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associated with videos to stop people copying popular combinations. They can still be attached to clips鈥攁nd theyre still factored into searches鈥攂ut theyre not visible while youre browsing around the site. If you find them useful, you can bring them back with the help of a simple Chrome extension. The add-on in question is the aptly named Tags for YouTube, which you can pick up for both Chrome and Firefox, and it does exactly what it says it will: Once installed, you can refresh YouTube and view the hidden tags underneath clips click Show more to see them . Click on any of the tags to run a search on YouTube in a new tab. You can of course run a manual search using the same terms but Tags for YouTube makes the process easier and giv
stanley kubek es you keywords you might not have necessarily considered. Dont forget about the filters at the top of each search page: They let you narrow down your results based on date, duration, rating and so on. extensionsYouTube
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that Facebook is so far ahead of human practice, it actually hacks our brains. While Facebook rise took many by surprise, its success was little surprise to the hundreds of researche
vaso stanley rs who study social interactions in neuroscience labs across the count
stanley france ry. Over the last decade, these neuroscientists have uncovered some unexpected quirks of the brain, that all link to one big idea: we are far more socially oriented, at the level of brain structure and systems, than we account for in daily life. Why does this matter It certainly matters to Goog
stanley cup le, or to any organization wanting to get people attention. Yet this insight also has a dark side that deserves some airtime too. Here how social the brain is: the brain network that is always on in the background is a region involved in thinking about yourself and other people. This network is so ubiquitous it has been labeled the default network. When not doing anything else, the brain favorite pastime is to think about people. We actually turn this region down when we do any active processing, such as doing math. One study showed that inactivity for just two seconds switched the default network back on. Many studies have emerged in the last few years about the importance of human social interactions to our well-being. We know that social rewards light up the brain reward circuits more than non-social rewards, and that social threats, such as feeling lonely or ostracized, light up th