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Scientist who studied the interface of science with meditation and other contemplative practices, especially Buddhist practices.

 

Varela was a proponent of the embodied philosophy which argues that human cognition and consciousness can only be understood in terms of the enactive structures in which they arise, namely the body (understood both as a biological system and as personally, phenomenologically experienced) and the physical world with which the body interacts.

 

Dr. Anisha Patel, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at UCSF, said that studies have found links between cognition and hydration. She said she's heard stories of schools providing plenty of water when they're administering standardized tests, which Dr. Patel said she finds interesting. "That’s one thing that policy-makers and school officials could be excited about, improving performance of students in their schools." Though many question whether the new state law has the teeth necessary to get the job done.

 

Photo: Sayre Quevedo/Youth Radio

Oppenheimer's Garden 2013

 

A large scale installation at the Gamut Gallery for the Liminal Cognition Exhibition.

 

The name Oppenheimer's Garden references Oppenheimer's research on the atomic bomb and the mushroom cloud produced by the nuclear reaction. This installation displays a variety of clouds composed of mushroom's which literally translates this devastating phenomenon, but conceptually offers a contradictory display as the cloud's appear to be living organisms.

 

I've utilized mushroom's in my previous work as a metaphor for the life force, from it's vitality and inability to be constrained in Heisenberg's Garden, to it's nature with energy in Albert's Garden and now in it's relation to water in Oppenheimer's Garden. All living organisms are mostly composed of water, condensed clouds if you will. Oppenheimer's Garden is in essence, a translation of the life force juxtaposed with the greatest form of destruction we've yet come to know.

 

www.cnn.com/2022/11/28/health/flavonols-memory-boost-well...

 

Slow cognitive decline with flavonols, study says

 

Eating more flavonols, antioxidants found in many vegetables, fruits, tea and wine, may slow your rate of memory loss, a new study finds.

 

The cognitive score of people in the study who ate the most flavonols declined 0.4 units per decade more slowly than those who ate the fewest flavonols. The results held even after adjusting for other factors that can affect memory, such as age, sex and smoking, according to the study recently published in Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

 

“It’s exciting that our study shows making specific diet choices may lead to a slower rate of cognitive decline,” said study author Dr. Thomas Holland, an instructor in the department of internal medicine at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, in a statement.

 

“Something as simple as eating more fruits and vegetables and drinking more tea is an easy way for people to take an active role in maintaining their brain health.”

 

Flavonols are cytoprotective, meaning they protect cells, including neurons, so it’s plausible there could be a direct impact on cognition, said Dr. David Katz, a specialist in preventive and lifestyle medicine and nutrition who was not involved in the study.

 

“But they are also a marker of higher intake of fruits and vegetables — which is good for the brain because it is good for every vital organ, and the organism as a whole,” Katz said in an email.

 

“They may also be a marker of better overall diet quality, or even greater health consciousness. People who are more health conscious may do things to preserve their cognition, or maybe being more health conscious is a by-product of better cognition.”

 

A huge family of phytochemicals

 

Plants contain over 5,000 flavonoid compounds, which play roles in producing cell growth, fighting environmental stress and attracting insects for pollination.

 

Flavonols, a type of flavonoid, have been shown in animal and some human studies to reduce inflammation, a major trigger for chronic disease, and are rich sources of antioxidants. Antioxidants combat free radicals, “highly unstable molecules that are naturally formed when you exercise and when your body converts food into energy,” according to the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, part of the National Institutes of Health.

 

One of the most common flavonols, quercetin, has shown promise in reducing the onset of colorectal cancer and other cancers, according to studies. Onions contain the highest levels — lower levels can be found in broccoli, blueberries, cauliflower, curly kale, leeks, spinach and strawberries.

 

Another common flavonol, kaempferol, appears to inhibit the growth of cancer cells while preserving and protecting normal cells. Good sources of kaempferol are onions, asparagus and berries, but the richest plant sources are spinach, kale and other green leafy vegetables, as well as herbs such as chives, dill and tarragon.

