Shadowing-Übung: How Is a Memory Stored Inside Your Squishy Brain? - Englisch Sprechen Lernen mit YouTube

C1
Memories are biological magic that enable you to experience bygone moments over and over.
⏸ Pausiert
172 Sätze
Wenn Sätze zu kurz oder zu lang sind, klicke auf Edit, um sie anzupassen.
1
Memories are biological magic that enable you to experience bygone moments over and over.
2
With them, your mind can encode, store and retrieve information about the world and yourself.
3
But memories are not static like photos.
4
Like dioramas made from wax, each time they're under the spotlight of your attention, they can melt and change a tiny bit.
5
Which is a bit concerning because they are a huge part of what makes you, you.
6
They are the personal law a lot of your identity is based on, and the basis for your decisions about your future.
7
What does it mean if they change?
8
And more fundamentally, what is a memory?
9
How is a moment in time stored in squishy meat?
10
Your brain is weird madness.
11
The human brain is the most complex thing in the universe, so we need to simplify quite a bit.
12
Scientific models work, but are not a perfect reflection of reality.
13
It's a bit like talking about elementary particles, but in a nutshell, what makes you think and feel is a complex system of about 86 billion neurons.
14
Extremely complex electrochemical root systems sending and receiving signals through synapses and tiny gaps between cells, where an electrical signal is converted into chemicals,
15
bridges the distance, is received and converted into electricity again.
16
This is how neurons talk to each other.
17
And it's a busy conversation because a typical neuron is connected with up to 10,000 others.
18
Together, they're a network of hundreds of trillions of connections.
19
A hundred times more than galaxies in the observable universe.
20
From these connections, the magic of your existence emerges.
21
To create purpose in this chaos, some connections need to grow stronger.
22
Whenever two neurons fire at the same time, their synapses change and their connection gets stronger.
23
They become buddies if you want, and when their buddy calls, they join in.
24
If we zoom out, patterns emerge.
25
Dozens or thousands of neurons organize into local columns.
26
These columns are very basic information processing units that process a tiny piece of all the input coming in from your senses, like dark and light, a location in space,
27
how a texture feels, the sound of words and so on.
28
You have columns for sound, images, touch, etc. all located in different parts of your brain.
29
These columns are the gears of the biological machine that is your cortex.
30
It's the fundamental hardware you emerge from.
31
Everything you see, hear or feel causes the gears to move, which means your neurons to fire together.
32
But for you to have a coherent experience, these very different gears need to be connected together.
33
Any moment you perceive is made from different parts.
34
As you're watching this video, your eyes activate columns for vision and color in your visual cortex, your ears transmit information to your auditory cortex,
35
language areas are decoding my words, while other networks keep track of your body and emotions.
36
All these signals are processed in deeper areas of your brain that evaluate them, boosting what seems important right now and tuning out what doesn't.
37
Vastly simplifying, This concert of all these different gears connected by levers, wheels and screws comes together to create a new structure within your brain machine.
38
The assembly.
39
A new pattern of synchronized activity within the grand architecture of your brain.
40
This assembly of very different neurons firing together is what gives you the experience of being a human being in this moment.
41
So the assembly active in your brain right now is you watching this video, hearing my voice, and learning about memories.
42
But this is only activity without permanent substance.
43
Like ripples on a pond, nothing will remain.
44
Without memories, you'll be forever trapped in the present.
45
To become a being that transcends time, you need to etch these fleeting sensory inputs, these temporary moments, into something physical that will remain.
46
And how does your brain decide what becomes permanent?
47
With a deadly competition.
48
How to store the past.
49
In reality, there's not just one assembly active in your brain.
50
Your brain can't process everything in the outer and inner world with full attention, so different assemblies are fighting for dominance.
51
The details are complicated, but at any moment, one assembly is winning and deemed the most important by your brain.
52
This is what you're aware of right now.
53
