Instructional Video4:29
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Why do people fear the wrong things? - Gerd Gigerenzer

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A new drug reduces the risk of heart attacks by 40%. Shark attacks are up by a factor of two. Drinking a liter of soda per day doubles your chance of developing cancer. These are all examples of a common way risk is presented in news...
Instructional Video5:19
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How optical illusions trick your brain - Nathan S. Jacobs

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Optical illusions are images that seem to trick our minds into seeing something different from what they actually are. But how do they work? Nathan S. Jacobs walks us through a few common optical illusions and explains what these tricks...
Instructional Video3:06
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What is color? - Colm Kelleher

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Have you ever wondered what color is? In this first installment of a series on light, Colm Kelleher describes the physics behind colors-- why the colors we see are related to the period of motion and the frequency of waves.
Instructional Video2:06
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Questions no one knows the answers to - Chris Anderson

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In the first of a new TED-Ed series designed to catalyze curiosity, TED Curator Chris Anderson shares his boyhood obsession with quirky questions that seem to have no answers.
Instructional Video5:38
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Ideasthesia: How do ideas feel? - Danko Nikoli_

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The traditional model of our mental function is that first our senses provide data to our brain, which then translates those senses into the appropriate mental phenomena: light into visual images, air vibrations into auditory...
Instructional Video4:09
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why do we feel nostalgia? - Clay Routledge

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Nostalgia was once considered an illness confined to specific groups of people. Today, people all over the world report experiencing and enjoying nostalgia. But how does nostalgia work? And is it healthy? Clay Routledge details the way...
Instructional Video5:41
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The language of lying - Noah Zandan

Pre-K - Higher Ed
We hear anywhere from 10 to 200 lies a day. And although we've spent much of our history coming up with ways to detect these lies by tracking physiological changes in their tellers, these methods have proved unreliable. Is there a more...
Instructional Video5:19
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The great brain debate - Ted Altschuler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Throughout history, scientists have proposed conflicting ideas on how the brain carries out functions like perception, memory, and movement. Is each of these tasks carried out by a specific area of the brain? Or do multiple areas work...
Instructional Video4:27
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How do dogs "see" with their noses? - Alexandra Horowitz

Pre-K - Higher Ed
You may have heard the expression that dogs 'see with their noses.' But these creature's amazing nasal architecture actually reveals a whole world beyond what we can see. Alexandra Horowitz illustrates how the dog's nose can smell the...
Instructional Video4:18
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What is imposter syndrome and how can you combat it? - Elizabeth Cox

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Even after writing eleven books and winning several awards, Maya Angelou couldn't escape the doubt that she hadn't earned her accomplishments. This feeling of fraudulence is extremely common. Why can't so many of us shake feelings that...
Instructional Video4:15
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The "End Of History" Illusion - Bence Nanay

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Time and time again, we've failed to predict that the technologies of the present will change the future. Recently, a similar pattern was discovered in our individual lives: we're unable to predict change in ourselves. But is there...
Instructional Video4:42
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The Turing test: Can a computer pass for a human? - Alex Gendler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
What is consciousness? Can an artificial machine really think? For many, these have been vital considerations for the future of artificial intelligence. But British computer scientist Alan Turing decided to disregard all these questions...
Instructional Video3:55
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What is deja vu? What is deja vu? - Michael Molina

Pre-K - Higher Ed
You might have felt it -- the feeling that you've experienced something before, but, in reality, the experience is brand new. There are over 40 theories that attempt to explain the phenomenon of deja vu. Michael Molina explains how...
Instructional Video5:38
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why do we dream? - Amy Adkins

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In the 3rd millennium BCE, Mesopotamian kings recorded and interpreted their dreams on wax tablets. In the years since, we haven't paused in our quest to understand why we dream. And while we still don't have any definitive answers, we...
Instructional Video4:45
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Earworms: Those songs that get stuck in your head - Elizabeth Hellmuth Margulis

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Have you ever been waiting in line at the grocery store, innocently perusing the magazine rack, when a song pops into your head? Not the whole song, but a fragment of it that plays and replays until you find yourself unloading the...
Instructional Video5:44
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The benefits of a good night's sleep - Shai Marcu

Pre-K - Higher Ed
It's 4am, and the big test is in 8 hours. You've been studying for days, but you still don't feel ready. Should you drink another cup of coffee and spend the next few hours cramming? Or should you go to sleep? Shai Marcu defends the...
Instructional Video4:42
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How stress affects your body - Sharon Horesh Bergquist

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Our hard-wired stress response is designed to give us the quick burst of heightened alertness and energy needed to perform our best. But stress isn't all good. When activated too long or too often, stress can damage virtually every part...
Instructional Video5:18
TED-Ed

TED-ED: An exercise in time perception - Matt Danzico

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Why is that some experiences feel like they last forever, while others fly by? We tend to miscalculate the time it takes to engage in novel activities due to the influence of memories. Matt Danzico explains why your childhood feels like...
Instructional Video4:48
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The terrors of sleep paralysis - Ami Angelowicz

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Imagine you're fast asleep and then suddenly awake. You want to move but can't, as if someone is sitting on your chest. And you can't even scream! This is sleep paralysis, a creepy but common phenomenon caused by an overlap in REM sleep...
Instructional Video3:44
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Diagnosing a zombie: Brain and body - Tim Verstynen & Bradley Voytek

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Zombies eat brains. They are also, like all of us, driven by brain functions. What is happening in their brains to make them act as they do? In this intriguing dialogue, Tim Verstynen & Bradley Voytek apply the various human medical...
Instructional Video4:19
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How plants tell time - Dasha Savage

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Morning glories unfurl their petals like clockwork in the early morning. A closing white waterlily signals that it's late afternoon. And moon flowers, as their name suggests, only bloom under the night sky. What gives plants this innate...
Instructional Video4:20
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How memories form and how we lose them - Catharine Young

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Think back to a really vivid memory. Got it? Now try to remember what you had for lunch three weeks ago. That second memory probably isn't as strong-but why not? Why do we remember some things, and not others? And why do memories...
Instructional Video4:56
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How does anesthesia work? - Steven Zheng

Pre-K - Higher Ed
When under anesthesia, you can't move, form memories, or -- hopefully -- feel pain. And while it might just seem like you are asleep for that time, you actually aren't. What's going on? Steven Zheng explains what we know about the...
Instructional Video4:28
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Why is being scared so fun? - Margee Kerr

Pre-K - Higher Ed
At this very moment, people are lining up somewhere to scare themselves, be it with a thrill-ride or a horror movie. In fact, in October of 2015 alone, about 28 million people visited a haunted house in the US. But you might wonder: What...