The Brain with David Eagleman

What Makes Me?

Dr. David Eagleman explores memory as an important pillar of self, and reveals that rather than being a faithful record of our past, memory is fallible and often unreliable, making our life of memories more personal mythology than digital recording.

What Makes Me?

55m 11s

Dr. David Eagleman explores memory as an important pillar of self, and reveals that rather than being a faithful record of our past, memory is fallible and often unreliable, making our life of memories more personal mythology than digital recording.

Previews + Extras

  • Episode 2 | Born Unfinished: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Episode 2 | Born Unfinished

    S1 E2 - 2m 3s

    Many newborn animals are born ready for the world, compared to human babies who are born helpless. The unfinished brains of young humans allows them to develop and adapt to whichever environments they are born into.

  • Episode 2 | Stressed Teens: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Episode 2 | Stressed Teens

    S1 E2 - 3m 16s

    An experiment in a shop window demonstrates why teens feel far more self-conscious than adults in the same situation. The activity in the teenager’s medial prefrontal cortex plays an important role in how young adults perceive themselves.

  • Episode 2 | Your Job Can Reshape Your Brain: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Episode 2 | Your Job Can Reshape Your Brain

    S1 E2 - 2m 19s

    The brains of London taxi drivers were tracked before, during and after their training, and results showed that a part of their brain had grown. The adult brain isn’t fixed. Its networks can reconfigure themselves according to our experiences and our environment.

  • Episode 2 | Nuns and the Aging Brain: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Episode 2 | Nuns and the Aging Brain

    S1 E2 - 3m 37s

    A study of nuns’ brains produces an unexpected revelation. A third of the brains tested at autopsy showed signs of Alzheimer’s but cognitive tests had revealed that the brain owners had shown no symptoms of this terrible disease. What was going on?

  • Episode 2 | Inside a Child's Brain: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Episode 2 | Inside a Child's Brain

    S1 E2 - 1m 59s

    A typical 2-year-old is building 2 million new connections every second, but after the age of two this growth is halted, and a process of pruning begins. The process of becoming someone is about pruning back the brain’s connections.

  • Episode 2 | Stuck in the Present: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    Episode 2 | Stuck in the Present

    S1 E2 - 2m 41s

    Henry Molaison couldn't form new memories. His case reveals something important about the brain’s ability to think into the future. Both the past, and the future are constructions of the same networks in the brain.

  • What Makes Me? | Preview: asset-mezzanine-16x9

    What Makes Me? | Preview

    S1 E2 - 30s

    Explore how we are our brain, how our personality, emotions and memories are encoded as neural activity. The process of becoming continues through our lives. We change our brain and our brain changes us. Premieres Wednesday, October 21, 2015, 10-11 p.m. ET.

Similar Shows

Poster Image
Far Out: show-poster2x3

Far Out

Science and Nature

Poster Image
NOVA: show-poster2x3

NOVA

Science and Nature

WETA Passport

Stream tens of thousands of hours of your PBS and local favorites with WETA Passport whenever and wherever you want. Catch up on a single episode or binge-watch full seasons before they air on TV.