Episode Details
Back to EpisodesHow childhood (and Pokémon) shape how we see the world | Kalanit Grill-Spector
Description
Today's episode is all about how childhood literally shapes the brain.
Our most important experiences – from learning to read, to the growing complexity of our social lives at school, and even the video games we play – leave physical traces in how our brains get organized that shape how we see the world as adults.
But how does the brain actually know what parts of our lives are actually important enough to reorganize around? How do particular experiences get under the hood to leave their mark on the developing brain?
Today's guest, Stanford psychology professor Kalanit Grill-Spector, has spent her career trying to answer these questions. She's has been imaging children's brains – from infants to teenagers – to watch this reorganization unfold. Her work focuses on how our visual experience as children shapes our brains and how we see the world – what she and her team have found is not always what they expected.
Learn More
- The Vision and Perception Neuroscience Lab at Stanford Humanities and Sciences
- Brain's face recognition area grows much bigger as we get older (New Scientist, 2017)
- Neuroscientists use AI to simulate how the brain makes sense of the visual world (Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute, 2025)
- Bridging nature and nurture: The brain's flexible foundation from birth (Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute, 2025)
- Extensive childhood experience with Pokémon suggests eccentricity drives organization of visual cortex (Nature Human Behavior, 2019)
- Cortical recycling in high-level visual cortex during childhood development (Nature Human Behaviour, 2021)
- A unifying framework for functional organization in early and higher ventral visual cortex (Neuron, 2024)
- The emergence of visual category representations in infants' brains (eLife, 2024)
- White matter connections of human ventral temporal cortex are organized by cytoarchitecture, eccentricity and category-selectivity from birth (Nature Human Behaviour, 2025)
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