In your brain, the assembly processing the sentence I'm speaking to you seems to be the most active and wins.
54
Your brain thinks this matters and you're forming a new memory.
55
Two things are happening right now.
56
The neurons of the winning assembly are bathed in chemicals that make them more susceptible to change and tie them closer together, strengthening the synapses between them.
57
And the memory centre and librarian of your brain, the hippocampus, is activated.
58
The details here are super complicated and the exact process isn't fully understood yet.
59
But in a nutshell, your hippocampus creates a blueprint saving the rough configuration of the assembly.
60
The assembly is saved and put on an index with all your other memories
61
that are associated with what was going on in this moment.
62
every time I was confused by something in a Kurzgesagt video.
63
Finally, you have a memory.
64
An activation pattern of millions of neurons spanning many different regions of your brain.
65
Activating any part of the pattern now makes the whole assembly fire.
66
Now, you're able to relive a moment of the past that's gone forever in the real world.
67
But this new memory is very fragile and still pretty temporary.
68
Your hippocampus holds its blueprint, but without reinforcement, the assembly will fade and the synapses will be weakened again.
69
This is why you forget most moments of your life, why you don't remember how your coffee tasted 43 weeks ago on a Monday.
70
You experience most of your life only once in the moment you live it.
71
And you don't just forget what happens to you, you also forget what happens in the world.
72
Most news stories disappear within days, and often you never even saw the full picture in the first place first place.
73
This is why we've partnered with Ground News, a media literacy tool whose mission we fully support.
74
Their app and website let you compare coverage, explore context and see how stories spread over time.
75
You can even see how bias shapes the narrative.
76
Take this study on Alzheimer's risk in women.
77
More than 40 articles were published on it.
78
Some focus on how menopause shrinks parts of the brain, others highlight the benefits of hormone therapy.
79
You're actively weighing different aspects and that deeper engagement helps your brain to remember.
80
Most importantly, Ground News reveals blind spots, stories that only one side is covering, showing you what your usual news feed is hiding.
81
As information bubbles become the norm, thinking critically about the news is no longer optional.
82
And Ground News makes it easier to do just
83
that try it via the qr code on the screen
84
or go to ground.news slash nutshell our link below gives you 40% off an unlimited access subscription
85
and directly supports our channel and now back to your brand new memory
86
for the past to be truly saved the assembly needs to fight for its life there are many ways this can happen.
87
One of them is novelty.
88
If you walk to the bus, listening to some mildly interesting podcasts as usual, this assembly's signal is too weak.
89
This moment in time will be lost like tears in rain.
90
But if one day you see a crow and a squirrel fighting over a nut, only for a mouse to steal it, the assembly will fire strongly just for the novelty of it all.
91
Another one is to reactivate the memory over and over after it's formed.
92
Thinking Talking about the animal fight all day and telling everyone about the strange event will etch it deeper into your brain,
93
similar to doing loads of repetition when you try to learn something.
94
And a major way to make a memory stick is to feel emotions.
95
Emotions are really strong mechanisms to guide out behavior that evolved hundreds of millions of years ago.
96
They motivate you to avoid danger, seek out food and reproduce.
97
You experience this as something feeling good or bad.
98
Whenever you feel something strongly, your ancient brain decides that whatever is going on is important for your survival, regardless if it's wrong or not.
99
So many of your strongest memories have strong emotional flavors.
100
The humiliation when you acted dumb in front of your crush.
101
The joy when you beat your dad at Mario Kart.
102
The devastation when your dog died.
103
The overwhelming love when you held your first kid.
104
If we just made you feel something, we increased the chances that you'll remember this video.
105
Strong activation, repetition and emotions do the same thing to your memory.
106
We said before that chemicals made the neurons able to change.
107
Well, now they change drastically.
108
Like wax warming up and melting together, the gears of the assembly grow new teeth to fit more tightly.
109
Neurons grow more synapses and fire together even better.
110
They become closer and more solid.
