Cellular and Molecular Biology for Research

When Brain Meets Mind: Neurology, Psychiatry, and What Goes Wrong

46 min · 23 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio When Brain Meets Mind: Neurology, Psychiatry, and What Goes Wrong

Descripción

Neurology treats disorders of the nervous system. Psychiatry treats disorders of the mind. For a long time, these worlds were kept politely separate—one dealing with myelin, axons, and lesions, the other with mood, fear, and thought. In this episode, we tear down that artificial wall. By examining anxiety disorders, affective disorders, and schizophrenia, we explore how studying breakdowns in brain function reveals the mechanisms of normal cognition, emotion, and behavior. Mental illness is no longer beyond neuroscience—and understanding what goes wrong may be the fastest way to understand how the brain works at all.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Cellular and Molecular Biology for Research!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

66 episodios

episode Where Memories Live: Synapses, Snails, and the Biology of Learning artwork

Where Memories Live: Synapses, Snails, and the Biology of Learning

Memory isn’t stored in a single place or a single cell—it’s embedded in subtle, widely distributed changes at synapses. In this episode, we explore how neuroscientists moved from abstract theories of memory to concrete biological mechanisms. We follow the trail from Hebb’s insight about synaptic modification to Eric Kandel’s landmark experiments in the sea snail Aplysia, where learning could be traced to specific molecular changes at identifiable synapses. We then bridge simple nervous systems to the mammalian brain, examining how activity-dependent synaptic plasticity links development, learning, and memory. The result is a unifying view of memory as a physical process—measurable, modifiable, and deeply rooted in neural circuitry.

30 de abr de 202652 min
episode How the Brain Invented Language: From Sound to Meaning artwork

How the Brain Invented Language: From Sound to Meaning

This episode dives into one of the brain’s most audacious tricks: turning vibrations in the air and symbols on a page into ideas, emotions, jokes, and entire cultures. We explore how language travels through our sensory systems, gets sculpted by specialized neural circuits, and emerges as speech, writing, and meaning. From classic lesion studies to modern fMRI maps, we trace the pathways that let humans communicate everything from coffee orders to quantum-induced existential dread. Language may differ across thousands of dialects, but the neural machinery powering it is universal—and astonishingly intricate. This episode unpacks that machinery, neuron by neuron, idea by idea, opening a window into what makes human communication uniquely human.

17 de abr de 202636 min