Center for Mind, Brain, and Culture

What is the nature of the human mind? The Emory Center for Mind, Brain, and Culture (CMBC) brings t

Episodes

Total: 294

Romantic bonds reinforce our health and well-being while their sudden loss is highly detrimental. To

Aubrey Kelly, Assistant Professor of Psychology at Emory University talks with Dietrich Stout, Assis

Bree Beal talks about the value he's received from completing the Center for Mind, Brain, and Cultur

There is no eating in the archive. This is not only a practical admonition to any would-be researche

Unpacking the nature of emotions is critical to a scientific understanding of the human condition. 

Empathy allows us to understand and share one another’s emotional experiences. It allows one to quic

Presented by Music Department, Emory University with co-sponsorships by the Center for Mind, Brain,

Loneliness is everybody’s business. Neither a pathology, nor a rare affliction, it is part of the hu

Musicians ubiquitously apply spatial metaphors when describing the stability hierarchy established b

Stephanie Koziej talks with Dietrich Stout about her work and upcoming gallery show, "Tender Rhythms

Chikako Ozawa de-Silva talks with Dietrich Stout about her research and upcoming book "The  Anatomy

Most of us crave new experiences and sensations. Whether it's our attraction to that new burger plac

According to Elliot Turiel, religious affiliation does not influence the distinction between so-call

Although most scientists nowadays would not argue that brains of males and females belong to two dis

An emerging body of work in cognitive philosophy and computational neuroscience depicts human brains

Jinho Choi talks with Lynne Nygaard about his research and lab.BIOJinho Choi is an assistant profess

Benjamin Wilson talks with Dietrich Stout about his research and lab.  BIOBenjamin Wilson received h

Translation is often thought of as a transparent, objective act in which words from a source languag

Groups adopt strikingly different attitudes and practices centered on how humans and other living be

For millennia, sociocultural complexity increased (and occasionally decreased) gradually over many h