![]() Thalamic structures and associated cognitive functions: Relations with age and aging. Facing the role of the amygdala in emotional information processing. Role of developmental factors in hypothalamic function. doi:10.1038/nature21726īiran J, Tahor M, Wircer E, Levkowitz G. Cerebellar granule cells encode the expectation of reward. Wagner MJ, Kim TH, Savall J, Schnitzer MJ, Luo L. The brainstem: anatomy, assessment, and clinical syndromes. Hurley RA, Flashman LA, Chow TW, Taber KH. Are the neural correlates of consciousness in the front or in the back of the cerebral cortex? Clinical and neuroimaging evidence. This appeals both to me as a user (new facilities, better interfacing etc) but also as an engineer and technologist who admires open development and sharing of concepts and ideas.Boly M, Massimini M, Tsuchiya N, Postle BR, Koch C, Tononi G. However, as other have said, Roam has a much more open interface, culture and community. The BrainBox is good too (though getting things back into your Brain can be fiddly). ![]() Brain V12 has added a lot of Roam like features, crucially including backlinks, which balanced the books between the two applications. I like the Plex in The Brain, and miss it when working in Roam. (And to save money!)īoth are excellent tools, and have made me look at the information I record in both my work and personal life in a different way - a world of links, backlinks and easy recall. I have been using both for a year or so, but would like to settle on just one in order to consolidate where I put my information and notes. Two very intriguing tools which both have their own way to challenge ones habits and thinking! ![]() ![]() I like the quick capture tool from Roam on my iPhone. Roam challenges me to rethink how I use TheBrain too. Reading, note taking, planning, learning, keeping track of thoughts, relationships, you name it. They turn my ways of thinking and working upside down for six months now. Roam, and the whole Roamcult community are triggering unexpected cognitive and linguistic functions in me. named links.įor me, Roam is a very inspiring and intriguing tool complementary to TheBrain. And TheBrain has lots of useful other features not found in Roam, e.g. You can give others access to one or more of your brains too. Collecting things/links in the Brainbox is a nice feature too. Besides Desktop/laptop as the homebase, it is very handy when used via a browser or phone or tablet app. And searching within TheBrain and attachments is fabulous. It’s also a great repository beyond the traditional hierarchical filesystem. I mostly use TheBrain for exploring, classifying and documenting domains of interest. Will try soon (but initially feels as a strange idea □). Haven’t tried running Roam inside TheBrain. As you can imagine a lot has accumulated in TheBrain over the years, so I guess I'll be using both parallel for a long time. I have a tag in TheBrain "Moved to Roam" which I use to mark thoughts that have been moved. I have not migrated my notes from TheBrain, I only move stuff when it comes up. With respect to the question do I use both: Yes. Regarding TheBrain 12, they have implemented some level of a text only view including navigating the plex through text, but it is far from a frictionless experience. In TheBrain you need to click a lot to get things done and there is no such thing as block level referencing. Finally the absolute killer feature of Roam is its frictionless experience and its block level referencing.With some hacking you can read the brain export, and even create your own, but it is not documented and TheBrain does not encourage such hacking. TheBrain was never good at giving users access to their data outside the GUI. roam/js and recently Roam42 are game changers. The huge benefit of Roam is its flexibility. ![]() I miss lateral links (jumps) in Roam (of course you could argue that in a way all links and backlinks are all lateral links in Roam - in which case I miss the parent child links :)).I love the plex in TheBrain (the graph overview in Roam is crap),.I've used TheBrain for 18 years and have moved to Roam in May. ![]()
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