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The Body Has a Mind of Its Own How Body Maps in Your Brain Help You Do (Almost)
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The Body Has a Mind of Its Own How Body Maps in Your Brain Help You Do (Almost) Everything Better Unknown - 2007

by Matthew Blakeslee; Sandra Blakeslee


From the publisher

Why do you still feel fat after losing weight? Why do you duck your head when you drive into an underground parking garage? Why are your kids so enthralled by video games? The answers to these questions can be found in a new understanding of how your brain interacts with your body, the space around your body, and the social world. Every point on your body, each internal organ, and every point in space out to the end of your fingertips is mapped inside your brain. Your ability to sense, move, and act in the physical world arises from a rich network of flexible body maps distributed throughout your brain. The science of body maps has far-reaching applications. It can help people lose weight, improve their ability to play a sport, or assist recovery from stroke. It points the way to new treatments for anorexia and phantom limbs. It helps explain out-of-body experiences, auras, placebos, and healing touch. It provides a new way to understand human emotions from love to hate, lust to disgust, pride to humiliation. With scientific discoveries from every corner of the globe, Sandra and Matthew Blakeslee have written a compelling narrative that is positively mind-bending and that will appeal to readers of Sharon Begley's Train Your Mind, Change Your Brain.

Details

  • Title The Body Has a Mind of Its Own How Body Maps in Your Brain Help You Do (Almost) Everything Better
  • Author Matthew Blakeslee; Sandra Blakeslee
  • Binding unknown
  • Edition Unabridged, MP3-
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Tantor Media
  • Date October 1, 2007
  • ISBN 9781400154975

About the author

Matthew Blakeslee is a freelance science writer based in Los Angeles. Sandra Blakeslee is a science correspondent at the "New York Times" who specializes in the brain sciences.
Stage actress Kate Reading has been a freelance narrator for over twenty years. She has received multiple Audie Awards and nominations, as well as numerous Earphones Awards from "AudioFile" magazine, which has named her Narrator of the Year and, for two years running, Best Voice in Science Fiction and Fantasy.