 

third major player is myricetin, which has been studied in rodents for blood sugar control and the reduction of tau, a protein that causes the hallmark tangles of Alzheimer’s and other dementia. Spinach and strawberries contain high levels of myricetin, but honey, black currants, grapes and other fruits, berries, vegetables, nuts and tea are also good sources.

 

The last group of flavonols, isorhamnetin, may protect against cardiovascular and neurovascular disease in addition to anti-tumor and anti-inflammatory benefits. Good sources of isorhamnetin are pears, olive oil, wine and tomato sauce.

 

You can find a full list of the flavonoid content of various fruits and vegetables here.

 

An older, dementia-free population

 

The new study asked 961 people with an average age of 81 and no signs of dementia to fill out a food questionnaire each year for seven years. In addition, the participants underwent annual cognitive and memory tests and were quizzed on their time spent being physically and mentally active.

 

People were divided into groups based on their daily intake of flavonols. The lowest intake was about 5 milligrams a day; the highest 15 milligrams a day — equal to about a cup of dark leafy greens, the study noted. (For comparison, the average flavonol intake in US adults is about 16 to 20 milligrams per day, according to the study.)

 

The study looked at the impact of the four major flavonols — kaempferol, quercetin, myricetin and isorhamnetin — on the rate of cognitive decline over the seven years.

 

The greatest impact was found with kaempferol: People who ate the highest amounts of foods with kaempferol showed a 0.4 units per decade slower rate of cognitive decline compared with those who ate the fewest, according to the study.

 

Myricetin was next: People who ate the most foods with myricetin had a 0.3 units per decade slower rate of cognitive decline compared with the lowest consuming group. People who ate the most foods with quercetin showed a 0.2 units per decade slower rate of cognitive decline.

 

Dietary isorhamnetin had no impact, the study found.

 

The jury is still out?

 

Despite the apparent positives, studies on the impact of flavonols on human health have been inconclusive -— mainly because many are observational and cannot show a direct cause and effect. That applies to the Neurology study as well, according to its authors.

 

A few randomized controlled trials — the scientific gold standard — have shown benefits associated with flavonols for controlling blood sugar in type 2 diabetes and improving cardiovascular health, according to the Linus Pauling Institute, home to the Micronutrient Information Center, an online database for nutrition information.

 

It’s not known whether these benefits are long term, the institute said, and no clear impact has been shown for cancer prevention or cognitive protection.

 

“There are other bioactives that may contribute to the observed outcomes,” Katz said. “Supplemental studies are required to isolate flavonoid effects fully.”

 

There’s also a downside to assuming a health impact without the necessary studies to back it up, said Dr. Christopher Gardner, a research professor of medicine and director of the Nutrition Studies Research Group at Stanford University.

 

“You can count on Americans wanting the benefits of plants but not wanting to eat them,” he said in an email.

 

“(What) if people read the headline and rush out and buy bottled (extracted) flavonols instead of eating whole plant foods, and it turns out it wasn’t just the flavonols, but the package deal of everything in those plants (instead).”

Associate Professor of Psychology, Yale University

 

Laurie Santos is an associate professor of psychology at Yale University and the director of Yale University’s Comparative Cognition Laboratory. She received her B.A. in Psychology and Biology from Harvard University and her Ph.D. in Psychology from Harvard.

 

Her research explores the evolutionary origins of human cognition by studying the cognitive capacities present in non-human primates. She has investigated a number of topics in comparative cognition, including primates’ understanding of others’ minds, the origins of irrational decision-making, and the evolution of prosocial behavior.

 

Her scientific research has been featured in The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, The Economist, Forbes, The New Yorker, New Scientist, Smithsonian, and Discover.

 

She has also won numerous awards, both for her scientific achievements and for her teaching and mentorship. She is the recipient of Harvard University’s George W. Goethals Award for Teaching Excellence, Yale University’s Arthur Greer Memorial Prize for Outstanding Junior Faculty, and the Stanton Prize from the Society for Philosophy and Psychology for outstanding contributions to interdisciplinary research. She was recently voted one of Popular Science Magazine’s “Brilliant 10” Young Minds.