111
A lot of this happens while you sleep.
112
Your hippocampus replays the assembly over and over, making it more solid and easier to retrieve, which also means that if you don't sleep enough,
113
you literally forget more of your life.
114
Think about that when you have to study for a test next time.
115
Without proper sleep, you'll be wasting your time.
116
But in the end, you have a proper long-term memory.
117
A diorama of hardened wax displaying a moment of your life.
118
A scene etched into a pattern of connection inside your brain.
119
Now, you can remember it forever.
120
Well, why remembering changes your memories forever.
121
To remember, you need a cue for the memory, something that's part of the original assembly.
122
A smell, sound, word, or maybe the image of an angry crow.
123
Your hippocampus searches its index for the cue, hopefully finding the right stored assembly, and activates it.
124
It fires.
125
Your past experience is retrieved.
126
The diorama appears in your mind, and you relive seeing the crow and squirrel fighting.
127
So far, so good.
128
But as the diorama plays for you, you start changing it.
129
Recalling memories is not like loading a video and pressing play.
130
Under the light of your attention, parts of the wax become soft again, moldable, which means that as you experience the memory in your mind,
131
the neurons involved are bathed in chemicals that make them able to change their structure again.
132
Your hippocampus organizes memories based on a few things, but most importantly, the context of the experience.
133
And the context is now very different.
134
When you form the memory, you are tired, in a mildly bad mood before work, and very surprised.
135
Right now, you're putting the memory as you're having a night out with your friends
136
and are telling your hilarious story of the epic squirrel crow fight.
137
And this new context seeps into the memory.
138
New connections form, some synapses are weakened, while others reconfigure.
139
The diorama changes, becomes funnier and more absurd.
140
Not because you wanted to, your brain is just incorporating the new context of your life into the memory.
141
As you finish your story, the light of your attention moves on.
142
The diorama hardens again, now in a new form.
143
The next time you remember the animal fight, you'll remember it as way funnier than when you actually experienced it.
144
And it's the same with all your memories.
145
When you retrieve them, your brain adds new information or forgets some and incorporates your emotions and expectations.
146
In a sense, it updates your past life to fit the narrative of your present life.
147
Over time, even core memories can shift, combine with others or generate entirely new elements.
148
Your memory system is deeply intertwined with the mechanisms for learning.
149
It was never designed to create an accurate representation of the world.
150
So your memories are updated as you gain new experiences and information.
151
Ironically, the more you remember something actively, the less of the original experience remains.
152
This also means that just because you remember something really well, it doesn't mean your memory is correct.
153
It just means that its assembly is really strong and vivid.
154
It's not a sudden process.
155
Your identity is safe for today.
156
It's a slow shift in the overall patterns inside your mind.
157
You are who you are today, but your future self will be different, and they'll think and feel differently about the things you experience today.
158
This is also why therapy can be so helpful.
159
By revisiting hurtful memories in a safe context, ideally with helpful introspection, you are literally changing your brain.
160
Literally rewiring yourself to get a chance to be happier.
161
Because yes, your memories may be the law of your life and the basis for your future, but it turns out, with some help,
162
you may be able to rewrite your law and be who you want to be.
163
And if you want to rewrite the law of your home, new human-made original art prints just landed in the Kurzgesagt shop.
164
Choose a dramatic meteor shower, a tranquil lunar dreamscape, or a powerful volcanic eruption.
165
Or even better, all of them.
166
Each print is created with bold neon colors and set in a matching fluorescent acrylic frame.
167
The sturdy frame is designed to stand solo on your desk or hang on your wall with ease.
168
And when the light hits it just right, it radiates vivid color into your room.
169
Get yours now and literally brighten up your space.
170
You want to listen to the beautiful soundtrack without my annoying voice?
171
Well, it's up to you.
172
Just select the audio track Interlingua down here and watch the video again as a music video.

