Andrew Huberman is a neuroscientist and tenured professor in the Department of Neurobiology at the Stanford University School of Medicine. He has made numerous important contributions to the fields of brain development, brain plasticity, and neural regeneration and repair.
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Technology can be great in many ways also. I've learned so much about addiction and neuroplasticity because of my phone. And how addiction and neuroplasticity go hand in hand. How true recovery from addiction starts with changing the brain on a cognitive level. I've learned how to cook like a 5 star chef. I've learned how to be more open minded and listen to other people's opinions. I've learned a lot about myself and my past actions which can better prepare me for future actions. I've lost weight because of my phone. I've been eating healthier because of my phone. I believe used in the right way the phone can be a true blessing. Done in moderation and done educationally. I'm sober now because of my own motivation but having a phone to get insight and education on my addiction and how my brain works is what's keeping me sober today. I'd be sober without my phone but having it truly helps me learn new ways to stay in sobriety.
Yeah it's b***** isn't it you cannot trust those fake people
JOE….!!! You used to be great at letting people speak without interrupting them, dude. What happened..? With a guest of the calibre of Andrew…..let the man say his say pleaseyou. You ask the right questions as usual, but don't answer them right at the point where the guest can do it better. I love Joe, btw. Just constructive criticism here.
“The person needs to have a cat on their head, naked and being on fire “ Ha ha how random and genius:)
19:00 not sure thats a new thing , im french canadian and the french from france think we got a weird accent but i did some research and turns out before the french revolution they all had an accent similar to us but then a big part of society started doing this upspeak thing to sound more distinguished so much that it actually became how everyone talks in france