The JiVitA Project in Bangladesh will examine the effects of weekly maternal vitamin A supplementation during pregnancy along with newborn vitamin A supplementation on cognitive development of children at 8 years of age. The findings will help to elucidate the preventable effects of micronutrient deficiencies during critical early stages of neurobehavioral development on cognition of children at ages when they usually start school.

Writing a book here: open.spotify.com/show/3mMrq70ofFvPputOjQIiGU?si=kwclM6f8Q...

 

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Memory & Attention

 

It is essential for cognitive study to explore memory, and it is impossible to treat cognition and remembrance as separate elements. Our past experience always biases our perception. What we have perceived will go through our imagination, and it will be stored in memory. We repeat this roop every day. It is impossible to see more things than our imagination and memory allow us to see. At the same time, it means that if we have more imagination and more kinds of recollections, we might be able to see more elements in the world. A series of experiment was conducted to explore our attention and memory in space.

 

sayakashiraishi18@gmail.com

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Neurorehabilitation in Parkinson's Disease: Cognition, Neuroimaging Biomarkers and Exercise Interventions (590142)

 

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Source: Florence (Duchy). Legge sopra la cognitione, et prescritione de malefizij (In Fiorenza: Zanobi Pignoni, 1617; 21 cm. Call # Italy F66 223.

October 11-15, 2014

 

SSIR Technology, Cognition and Behavior fall break trip to San Francisco, Palo Alto, and Mountain View, California

The Sleight of Mind Set Workshops | MindSways - April 2013

 

SEEING THROUGH ILLUSIONS

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Hi,

 

The Sleight of Mind Set Workshop is a one day, intimate learning experience where we will guide you through a number of principles. You'll learn the Principles of Mind Magic, the Framework of Mind Magic; we'll Explore Why and How Illusions Work, look at the role of MMI's (Multiple Moments of Interest, Interaction & Insight) and Thinking Fallacies. Most importantly though, you will Learn And Be Given a Number of Easy and Practical Tricks (with supporting materials) that you can take away with you and start performing and adding to your delivery the next day.

 

We wanted to make sure you'd get the best out of the one day experience, so we've packed months of one-to-one training sessions and years of our own experience into the day. The themes of the day are Innovation & Creativity, Practically Applied Advantage, Emotional Engagement, Show, Not Tell and the importance of Mystery, Magic and Surprise. For more information on the day, please see mindsways.com/SMS/ and for a brochure of what the day is about, please look at mindsways.com/SMS/#Brochure

 

TAPPING INTO POPULARITY

On the day we talk about the enduring allure and popularity that mystery, the paranormal and Mind Magic has. Magic is never far out of the popular sphere with Derren Brown filling theatres and drawing large TV audiences. Part of the popularity is down to the fact that it "May just be real". This is also shown by the new blockbuster film, Now You See Me.

This new film is based on the premise of what if the impossible was real. Starring Morgan Freeman, Michael Caine, Mark Ruffalo, Jesse Eisenberg and Isla Fisher, the film shows the hold that magic has over our imagination. It also gives us an insight into how popular magic is, and a fascinating glimpse into what it would be like to have real powers. To see more about the film, please go to mindsways.com/SMS/#NowYouSeeMe.

 

Today, to stand out we need the personal touch and the sleight of mind set workshop is about tapping into this popularity of mind magic and adding value through your delivery and the personal touch.

 

Our aim is to make day informative, entertaining and practical for you. People have attended for many reasons including:

Curiosity (just how was that done)

Learning something new

Interest in how the mind works

Adding variety to enliven their presentations

New and different approaches

Something to impress others with

An increased reputation

A channel for their passion and fascination

Wider perspectives and experiences

The real power of Mind Magic and Psychological Artistry lies not with just the tricks, but the effect that the delivery of the tricks have on people, tapping into the emotions of mystery combined with the personal touch and firing off the silent questions. On the workshops and in the SNT kit, we give you the tricks, however, learning to use them with what you do is where the real power lies.

By delivering these tricks, you can evoke the making of the extraordinary. By combining the tricks with the energy of your words, your message and your personality, you make yourself stand out, stimulate fascination and create interest in you. This is when the real magic happens, in the theatre of the minds.

