Dr Julie Bakker's Lecture: My Response -- Misaki Nakayama
Her argument is that sex differences cause when not people are born but they are srrounded with their environment.
It is hard to listen to the lectures. I think the lecture is passive and input because I just listen to what the speaker want to tell. I need excellent English skills, the knowledge about the lecture and enthusiastic for the area to attend it.
There are many graphs on the slides. The slide is changed soon. There are the words I have ever seen, such as female, reproductive and behavior.
Brain is mysterious in large parts of areas, so I expect that they can discover the somthing new.
I am not considering these professions for myself because I don't try to find somethinf new and don't have knowledge although I'm intrested in the solved problems.
Research on various parts of the brain seems interesting.
ReplyDeleteYes. There are some mysteires on human brain now.
Deleteyes.. if we have some break time during the lecture, we might have been able to exchange knowledge what each of us understood in the lecture so that we can output that...??
ReplyDeleteWow, that's right. I felt isolated because I thought everyone understood the lecture. I might have felt relieved at that time.
DeleteThe brain is shrouded in mystery in many ways, making it a fascinating field of research!
ReplyDeleteYes! Human brain has as much mysteries as space, I think.
DeleteEven if you don’t want to become a researcher, being interested in science and understanding new discoveries is still very valuable‼
ReplyDeleteI think so too! I like to get knowledge at the museum and the planetarium.
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