Greg Gage: The cockroach beatbox
Greg Gage: Electrical experiments with plants that count and communicate
Neuroscientist Greg Gage takes sophisticated equipment used to study the brain out of graduate-level labs and brings them to middle- and high-school classrooms (and, sometimes, to the TED stage.) Prepare to be amazed as he hooks up the Mimosa pudica, a plant whose leaves close when touched, and the Venus flytrap to an EKG to show us how plants u...
Greg Gage: How to control someone else's arm with your brain
Greg Gage is on a mission to make brain science accessible to all. In this fun, kind of creepy demo, the neuroscientist and TED Senior Fellow uses a simple, inexpensive DIY kit to take away the free will of an audience member. It's not a parlor trick; it actually works. You have to see it to believe it.
Greg Gage: The real reason why mosquitoes buzz
Greg Gage: How octopuses battle each other
Greg Gage: How sound can hack your memory while you sleep
Greg Gage: How you can make a fruit fly eat veggies
Greg Gage: How a dragonfly's brain is designed to kill
Dragonflies can catch prey with near perfect accuracy, the best among all predators. But how does something with so few neurons achieve such prowess? Our intrepid neuroscientists explore how a dragonfly unerringly locks onto its preys and captures it within milliseconds using just sensors and a fake fly.
Greg Gage: This computer is learning to read your mind
Greg Gage: Clocking the inner workings of the human brain
Greg Gage: Tools to help discover how your brain works
Greg Gage highlights basic principles of neuroscience using DIY mechanisms, through neurophysiology, functional electrical stimulation, and microstimulation. With his work he seeks to inspire and arouse the curiosity of children to learn more, from an early age, about the brain, as he believes it will have an impact on the neuroscientists of th...