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  • Inside your head you have about 86 billion brain cells, or neurons.

  • That's Joe, from It's Okay To Be Smart.

  • Now all those neurons live in particular regions of your brain. Take these here, those are

  • the ones that help you see, whereas, well, way over here, those are the ones that help

  • you move.

  • And it's pretty amazing to think that these neurons connect with other neurons in all

  • of these areas to form this crazy network that controls all of your thoughts, feelings

  • and actions.

  • It makes me wonder -- where do all these neurons come from? It is determined when your brain

  • starts growing which neurons will be responsible for you getting excited about history or math

  • or labradoodles? Is it weird that I wonder these things?

  • It's okay to be smart.

  • Well your brain starts growing when your whole body is smaller than a dime. The speed of

  • growth is incredible. During early pregnancy, neurons develop at the rate of 250,000 every

  • minute.

  • Of the 40 weeks it takes a baby to grow, your neurons are mainly developed between 10 and

  • 20 weeks and then these newly formed neurons start to migrate. This part is really cool.

  • They head off to regions of the brain where they're gonna live the rest of your life.

  • Now each neuron carries a special code that tells it exactly where it's going to end up.

  • And as they migrate, they start off as just cell bodies, the control centres and factories

  • of the neuron.

  • And It's not always fun travelling by yourself. With your neurons migrating, glial cells glue

  • neurons together to give your brain structure.

  • Once the cells reach their final destinations, then connections among them begin to develop.

  • Synapses form, the tiny space between neurons that let them communicate with each other.

  • And a fetus lets you know when this is happening. They start to have periods of activity and

  • rest -- they can nap! And even yawn.

  • During the last 8 weeks of a pregnancy, a fetus can hear, smell, respond to touch and

  • light. And they can learn. In one study women read The Cat in the Hat

  • out loud for the last 6 weeks of their pregnancy. And when their babies were born, they were

  • able to suck on special pacifiers that allowed them to hear their Mother reading that story

  • to them. And they quickly adapted to do it in just the right way to hear their Mother's

  • voice.

  • Babies brains are incredibly adaptable. They form 700 new connections between neurons every

  • second in the first years of life and by the time they're 3, their brains have formed 1000

  • trillion connections.

  • By age six, your brain is 90% of your adult brain size. While it doesn't grow a lot more

  • in size, your brain development extends through late adolescence, and arguably throughout

  • the rest of your life.

  • While you'll develop new connections for the rest of your life, most of your brain has

  • been there before you were even born.

  • So why are our brains in our heads to begin with? Head over to It's Okay To Be Smart,

  • where Joe tackles evolution head on. And if you haven't already, subscribe to BrainCraft!

  • I have a new episode out every other week.

Inside your head you have about 86 billion brain cells, or neurons.

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你的大腦是這樣生長的 (This Is How Your Brain Grows)

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