Neuroscience is the scientific study of the brain, it’s function, structure and the nervous system.
Neuroscience includes the study of the spinal cord and networks of sensory nerve cells called neurons or brain cells, with about a thousand connections to other cells. The human brain has over 86 billion neurons.
The brain stores memories, experiences, emotions, and the brain typically defines who a person is and what the person does. Neurons and their circuits create new thoughts, ideas, movements, patterns, and reinforce old thoughts and patterns. The brain synapses, individual connections, connect the entire body.
The brain is wired with neural connections, which link lobes, sensory input, and motor output with the brain’s message centers, allowing information to come in and be sent back out.
Neuroscience integrates several disciplines, including biology, chemistry, physics, and psychology.
The brain is an intricate system, which processes and creates almost every aspect of our conscious experience in this existence. Every thought we think is emanated from the brain and acts as a radio frequency.
Neuroscience examines the brain, nerve cells, networks and how the nervous system develops and functions as well as issues that cause challenges to the inner workings and develop new patterns.
For example when a person reads words, the brain sends signals to eye muscles to track the text, the eyes convert the words into signals to neurons to the brain. The brain “decodes the signals creating meaning to the words read, to which the brain gives information and assigns meaning based upon the filters set up. The brain accesses stored information including memories, experiences, thoughts, patterns, emotions, unprocessed trauma, etc. to assign meaning to the words individually and together.