
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


You know that feeling when you know something will be good for you: exercising, writing the email, doing the taxes, and yet you just can’t start? That’s not a character flaw. It might be your brain.
A new study published in the science journal, Current Biology has identified a specific brain circuit that controls whether we even begin an unpleasant task and it’s separate from the part of the brain that evaluates the reward at the end. Neuroscientist and science communicator Dr. Samantha Yammine, also known as Science Sam, spoke to Andrew Carter.
By CJAD 800You know that feeling when you know something will be good for you: exercising, writing the email, doing the taxes, and yet you just can’t start? That’s not a character flaw. It might be your brain.
A new study published in the science journal, Current Biology has identified a specific brain circuit that controls whether we even begin an unpleasant task and it’s separate from the part of the brain that evaluates the reward at the end. Neuroscientist and science communicator Dr. Samantha Yammine, also known as Science Sam, spoke to Andrew Carter.

69 Listeners

113,121 Listeners

9,194 Listeners

47,718 Listeners

783 Listeners

2,914 Listeners

9 Listeners

4 Listeners

12,559 Listeners