Starting on 7 November, BBC Radio 4 presents a  new season of programmes about the brain. The season includes: a major  10-part series about the history of the brain; the story of the lobotomy  craze in the Forties and Fifties; an exploration of what the latest  discoveries in neuroscience might mean for the way we live our lives; an  interview with one of Britain's leading brain experts and the slaying  of common myths about the brain and its workings; and a new radio  science website.
The season starts with Dr Geoff Bunn’s  10-part A History Of The Brain series which takes listeners on a journey  through 5,000 years of our understanding of the most complex thing in  the known universe. Moving from Neolithic times to the present day,  Geoff journeys through the many and varied ideas about what the brain is  for and how it fulfils its functions. This ground-breaking series,  written and presented by Dr Geoff Bunn, can be heard on weekdays at  1.45pm starting on Monday 7 November, with an omnibus on Fridays at 9pm. 
   In a three-part series, Brain Culture: Neuroscience And Society, starting on Tuesday 15 November at 4pm, Matthew Taylor  explores how new imaging techniques have produced some remarkable  insights into the functioning of the brain. And he looks at how the  findings of neuroscience might radically transform our understanding of  the classroom, the courtroom and the cabinet office. With a potentially  new understanding of how the mind works will we seek to teach, punish  and rule people differently? The series continues on Tuesday 22 and 29  November, 4pm. 
   On Monday 7 November at 8pm, Hugh Levinson tells the  story of the lobotomy craze of the Forties and Fifties in The  Lobotomists. Hugh asks what the procedure's popularity said about  society’s idea of mental health and about the nature of the scientific  method itself. 
    On Tuesday 8 November at 9pm, Radio 4’s psychologist Claudia Hammond  makes it her mission to slay common myths about the brain and its  workings in Mind Myths; everything from the fallacy that we use only 10  per cent of our brains to the idea that listening to Mozart makes  children smarter. 
   This season follows Radio 4’s bold commitment to science with a new  science strand – The Life Scientific With Jim Al-Khalili – starting on  Tuesday 11 October at 9am, and which gets inside the mind of leading  neuroscientist, Colin Blakemore, on 8 November 2011. 
  A new website, The Science Explorer will offer a rich archive of Radio 4  programmes that explore the lives, the work and the inspiration of  scientists featured in this autumn's science programming and the new  science strand The Life Scientific. The archive will include episodes  from series such as In Our Time, Material World, Desert Island Discs and  The Reith Lectures. 
   Scientists to be featured include Sir Paul Nurse, Steven Pinker and Prof Jocelyn Bell Burnell, Prof John Sulston, Dr Geoff Bunn, Matthew Taylor and Prof Robert Winston. 
    Programmes from the brain season and The Life Scientific will be  available via the Science Explorer site to listen again or to download  as podcasts. Listeners will also be able find out more about the  scientists, their big ideas and their work, starting with Prof Jim Al-Khalili on Monday, 3 October. The Science Explorer can be found at bbc.co.uk/radio4. 
(Source: BBC Radio 4 Publicity)
 




















