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Backyard Brains Heart and Brain Spikerbox NGSS

SKU #BIO-530
Availability:
Backordered until 1/21/2025
Qty.
*Backordered: 1/21/2025
May require additional shipping time and may not be available for express shipping.
View and record the action potentials of your heart and brain.

Replacement Electrodes Pack of 50

SKU #BIO-520
Availability: In Stock
Qty.
50 replacement electrodes for Backyard Brains experiment kits.

Description

With our Heart and Brain SpikerBox, you can view and record the action potentials of your heart (EKG) and the slow rhythms of your brain (EEG) using a Smartphone, Tablet, Chromebook or Computer running our free Spike Recorder Software.

The EKG is the bodies' most recognizable electrical signal, making cameos in TV medical shows for decades. Our experiments take you through the steps of how to record your own, and what these signals say about you. Tap into the cerebral cortex using our EEG headband to record both brain "rhythms" as well as evoked potentials. Wait, there's more! You can also use this SpikerBox to record electrical deflections of the eye. Comes with 12 reusable electrodes.

Depending upon your location, this product may require additional shipping time and may not be available for express shipping. Please call (203) 748-3224 for further details on shipping.

blog button Read more on our Blog - Hey Now, You're a Rock Star, Get Your Neuroscience On!

blog button Read more on our Blog - Neuroscience in a Box

blog button Read more on our Blog - Neuroscience, Wow! Record Electrical Signals from your Heart, Brain and Eyes

blog button Read more on our Blog - Grant-Funded Neuroscience!

Video

May 25, 2023 Webinar - Teaching Neuroscience in Grades K-12 Using Backyard Brains





February 20, 2020 Webinar

NGSS

4-LS1-1

Construct an argument that plants and animals have internal and external structures that function to support survival, growth, behavior, and reproduction.

4-LS1-2

Use a model to describe that animals receive different types of information through their senses,process the information in their brain, and respond to the information in different ways.

MS-LS1-1

Conduct an investigation to provide evidence that living things are made of cells; either one cell or many different numbers and types of cells.

MS-LS1-2

Develop and use a model to describe the function of a cell as a whole and ways parts of cells contribute to the function.

MS-LS1-3

Use argument supported by evidence for how the body is a system of interacting subsystems composed of groups of cells.



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