Dr. Allan Schore
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
With that person, I can bring back the whole context because remember the right brain acts with images, images. So I can bring back that image now and I can remember the closeness that I felt at that point in time, et cetera. These are put into right brain. So we are always putting into our autobiographical memory these heightened affective moments.
With that person, I can bring back the whole context because remember the right brain acts with images, images. So I can bring back that image now and I can remember the closeness that I felt at that point in time, et cetera. These are put into right brain. So we are always putting into our autobiographical memory these heightened affective moments.
With that person, I can bring back the whole context because remember the right brain acts with images, images. So I can bring back that image now and I can remember the closeness that I felt at that point in time, et cetera. These are put into right brain. So we are always putting into our autobiographical memory these heightened affective moments.
So to have those shared affective moments with other people, These are really whereby you're making changes in the right. And these are much more important, I want to suggest, than intellectually. Now, there have been certain fMRI... I'm now going to move into a little bit of a different place here. What I'm suggesting is that these right-brain-to-right-brain communications are always going on.
So to have those shared affective moments with other people, These are really whereby you're making changes in the right. And these are much more important, I want to suggest, than intellectually. Now, there have been certain fMRI... I'm now going to move into a little bit of a different place here. What I'm suggesting is that these right-brain-to-right-brain communications are always going on.
So to have those shared affective moments with other people, These are really whereby you're making changes in the right. And these are much more important, I want to suggest, than intellectually. Now, there have been certain fMRI... I'm now going to move into a little bit of a different place here. What I'm suggesting is that these right-brain-to-right-brain communications are always going on.
But... certain people literally can't read them as well as other people can.
But... certain people literally can't read them as well as other people can.
But... certain people literally can't read them as well as other people can.
Yeah, that's a colossal shift. You can shift from the left into the right about 100 milliseconds. So essentially, you have to be in one hemisphere or the other.
Yeah, that's a colossal shift. You can shift from the left into the right about 100 milliseconds. So essentially, you have to be in one hemisphere or the other.
Yeah, that's a colossal shift. You can shift from the left into the right about 100 milliseconds. So essentially, you have to be in one hemisphere or the other.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Good feet, good feet. Now watch where I go here.
Good feet, good feet. Now watch where I go here.
Good feet, good feet. Now watch where I go here.
The right hemisphere is dominant for attention. Okay? I mean, this baby and this mother, literally, she's focusing our attention on that baby's face, tone, voice. But there are two different types of attentions. strong neuroscience to show this. The left brain operates by narrow attention, narrowly focused attention.
The right hemisphere is dominant for attention. Okay? I mean, this baby and this mother, literally, she's focusing our attention on that baby's face, tone, voice. But there are two different types of attentions. strong neuroscience to show this. The left brain operates by narrow attention, narrowly focused attention.