Why People Who Grew Up in the 1970s Have a Completely Different Brain
Something unusual happened to the brains of children who grew up in the 1970s — and neuroscience is only now catching up to explain why. If you were one of those kids, your neural architecture was shaped by a combination of conditions that no longer exist anywhere on the planet. In this video we break down 5 traits that quietly define a 1970s childhood — self- generated direction, adaptive risk calibration, comfortable solitude capacity, analog patience, and unsupervised autonomy wiring — and why they made an entire generation fundamentally different from everyone who came after. 📺 Watch next — Psychology of Gen Alpha: • Psychology of Gen Alpha (2013–2024) 🔔 Subscribe for more psychology, untangled: / @psychologyuntangledtv #psychology #1970s #neuroscience ⚠️ Disclaimer: This video is for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional psychological advice, diagnosis, or treatment. #psychology #psychologyexplained #personalitytraits #introvert

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