~Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock
Today's post was inspired by an interesting MOOC (Massive Open Online Course) at Future Learn called Good Brain, Bad Brain.
Visualization of a DTI measurement of a human brain
Rendering by Thomas Schultz; the dataset is courtesy of Gordon Kindlmann at the Scientific Computing and Imaging Institute, University of Utah, and Andrew Alexander, W.M. Keck Laboratory for Functional Brain Imaging and Behaviour, University of Wisconsin, Madison.
Danzamente – the dance of connections
by Sara Ambrosino, Emmanuela Ambrosino NICHE Neuroimaging Lab, Psychiatry Department, UMC Utrecht, The Netherlands
MEG source connectivity analysis using 3D graph visualization
by Sebastien Dery, Montreal Neurological Institute
Man Takes Brain for a Walk
by Crash the Rocks
Harmony between polarities
by Sara La Gioia
Neural I
by Sal Hunter, University of Cambridge UK
Lace Brain
by Michel Thiebaut de Schotten, Benedicte Batrancourt
Baby Brain
by bixentro
2 comments:
Like the guy says in the video, understanding the brain is a long road, and "we're just getting started."
But at least the artists among us are starting to portray the brain as an interactive place...and pushing the viewers to accept that.
These are wonderful, imaginative renderings.
Such beautiful pictures - especially the infrared ones - luminous activity. And we know so little yet of how it really works!
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