In communications theory the saying "it's not us, its them" has great importance. Likewise in Psychological Artistry and in our Sleight of Mind Set workshops these take on a very important role. For more on this, please go to mindsways.com/SMS/

 

THE FEEDBACK - What People Say

 

The feedback from the workshops have been extremely positive, with people (from last weeks workshops) saying things like:

"It really was most enjoyable and enlightening"

"Fantastic day... a great eye opener!"

"Another great course, with plenty to think about and over"

The workshops have been enjoyed and shown to be beneficial to many people over the past year. The events have been attended and proved to be relevant to people from a wide range of backgrounds including entrepreneurs, business consultants, health professionals, coaches of life, performance and sports, therapists, hypnotherapists, trainers etc.

This is an unorthodox approach to understanding human behaviour, illustrating and promoting our messages, and this is where the real power lies. As Marty Neumeier says in ZAG " Be Different - NO Really Different". For more on what people say, please see mindsways.com/WPS/

THEATRE OF THE MIND - Tricks on 3 Levels

On the workshop we uncover tricks, look at making a trick into an effect and making the effect into a piece that works for you. The three levels we work on are:

Effect of a trick - triggers "how did you do that?"

Analysis of a trick - triggers "why does this trick work? Why does the effect happen?"

Practicality of a trick - explores how you can use the tricks

This involves using a combination of Psychology, Neuroscience, Smart Thinking and the ideas, tools and techniques from Mind Magic. The principles and lessons are useful in understanding our belief systems, how we think and act. It is in our minds that we experience emotions, thoughts and actions. These are in turn determined by the silent questions we ask ourselves.

We use Mind Magic effects as a reflection of how the mind works. We use the 3 levels above as a lens to increase our understanding how our minds control our actions, emotions and thoughts. It is through this that our minds tell us stories that justify our actions. For more on this, please see mindsways.com/SMS/

 

WHAT IS PSYCHOLOGICAL ARTISTRY?

Psychological Artistry is the blending of the science of how we think, and the combination of:

Creating connection, rapport and emotions

Telling stories

Gaining and holding attention

Producing insights

Displaying human nature

Cognition

Show, Not Tell

Multiple Moments of Interest, Interaction and Insights (MMI's)

to create a method for successful communication. Therefore, Psychological Artistry is where science and art meet Mind Magic.

 

THE WORKSHOPS

All the workshops start at 10:00 a.m. and finish at 4:30 p.m. These are being held around the country, in:

London | 2nd May 2013

Birmingham | 7th May 2013

Doncaster | 31st May 2013

Bath | 22nd June 2013

Glasgow | 2nd July 2013

 

To register your place on the Sleight of Mind Set, please go to mindsways.com/SMS#BookNow

 

REGISTER YOUR PLACE NOW

 

In the workshop, we will explore how Psychological Artistry and Mind Magic provide important insights into how we think, how we learn and how we experience the world, whilst training you in the tricks of the trade.

 

On the Sleight of Mind Set Workshop, you will get:

The SMS Pack :- The materials you need to perform the tricks we go through on the day

The SNT Kit :- The Show, Not Tell Kit. For more information on this, please go to mindsways.com/SNT/

The Presentation :- A copy of the presentation we use on the day for your reference

The eBook :- Access to written material on the tricks, including scripts and tips on performance

Follow-up Support :- Email and phone access to the trainers for further training or advice

To register your place on the Sleight of Mind Set Workshop, please go to mindsways.com/SMS

 

George

P.S. The SNT kit is available separately. To see more, please go to mindsways.com/SNT/

P.P.S. The Fascination and The Fascination Pack is also available. For more, please see mindsways.com/the-fascinationand mindsways.com/TFP

 

07976 356 082

Iverley Road, Halesowen, United Kingdom, B63 3EP

Copyright © 2013 MindSways. All Rights Reserved.

 

www.mindsways.com | contact@mindswaysinfo.com

If you no longer wish to recieve these updates, please click here to unsubscribe.

