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What’s 1000 times thinner than a piece of paper, more numerous in you than grains of
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sand on a beach, and proof that the smallest things can sometimes be the most powerful?
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I’m talking about the synapse -- the meeting point between two neurons.
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If your neurons form the structure of your nervous system, then your synapses -- the
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tiny communication links between them -- are what turn that structure into an actual system.
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Because, as great and powerful as your neurons are, when it comes down to it, their strength
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and their purpose lies in their connections. A single neuron in isolation might as well
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not exist if it doesn’t have someone to listen or talk to.
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The word “synapse” comes from the Greek for “to clasp or join.” It’s basically
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a junction or a crossroads.
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When an action potential -- and if you don’t know what an action potential is, watch the
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last episode -- sends an electrical message to the end of an axon, that message hits a
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synapse that then translates, or converts it, into a different type of signal and flings
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it over to another neuron.
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These connections are rather amazing feats of bio-electrical engineering, and they are
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also ridiculously, mind-bogglingly numerous.
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Consider that the human brain alone has 100 billion neurons, and each of those has 1000
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to 10,000 synapses.
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So you’ve got somewhere between 100 to 1,000 trillion synapses in your brain.
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Each one of these hundreds of trillions of synapses is like a tiny computer, all of its
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own, not only capable of running loads of different programs simultaneously, but also
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able to change and adapt in response to neuron firing patterns, and either strengthen or
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weaken over time, depending on how much they’re used.
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Synapses are what allow you to learn and remember.
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They’re also the root of many psychiatric disorders.
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And they’re basically why illicit drugs -- and addictions to them -- exist.
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Pretty much everything in your experience -- from euphoria to hunger to desire to fuzziness
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to to confusion to boredom -- is communicated by way of these signals sent by your body’s
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own electrochemical messaging system.
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Hopefully, you know enough about email and texting etiquette to know that if you’re
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gonna communicate effectively, you have to respect the sanctity of the group list.
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It’s not a great idea to send a mass text to all of your friends first thing in the
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morning to give them the urgent news that you just ate a really delicious maple-bacon donut.
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Seriously, people. If you happen to have a friend who truly adores bacon, then an email would suffice.
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But! If you’re out clubbing and suddenly Bill Murray shows up and starts doing karaoke...
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then that would be a totally appropriate time to notify all of your friends at once that
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something awesome is happening and they better be a part of it.
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And in much the same way -- OK, in kind of the same way -- your nerve cells have two
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main settings for communicating with each other, depending on how fast the news needs to travel.
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Some of your synapses are electrical -- that would be like an immediate group text.
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Others are chemical synapses -- they take more time to be received and read, but they’re
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used more often and are much easier to control, sending signals to only certain recipients.
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Fortunately, your nervous system has better text etiquette than your mom, and knows when
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each kind is appropriate to use, and how to do it.
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Your super fast electrical synapses send an ion current flowing directly from the cytoplasm
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of one nerve cell to another, through small windows called gap junctions.
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They’re super fast because the signal is never converted from its pure electrical state
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to any other kind of signal, the way it is in a chemical synapse.
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Instead, one cell and one synapse can trigger thousands of other cells that can all act
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in synchrony. Something similar happens in the muscle cells of your heart, where speed
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and team effort between cells is crucial.
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This seems like a good system, so why aren’t all of our synapses electrical?
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It’s largely a matter of control. With such a direct connection between cells, an action
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potential in one neuron will generate an action potential in the other cells across the synapse.
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That’s great in places like your heart, because you definitely don’t want a half a heartbeat.
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But if every synapse in your body activated all of the neurons around it, your nervous
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system would basically always be in “group text” mode, with every muscle fiber and
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bit of organ tissue always being stimulated and then replying-all to the whole group which
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would stimulate them even more until everyone just got maxed out and exhausted and turned
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off their phones for good...which would be death.
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So that would be bad, which is partly why we have chemical synapses. They are much more
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abundant, but also slower, and they’re more precise and selective in what messages they send where.
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Rather than raw electricity, these synapses use neurotransmitters, or chemical signals,
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that diffuse across a synaptic gap to deliver their message.
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The main advantage chemical synapses have over electrical ones is that they can effectively
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convert the signal in steps -- from electrical to chemical back to electrical -- which allows
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for different ways to control that impulse.
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At the synapse, that signal can be modified, amplified, inhibited, or split, either immediately
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or over longer periods of time.
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This set-up has two principal parts:
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The cell that’s sending the signal is the presynaptic neuron, and it transmits through
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a knoblike structure called the presynaptic terminal, usually the axon terminal.
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This terminal holds a whole bunch of tiny synaptic vesicle sacs, each loaded with thousands
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of molecules of a given neurotransmitter.
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The receiving cell, meanwhile, is, yes, thankfully the postsynaptic neuron, and it accepts the
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neurotransmitters in its receptor region, which is usually on the dendrite or just on the cell body itself.
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And these two neurons communicate even though they never actually touch. Instead, there’s
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a tiny gap called a synaptic cleft between them -- less than five millionths of a centimeter apart.
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One thing to remember is that messages that travel via chemical synapses are technically
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not transmitted directly between neurons, like they are in electrical synapses.
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Instead, there’s a whole chemical event that involves the release, diffusion, and
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reception of neurotransmitters in order to transmit signals.
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And this all happens in a specific and important chain of events.
