144. Feeling Sound and Hearing Color

People I (Mostly) Admire

David Eagleman is a Stanford neuroscientist, C.E.O., television host, and founder of the Possibilianism movement. He and Steve talk about how wrists can substitute for ears, why we dream, and what Fisher-Price magnets have to do with neuroscience.

  • SOURCE:
    • David Eagleman, professor of cognitive neuroscience at Stanford University and C.E.O. of Neosensory.
  • RESOURCES:
    • Livewired: The Inside Story of the Ever-Changing Brain, by David Eagleman (2020).
    • "Why Do We Dream? A New Theory on How It Protects Our Brains," by David Eagleman and Don Vaughn (TIME, 2020).
    • "Prevalence of Learned Grapheme-Color Pairings in a Large Online Sample of Synesthetes," by Nathan Witthoft, Jonathan Winawer, and David Eagleman (PLoS One, 2015).
    • Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives, by David Eagleman (2009).
    • The vOICe app.
    • Neosensory.
  • EXTRAS:
    • "What’s Impacting American Workers?" by People I (Mostly) Admire (2024).
    • "This Is Your Brain on Podcasts," by Freakonomics Radio (2016).

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