This will presumably be one of the difficult jobs you’ve associated with getting your brand to market. More particularly, promotional packaging company can produce trial purchases and boost purchase frequency. This can promulgate product changes more efficiently than other marketing communications techniques. The process of promotional packaging is to build a compelling cause for the customer to buy now. If yours is a low cost accessory, the cognition of value can be comfortably raised using excellent, high quality packaging boxes, interesting carton designs or fabric pouches. By giving more to reward the purchaser for their purchase, it can make purchasing or shopping a more plausible activity. Tying nice feelings to your accessories is keys to creating a great brand.

 

Great, well engineered, promotional packaging can be beneficial, too. When Aropack discovered their purchasers found it difficult to extract their batteries and hearing from the promotional packaging and place them in assistance. Designing excellent packaging brought Aropack increased revenues and improved brand loyalty. Aropack gift boxes, paper bags, and other packaging products are custom-made to ensure high quality product. Slow selling accessories can be combined with well known accessories to build a gift set or an experience. Even the simple gift boxes can be nicely packaged to make it more genuine and more gift-able.

 

Perhaps not generally considered 'packaging', carrier bags of course boost your shop around town. Many store owners push flimsy carrier bags inside more solid carrier bags with simply handles. Lots of packaging suppliers simply do not handle small quantities products so it's essential to find a packaging supplier that works with small quantity product orders at the very beginning. Luckily there’re now numerous resources available online for packaging your product.

 

First you need to determine the complete quantity you can order. Opportunities are you may choose ordering more but what you do not need is a plenty of excess promotional packaging that you paid for that not determine what you was in need. Your promotional packaging will boost too so do not be worried if you can get precisely what you want the first time.

 

Start by asking the existing resources who they know and use as luxury packaging companies. You can search the name of the manufacture on existing promotional packaging too. Keep it comfortable to begin with. We know you’ve exotic package designs or visualized fantastic designs and as your company boosts you’ll be able to order promotional packaging for your products.

 

These days there’re many great alternatives available in the market. Luxury packaging companies have finally recognized that there’re a plenty customers. Before you spend a plenty of time and money creating a package you cannot allow or can make you need to decide what is available at the affordable price and in the suitable quantities.

 

For more information At www.aropack.com/

 

A new study explores effect infant cognition drinking fruit juice while #pregnant study shows cognitive benefit for offspring of mothers ingest fruit during pregnancy information for pregnant mothers is a non-pharmacological, dietary intervention to boost infant brain development

 

To learn more visit: europe.healthconferences.org/webinar

 

#pregnancy #health #womenhealth #childhoodobesity #healthwomen #healthcaresummit

© Foto: Kim Almgren

 

TEATER BRÅDDGATAN 34 Norrköping

29 september 2018

Guldsvanen

Kortfilmstävling

Arr: Josefin Stoor och Therese Eriksson/ Flimmer

 

TÄVLINGSBIDRAG

Säg nåt Christoffer Tambour

City of Prague Emanuel von Malmborg

Rösten vid stugan Olle Hagberg

Av jord till botten Erik Lambot

Keep Ashiq Alive Jasmin Kooijman & Rikard Nilsson

Polaroid Linus Larsson

Simon älskar godis Bayan Alshabrawi

Storebror Christian Hansson

Svek Linus Larsson

Cognition Dennis Goretti

Överraskningen Ludwig Lindell

Djungelradio Carl Lohman

 

JURY

Inger Scharis manusförfattare

Titus Paar filmregissör och manusförfattare

Eva Moberg skådespelare

The Sleight of Mind Set Workshops | MindSways - April 2013

 

SEEING THROUGH ILLUSIONS

Is this email not displaying correctly?

View it in your browser.

 

Hi,

 

The Sleight of Mind Set Workshop is a one day, intimate learning experience where we will guide you through a number of principles. You'll learn the Principles of Mind Magic, the Framework of Mind Magic; we'll Explore Why and How Illusions Work, look at the role of MMI's (Multiple Moments of Interest, Interaction & Insight) and Thinking Fallacies. Most importantly though, you will Learn And Be Given a Number of Easy and Practical Tricks (with supporting materials) that you can take away with you and start performing and adding to your delivery the next day.