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When an action potential races along the axon of a neuron, activating sodium and potassium
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channels in a wave, it eventually comes down to the presynaptic terminal, and activates
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the voltage-gated calcium (Ca2+) channels there to open and release the calcium into
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the neuron’s cytoplasm.
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This flow of positively-charged calcium ions causes all those tiny synaptic vesicles to
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fuse with the cell membrane and purge their chemical messengers. And it’s these neurotransmitters
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that act like couriers diffusing across the synaptic gap, and binding to receptor sites
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on the postsynaptic neuron.
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So, the first neuron has managed to convert the electrical signal into a chemical one.
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But in order for it to become an action potential again in the receiving neuron, it has to be
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converted back to electrical.
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And that happens once a neurotransmitter binds to a receptor. Because, that’s what causes
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the ion channels to open.
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And depending on which particular neurotransmitter binds to which receptor, the neuron might
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either get excited or inhibited. The neurotransmitter tells it what to do.
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Excitatory neurotransmitters depolarize the postsynaptic neuron by making the inside of
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it more positive and bringing it closer to its action potential threshold, making it
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more likely to fire that message on to the next neuron.
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But an inhibitory neurotransmitter hyperpolarizes the postsynaptic neuron by making the inside
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more negative, driving its charge down -- away from its threshold. So, not only does the
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message not get passed along, it’s now even harder to excite that portion of the neuron.
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Keep in mind here: Any region of a single neuron may have hundreds of synapses, each
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with different inhibitory or excitatory neurotransmitters. So the likelihood of that post-synaptic neuron
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developing an action potential depends on the sum of all of the excitations and inhibitions in that area.
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Now, we have over a hundred different kinds of naturally-occurring neurotransmitters in
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our bodies that serve different functions. They help us move around, and keep our vital
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organs humming along, amp us up, calm us down, make us hungry, sleepy, or more alert, or
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simply just make us feel good.
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But neurotransmitters don’t stay bonded to their receptors for more than a few milliseconds.
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After they deliver their message, they just sort of pop back out, and then either degrade or get recycled.
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Some kinds diffuse back across the synapse and are immediately re-absorbed by the sending
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neuron, in a process called reuptake.
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Others are broken down by enzymes in the synaptic cleft, or sent away from the synapse by diffusion.
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And this mechanism is what many drugs -- both legal and illegal -- so successfully exploit,
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in order to create their desired effects.
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These drugs can either excite or inhibit the production, release, and reuptake of neurotransmitters. And
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sometimes they can simply mimic neurotransmitters, tricking a neuron into thinking it’s getting
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a natural chemical signal, when really it’s anything but.
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Take cocaine, for example. Don’t take cocaine.
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Once it hits your bloodstream, it targets three major neurotransmitters --
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serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine.
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Serotonin is mainly inhibitory and plays an important role in regulating mood, appetite,
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circadian rhythm, and sleep. Some antidepressants can help stabilize moods by stabilizing serotonin levels.
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And when you engage in pleasurable activities -- like hugging a loved one, or having sex,
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or eating a really, really great donut -- your brain releases dopamine, which influences
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emotion and attention, but mostly just makes you feel awesome.
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Finally, norepinephrine amps you up by triggering your fight or flight response, increasing
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your heart rate, and priming muscles to engage, while an undersupply of the chemical can depress a mood.
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So in a normal, sober state, you’ve got all these neurotransmitters doing their thing
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in your body. But once they’ve delivered their chemical payloads, they’re usually
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diffused right back out across the synapse to be absorbed by the neuron that sent them.
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But cocaine blocks that reuptake, especially of dopamine, allowing these powerful chemicals
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to float around and accumulate -- making the user feel euphoric for a time, but also paranoid and jittery.
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And because you have a limited supply of these neurotransmitters, and your body needs time
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to brew more, flooding your synapses like this eventually depletes your supply, making
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you feel terrible in a number of ways.
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Cocaine and other drugs that target neurotransmitters trick the brain, and after prolonged use may
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eventually cause it to adapt, as all those synapses remember how great those extra chemicals feel.
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As a result, you actually start to lose receptors, so it takes even more dopamine, and finally
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cocaine, to function normally.
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Sometimes the best way to understand how your body works is to look at how things can go
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wrong. And when it comes to your synapses, that, my friends, is what wrong looks like.
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In their natural, healthy state, your synapses know when to excite, when to inhibit, when
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to use electricity and when to dispatch the chemical messengers.
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Basically, a healthy nervous system has the etiquette of electrical messaging down to,
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well, a science.
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Today you learned how electrical synapses use ion currents over gap junctions to transmit
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neurological signals, and how chemical synapses turn electrical signals into chemical ones,
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using neurotransmitters, before converting them to back electrical signals again. And
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you learned how cocaine is a sterling example of how artificial imbalances in this electrochemical
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system can lead to dysfunctions of all kinds.
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This episode of Crash Course was brought to you by Logan Sanders from Branson, MO, and
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Dr. Linnea Boyev, whose YouTube channel you can check out in the description below. Thank you
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to Logan and Dr. Boyev for supporting Crash Course and free education. Thank you to everyone
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who's watching, but especially to our Subbable subscribers, like Logan and Dr. Boyev, who make
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Crash Course possible. To find out how you can become a supporter, just go to Subbable.com.
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This episode was written by Kathleen Yale, the script was edited by Blake de Pastino,
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and our consultant, is Dr. Brandon Jackson. It was directed by Nicholas Jenkins and Michael
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Aranda, and our graphics team is Thought Café.