here. >> rose: where are we going tonight? >> we're going to discuss emotions some more. emotions are feeling states that enrich our mental...
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Sep 25, 2010
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tonight eric schmid, the c.e.o. of google. >> social networking is important and facebook is a consequence and very impressive company. and social information will be used by google and by others, i should add, to make the quality of the results, the quality of the experience that much better. the pore we foe about what your friends do with your permission, and i need to say that about 500 times, we can actually use that to improve the experience you have of getting information that you care about. in our case what we're actually do something building social information into all of our products. so it won't be a social network the way people think of facebook but rather social information about who your friends are, people that you interact with. and we have various ways in which we will be collecting that information. >> we continue with the film wall street money never sleeps with the director all i ver stone and two of the jars, josh brolin and shia labeouf. >> the 2 o 008 market is more difficult to understand w
tonight eric schmid, the c.e.o. of google. >> social networking is important and facebook is a consequence and very impressive company. and social information will be used by google and by others, i should add, to make the quality of the results, the quality of the experience that much better. the pore we foe about what your friends do with your permission, and i need to say that about 500 times, we can actually use that to improve the experience you have of getting information that you...
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Sep 25, 2010
09/10
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tonight eric scid, the c.e.o. ofoogle. >> social networking is important d facebook is a consequee and very impressive comny. and social infmation will be used by gooe and by others, i should add, to make the quality of t results, the qlity of the experience that much better. e pore we foe about what your friendso with your permission, and i need sayhat about 500 times, we canctually use that t improve the experiencyou have o getting informatio that you ce about. in our case what we're actuallyo something building social information into allf ourroducts. so it won't ba social network the way peop think of facebook but rather social infortion about who your friends a, people that you interactith. and we have various ways in which we wl be collecting that informaon. >>e continue with the film wall street money never eeps with the director all i vertone and twof the jars josh brolin d ia laouf. the 2 o 008 market is re difficult to understand wi credit default swaps and insurae and all tha stuff. but we made it a bac
tonight eric scid, the c.e.o. ofoogle. >> social networking is important d facebook is a consequee and very impressive comny. and social infmation will be used by gooe and by others, i should add, to make the quality of t results, the qlity of the experience that much better. e pore we foe about what your friendso with your permission, and i need sayhat about 500 times, we canctually use that t improve the experiencyou have o getting informatio that you ce about. in our case what we're...
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Sep 17, 2010
09/10
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. >> but what's amaze being it for all of us who have been involved and eric kandel has been extraordinary about this, is the complexity of it all. >> one of the things that is important to understand is that there's a complex universe down there. and that a lot is going on. when we look at color, the waves actually coming off this table, to us it just looks brown or tan or whatever. but the waves are change all the time depending on the light in our eyes and our mind is baifl determining ratio,. and it's doing advanced calculations to give us the impression that this is a constant color but it's not. and so the real world implication of that is the incredible power of perception. and this is relevant to what we all do when we try to understand the world. we have a sense that when we are weigh making the decision, we look at the decision. then we qal chrat what's right and wrong and then third we exercise our willpower to do what we actually set out to do. and steps to calculation and step three, willpower are the important steps. those are the complicated ones with that is wrong. step one
. >> but what's amaze being it for all of us who have been involved and eric kandel has been extraordinary about this, is the complexity of it all. >> one of the things that is important to understand is that there's a complex universe down there. and that a lot is going on. when we look at color, the waves actually coming off this table, to us it just looks brown or tan or whatever. but the waves are change all the time depending on the light in our eyes and our mind is baifl...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Sep 27, 2010
09/10
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i'm pleased to have my friend eric schmidst back on this program. welcome. >> thank you very much, charlesie. >> so you are here in new york for the clinton initiative where you spoke of, where google today and how does it see the future. >> well, of course google is first and foremost a search company as you said. but we foresee sort of a broadening, if you will, of a mission to really about information that you care about. information that you need right now. and so historically what you would do is you would just type in a query and out would type the answer and it would come back really fast. but there is up an overwhelming amount of information now. we can can also search for things even without text. we can search where you are. we can search with google goggles and take pictures and see what are you looking at if you take a picture of your camera. to all of these mean a much broader opportunity for search and bringing the information that you need. one way to think about this is we are trying to make people better people. literally give them
i'm pleased to have my friend eric schmidst back on this program. welcome. >> thank you very much, charlesie. >> so you are here in new york for the clinton initiative where you spoke of, where google today and how does it see the future. >> well, of course google is first and foremost a search company as you said. but we foresee sort of a broadening, if you will, of a mission to really about information that you care about. information that you need right now. and so...
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Sep 22, 2010
09/10
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of google, eric schmidt, will be seen at a later date. tonight, the president of turkey and the prime minister of the palestinian authority when we continue. captioning sponsored by rose communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. >> rose: abdullah gul is here, he's the president of turkey, a key u.s. ally and nato member, turkey has a new presence on the international stage as one of the fastest-growing economies in the world. it seeks to mediate in the region's most difficult conflicts and it has not shied away from conflict. relations with israel are tense after the israeli raid on the gaza-bound flotilla last spring. at home, the turkish government continues a path of democratic reform, waiting for membership in the european union. president gul is in new york for the united nations general assembly. i'm pleased to have him back at this table. welcome. >> thank you very much. >> rose: very good to see you again. >> it's always nice to be together. >> rose: tell me where you see turkey today. its role, its o
of google, eric schmidt, will be seen at a later date. tonight, the president of turkey and the prime minister of the palestinian authority when we continue. captioning sponsored by rose communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. >> rose: abdullah gul is here, he's the president of turkey, a key u.s. ally and nato member, turkey has a new presence on the international stage as one of the fastest-growing economies in the world. it seeks to mediate in the...