 

We wanted to make sure you'd get the best out of the one day experience, so we've packed months of one-to-one training sessions and years of our own experience into the day. The themes of the day are Innovation & Creativity, Practically Applied Advantage, Emotional Engagement, Show, Not Tell and the importance of Mystery, Magic and Surprise. For more information on the day, please see mindsways.com/SMS/ and for a brochure of what the day is about, please look at mindsways.com/SMS/#Brochure

 

TAPPING INTO POPULARITY

On the day we talk about the enduring allure and popularity that mystery, the paranormal and Mind Magic has. Magic is never far out of the popular sphere with Derren Brown filling theatres and drawing large TV audiences. Part of the popularity is down to the fact that it "May just be real". This is also shown by the new blockbuster film, Now You See Me.

This new film is based on the premise of what if the impossible was real. Starring Morgan Freeman, Michael Caine, Mark Ruffalo, Jesse Eisenberg and Isla Fisher, the film shows the hold that magic has over our imagination. It also gives us an insight into how popular magic is, and a fascinating glimpse into what it would be like to have real powers. To see more about the film, please go to mindsways.com/SMS/#NowYouSeeMe.

 

Today, to stand out we need the personal touch and the sleight of mind set workshop is about tapping into this popularity of mind magic and adding value through your delivery and the personal touch.

 

Our aim is to make day informative, entertaining and practical for you. People have attended for many reasons including:

Curiosity (just how was that done)

Learning something new

Interest in how the mind works

Adding variety to enliven their presentations

New and different approaches

Something to impress others with

An increased reputation

A channel for their passion and fascination

Wider perspectives and experiences

The real power of Mind Magic and Psychological Artistry lies not with just the tricks, but the effect that the delivery of the tricks have on people, tapping into the emotions of mystery combined with the personal touch and firing off the silent questions. On the workshops and in the SNT kit, we give you the tricks, however, learning to use them with what you do is where the real power lies.

By delivering these tricks, you can evoke the making of the extraordinary. By combining the tricks with the energy of your words, your message and your personality, you make yourself stand out, stimulate fascination and create interest in you. This is when the real magic happens, in the theatre of the minds.

In communications theory the saying "it's not us, its them" has great importance. Likewise in Psychological Artistry and in our Sleight of Mind Set workshops these take on a very important role. For more on this, please go to mindsways.com/SMS/

 

THE FEEDBACK - What People Say

 

The feedback from the workshops have been extremely positive, with people (from last weeks workshops) saying things like:

"It really was most enjoyable and enlightening"

"Fantastic day... a great eye opener!"

"Another great course, with plenty to think about and over"

The workshops have been enjoyed and shown to be beneficial to many people over the past year. The events have been attended and proved to be relevant to people from a wide range of backgrounds including entrepreneurs, business consultants, health professionals, coaches of life, performance and sports, therapists, hypnotherapists, trainers etc.

This is an unorthodox approach to understanding human behaviour, illustrating and promoting our messages, and this is where the real power lies. As Marty Neumeier says in ZAG " Be Different - NO Really Different". For more on what people say, please see mindsways.com/WPS/

THEATRE OF THE MIND - Tricks on 3 Levels

On the workshop we uncover tricks, look at making a trick into an effect and making the effect into a piece that works for you. The three levels we work on are:

Effect of a trick - triggers "how did you do that?"

Analysis of a trick - triggers "why does this trick work? Why does the effect happen?"

Practicality of a trick - explores how you can use the tricks

This involves using a combination of Psychology, Neuroscience, Smart Thinking and the ideas, tools and techniques from Mind Magic. The principles and lessons are useful in understanding our belief systems, how we think and act. It is in our minds that we experience emotions, thoughts and actions. These are in turn determined by the silent questions we ask ourselves.

We use Mind Magic effects as a reflection of how the mind works. We use the 3 levels above as a lens to increase our understanding how our minds control our actions, emotions and thoughts. It is through this that our minds tell us stories that justify our actions. For more on this, please see mindsways.com/SMS/

 

WHAT IS PSYCHOLOGICAL ARTISTRY?

