Mariano Sigman, a physicist by training, is an international leading figure in the cognitive neuroscience of learning and decision making. He is the founder of the Integrative Neuroscience Laboratory at the University of Buenos Aires. Sigman is the only Latin American scientist to be a director of the Human Brain Project, was awarded a Human Frontiers Career Development Award, the National Prize of Physics, the Young Investigator Prize of "College de France," the IBM Scalable Data Analytics Award, and is a scholar of the James S. McDonnell Foundation. In 2016 he was made a Laureate of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences.
‘Sigman finds the sweet spot between findings and experimental
detail, and it makes for a compelling read. Entertaining… with
moments of exhileration’Financial Times ‘Mariano Sigman writes and
thinks in a uniquely provocative way. He is a gifted cognitive
neuroscientist, and we are lucky to have him excavating the secret
life of the mind. He makes learning about the mind and brain easy
and almost automatic. He is the Richard Feynman of the brain’
Andrew Meltzoff, Professor of Psychology, the University of
Washington; co-author of ‘The Scientist in the Crib ‘The author
takes us on grand tour covering an extraordinarily diverse range of
topics that are of interest to readers and specialists alike’ VS
Ramachandran FRCP, author of The Tell-Tale Brain ‘The brain is the
star of this book, with chapters focussing on its characteristics
throughout childhood and youth, identity, decision-making,
consciousness, education and its capacity to transform itself. In
exploring the psychological element of neuroscience, Mariano Sigman
tells the story of the human mind as a journey through some of the
least travelled paths of mankind … A wonderful read’ La Nacion ‘The
idea of the mind as a tabula rasa is only one of many erroneous
notions that Sigman’s brilliant book helps to correct’ El Mundo
‘What differentiates The Secret Life of the Mind from other books
about the mind is that it takes on neuroscience from a
psychological point of view, as well as taking into account
psychoanalysis, behavioural economics and philosophy’ Nosotras
‘Sigman confirms that although we are capable of detecting and
manipulating consciousness, science is still not able to physically
break it down. The idea of the mind as a tabula rasa is only one of
many erroneous notions that Sigman’s brilliant book helps to
correct’ El Cultural, El Mundo
Ask a Question About this Product More... |