App herunterladen

Everything you need to speak fluently

AI PronunciationScore every sentence
IPA PracticeMaster every sound
VocabularyBuild your word bank
Vocab GameLearn while playing

Über Diese Lektion

In dieser Lektion werden Sie lernen, wie Erinnerungen im menschlichen Gehirn gespeichert werden. Sie erhalten Einblicke in die biologischen Prozesse, die beim Erinnern eine Rolle spielen, und erfahren mehr über die Funktionsweise von Neuronen und Gedächtniszellen. Diese Kenntnisse helfen Ihnen nicht nur, den Lernprozess besser zu verstehen, sondern auch, faszinierende Themen in Englisch zu diskutieren. Zudem werden Sie die Gelegenheit haben, Ihre Englischkenntnisse durch das Shadowing von Vorträgen zu verbessern.

Wichtiger Wortschatz und Phrasen

  • Erinnerungen (memories) – die biologischen Einheiten, die unsere Vergangenheit speichern.
  • Neuron (neuron) – Nervenzelle, die Informationen im Gehirn überträgt.
  • Hippocampus (hippocampus) – der Teil des Gehirns, der für das Speichern von Erinnerungen zuständig ist.
  • Synapse (synapse) – der Kontaktpunkt zwischen Neuronen für die Signalübertragung.
  • Assemby (assembly) – die Gruppe von Neuronen, die gleichzeitig aktiv sind und eine spezifische Erfahrung bilden.
  • Signalübertragung (signal transmission) – der Prozess, durch den Informationen zwischen Neuronen weitergegeben werden.
  • Informationsverarbeitung (information processing) – wie das Gehirn Eindrücke von außen analysiert und interpretiert.

Praxis Tipps

Um Ihre Englischkenntnisse zu verbessern, können Sie das Konzept des Englisch Shadowing nutzen, während Sie dieses Video ansehen. Versuchen Sie, die Sätze des Sprechers zeitgleich nachzusprechen. Hier sind einige spezifische Tipps zum Shadowing dieser Lektion:

  • Achten Sie auf die Geschwindigkeit: Der Sprecher hat einen klaren und moderaten Ton. Gehen Sie mit, um das Tempo zu halten.
  • Focus auf die Aussprache: Hören Sie genau hin, und versuchen Sie die Laute und Rhythmen des Sprechers nachzubilden.
  • Wiederholung der Schlüsselbegriffe: Wiederholen Sie wichtige Begriffe wie „Erinnerungen“ und „Neuron“ nach dem Sprecher, um Ihre Vernetzung dieser Wörter zu verstärken.
  • Dominieren Sie den Inhalt: Verschaffen Sie sich ein Verständnis für den Inhalt, bevor Sie mit dem Shadowing beginnen. Es hilft Ihnen, den Kontext besser zu erfassen.
  • Verwenden Sie shadow speech: Entwickeln Sie Ihre eigene Stimme und Artikulation, während Sie den Text nachsprechen.

Durch diese Methoden werden Sie nicht nur Ihr Englisch lernen mit YouTube optimieren, sondern auch Ihre Kommunikationsfähigkeiten im Englischen insgesamt stärken.

Was ist die Shadowing-Technik?

Shadowing ist eine wissenschaftlich fundierte Sprachlerntechnik, die ursprünglich für die professionelle Dolmetscherausbildung entwickelt und durch den Polyglotten Dr. Alexander Arguelles populär gemacht wurde. Die Methode ist einfach aber wirkungsvoll: Du hörst englisches Audio von Muttersprachlern und wiederholst es sofort laut — wie ein Schatten, der dem Sprecher mit nur 1–2 Sekunden Verzögerung folgt. Anders als passives Hören oder Grammatikübungen zwingt Shadowing dein Gehirn und deine Mundmuskulatur, gleichzeitig echte Sprachmuster zu verarbeiten und zu reproduzieren. Studien zeigen, dass es Aussprachegenauigkeit, Intonation, Rhythmus, verbundene Sprache, Hörverständnis und Sprechflüssigkeit signifikant verbessert — was es zu einer der effektivsten Methoden für die IELTS Speaking-Vorbereitung und reale englische Kommunikation macht.

Kauf uns einen Kaffee