The Exploratorium’s new MIND collection is now open!

MIND showcases over 40 new exhibits about thinking and feeling joining the museum’s permanent collection, plus programs, temporary exhibitions, and special events. Working with expert advisors, the MIND team spent over four years researching the cognitive sciences to create provocative and compelling experiences that will illuminate the way your mind works.

Feel the tension between reason and emotion at a very unusual drinking fountain.
Have a conversation with a computer.
Explore your idea of risk… beneath a hanging piano.
Catch your friend in a lie, or try to get away with one yourself.
Investigate your emotional responses to unexpected situations.
Read the fleeting emotions on the faces of friends and family.

Visit the Exploratorium’s MIND collection today—and explore the amazing territory between your ears!
 

 

More About MIND Exhibits

MIND Programs and Special Exhibitions

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Special Exhibition

January 22 – May 11, 2008   The Search for Universals in Human Emotion: Photographs from
the New Guinea Expedition
This exhibition celebrates the fortieth anniversary of psychologist Paul Ekman's pioneering work on human facial expressions. In the late 1960s, Dr. Ekman studied the isolated Fore people of New Guinea, most of whom could not have learned the meaning of facial expressions from contact with outsiders or modern media. Dr. Ekman’s work established that, as Charles Darwin had argued a century earlier, facial expressions are not culturally specific (as are languages), but are instead the products of human evolution—universal to our species.

Paul Ekman is Professor Emeritus of Psychology at UCSF and Director of the Paul Ekman Group, LLC. To learn more about his research, please visit www.paulekman.com.

   

 

June 13, 2008   Superstitious? Find out at the Superstition Obstacle Course!
Opening Friday, June 13, these special interactive exhibits let you test your reactions to superstitions from around the world. Break mirrors, walk under ladders, spill salt, and don’t knock wood—the Superstition Obstacle Course presents a unique opportunity to investigate your ideas about risk, reason, fear, and fun.

11 a.m.-4 p.m. throughout the summer; free with museum admission.


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More About MIND Exhibits

The exhibits in MIND will give you new ways of experimenting with your thoughts and feelings and new insights into your decisions, perceptions, and emotional reactions. The project team worked with a diverse advisory group of scientists and artists to research the cognitive sciences and create experiences highlighting the workings of the human mind—often in unexpected and thought-provoking ways. Here are a few of the experiences you’ll have when you visit this provocative new addition to the museum’s collection:

A Sip of Conflict
Play with the tension between reason and emotion as you drink from a water fountain fashioned from an actual (but unused!) toilet.

Center of Attention
This exhibit simulates the experience of standing in front of a lively crowd. The crowd’s changing responses allow you to examine your own emotional and cognitive reactions to being in the limelight.

Be Here Now
This meditative spot challenges you to empty your mind and observe the gentle flow and direction of your own uncontrolled thoughts.

Mood Lighting
This exhibit bathes you in colored light, initiating a surprisingly powerful emotional experience and suggesting the importance of visual stimuli in provoking feelings.

Piano Drop
What does “risk” mean to you? Stand under this piano and find out.

The Eyes Have It
Here, you’ll infer the emotional states of others from their eyes alone, illuminating the way we decode faces to interpret their owners’ inner states.

Masks
In a counterpoint to The Eyes Have It, Masks challenges you to communicate feelings without facial expressions—instead, you must use your body to send emotional messages to others.

Startle Response
Startle Response offers you a chance to see the subtle movements and changes that play out across your own face in a moment of extreme surprise.

See Yourself Sweat
This exhibit magnifies a small patch of your skin as you think about emotionally arousing ideas or images. Your thoughts trigger immediate secretion of sweat, and the sudden appearance of these glistening globules shows a concrete physiological reaction to an amorphous cognitive event.

True Mirrors
Normal and reversed mirrors let you see yourself as you normally do and compare that image with something you rarely encounter—your own face as others see it. The unsettling result illustrates what happens when expectations are subtly violated.

Dare to Compare
Mix and match descriptions to create an individual personality portrait of yourself or a friend, and bring to light your theories of how traits and behaviors fit together—or don’t.

Animal Camera
These film loops from artist Sam Easterson were created by temporarily fixing tiny cameras to animals, including a wolf, bison, scorpion, tarantula, and others. The resulting mini-movies vividly illustrate how perspective affects our perceptions—and raise questions of the consciousness of nonhuman creatures.

Divided Attention
Forcing you to pay attention to numerous stimuli at once highlights the limits of the human mind’s attentional capacity.

Theater of the Mind
This area provides a venue for films highlighting a range of perspectives on thoughts, feelings, and the human condition.

Poker Face
At Poker Face, you’ll lie to a friend about the contents of a poker hand—or try to detect your friend’s lie. This two-person exhibit lets you experiment with trying to conceal your thoughts and with using facial cues to interpret hidden motivations.

Talk to Daisy
A computer program designed to mimic human verbal communication lets you have a “conversation” with a machine and explore your ideas about consciousness, meaning, and intelligence.

Color Your Judgment
An exhibit highlighting the power of expectations, Color Your Judgment pairs familiar scents with liquids of various colors, showing how knowledge of what something “should” look like can affect our perceptions.

Stretching Your Attention
Experiment with identifying simultaneous events and see how practice may improve your attentional abilities.

The Cute Room
These exhibits let you manipulate familiar objects and experiment with the things that make them seem cute… or not. Is cuteness in the eye of the beholder?

Fast Faces
You probably recognize most of these people, but waiting for a specific image may impede your ability to name them.

Polite Smile, Delight Smile
Can you tell the difference between the posed and spontaneous smiles at this exhibit? These happy faces test the limits of your innate face-reading capabilities.

AHA Moment
Insight often comes in a flash… with the right hint.

Time To Think
Modeled on a fundamental experimental technique for studying cognitive activity, this exhibit illustrates how increasingly complex mental tasks dramatically affect your reaction time.

 


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NSF LogoThe Exploratorium's MIND Project was made possible with support from the National Science Foundation under grant no. 0307927 and by an in-kind gift from Neurosky, Inc.

Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the
National Science Foundation.