4.8 • 985 Ratings
🗓️ 29 November 2024
⏱️ 30 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Do you find your bearings quickly or are you easily disorientated? Do your friends trust you with the directions in a new city?
Finding our way in the physical world, whether that is around a building or a city, is an important everyday capability, one that has been integral to human survival. This week CrowdScience listener David wants to know whether some people are ‘naturally’ better at navigating, so presenter Marnie Chesterton sets her compass and journeys into the human brain.
Accompanied by psychologists and neuroscientists Marnie learns how humans perceive their environment, recall routes and orientate themselves in unfamiliar spaces. We ask are some navigational strategies better than others?
Professor Hugo Spiers from UCL shares his latest lab for researching navigation and tells us that the country you live in might be a good predictor of your navigation skills.
But is our navigational ability down to biology or experience, and can we improve it?
With much of our modern map use being delegated to smartphones, Marnie explores, with Prof Veronique Bohbot what an over-reliance on GPS technology might do to our brain health.
Presenter: Marnie Chesterton Producer: Melanie Brown
(Photo: Man standing on rural road holding up a road map, head obscured by map. Credit: Noel Hendrickson/Getty Images)
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | On a winter's night in 1974, a crime took place that would obsess the nation. |
0:07.0 | It was an extraordinary news story. |
0:09.0 | The story of an aristocrat, Lord Lucan, who's said to have killed the family Nanny, |
0:14.0 | mistaking her for his wife, then somehow just disappeared. |
0:18.0 | One of the great mysteries in English criminal history. We're still looking for Lucan. |
0:21.6 | It's honestly one of the most powerful stories of my lifetime. |
0:25.6 | I'm Alex Fondunzelman. |
0:26.6 | This is The Lucan Obsession. |
0:28.6 | Listen on BBC Sounds. |
0:30.6 | Do I go that way? |
0:33.6 | Or do we go that way? |
0:35.6 | Well, I'm already a bit stuck. |
0:36.6 | Maybe I'm on the path. I'm doubting myself now. |
0:38.3 | Oh, there's a fence. |
0:39.3 | I'm going to go this way. |
0:40.3 | Trying to work out where I am. |
0:41.3 | I feel that I'm going south. |
0:43.3 | It's actually quite hard to work out. |
0:45.3 | Getting lost, it's humiliating. |
0:48.3 | More than that, it's annoying and occasionally scary or even dangerous. And the thing that protects us from all of that or fails to is our sense of direction. |
0:59.4 | I'm Marnie Chesterton. |
1:00.8 | This is crowd science from the BBC World Service where we answer listener questions. |
... |
Transcript will be available on the free plan in -75 days. Upgrade to see the full transcript now.
Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from BBC, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.
Generated transcripts are the property of BBC and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.
Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.