Psychological Artistry is the blending of the science of how we think, and the combination of:

Creating connection, rapport and emotions

Telling stories

Gaining and holding attention

Producing insights

Displaying human nature

Cognition

Show, Not Tell

Multiple Moments of Interest, Interaction and Insights (MMI's)

to create a method for successful communication. Therefore, Psychological Artistry is where science and art meet Mind Magic.

 

THE WORKSHOPS

All the workshops start at 10:00 a.m. and finish at 4:30 p.m. These are being held around the country, in:

London | 2nd May 2013

Birmingham | 7th May 2013

Doncaster | 31st May 2013

Bath | 22nd June 2013

Glasgow | 2nd July 2013

 

To register your place on the Sleight of Mind Set, please go to mindsways.com/SMS#BookNow

 

REGISTER YOUR PLACE NOW

 

In the workshop, we will explore how Psychological Artistry and Mind Magic provide important insights into how we think, how we learn and how we experience the world, whilst training you in the tricks of the trade.

 

On the Sleight of Mind Set Workshop, you will get:

The SMS Pack :- The materials you need to perform the tricks we go through on the day

The SNT Kit :- The Show, Not Tell Kit. For more information on this, please go to mindsways.com/SNT/

The Presentation :- A copy of the presentation we use on the day for your reference

The eBook :- Access to written material on the tricks, including scripts and tips on performance

Follow-up Support :- Email and phone access to the trainers for further training or advice

To register your place on the Sleight of Mind Set Workshop, please go to mindsways.com/SMS

 

George

P.S. The SNT kit is available separately. To see more, please go to mindsways.com/SNT/

P.P.S. The Fascination and The Fascination Pack is also available. For more, please see mindsways.com/the-fascinationand mindsways.com/TFP

 

07976 356 082

Iverley Road, Halesowen, United Kingdom, B63 3EP

Copyright © 2013 MindSways. All Rights Reserved.

 

www.mindsways.com | contact@mindswaysinfo.com

If you no longer wish to recieve these updates, please click here to unsubscribe.

One the New York wedding dresses fashion week, these fashionable trends of wedding dresses make people unforgettable. Besides some novelty beautiful design, there are two main elements in this fashion week. It challenges people’s traditional concept and cognition about wedding dresses.

October 11-15, 2014

 

Google Accessibility Team - braille keyboard

 

SSIR Technology, Cognition and Behavior fall break trip to San Francisco, Palo Alto, and Mountain View, California

October 12-16, 2013

SSIR Technology, Cognition and Behavior

Writing a book here: open.spotify.com/show/3mMrq70ofFvPputOjQIiGU?si=kwclM6f8Q...

 

www.brechtcorbeel.com/

www.google.com/search?q=brecht+corbeel

 

Support me on:

www.patreon.com/BrechtCorbeel

 

Free images:

unsplash.com/@brechtcorbeel

 

Follow me on:

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Professor of Cognition and Education, Harvard Graduate School of Education Howard Gardner

October 12-16, 2013

SSIR Technology, Cognition and Behavior

 

Meeting with the faculty of the Virtual Human Interaction Lab vhil.stanford.edu/

The noosphere can be seen as the "sphere of human thought" being derived from the Greek νους ("nous") meaning "mind" in the style of "atmosphere" and "biosphere". In the original theory of Vernadsky, the noosphere is the third in a succession of phases of development of the Earth, after the geosphere (inanimate matter) and the biosphere (biological life). Just as the emergence of life fundamentally transformed the geosphere, the emergence of human cognition fundamentally transforms the biosphere. In contrast to the conceptions of the Gaia theorists, or the promoters of cyberspace, Vernadsky's noosphere emerges at the point where humankind, through the mastery of nuclear processes, begins to create resources through the transmutation of elements.

October 12-16, 2013

SSIR Technology, Cognition and Behavior

Besides the black and white polka dots we've made caps with in the past, this is the range of colors we can do with that pattern.

an element is missing.

what could it be?

October 12-16, 2013

SSIR Technology, Cognition and Behavior

 

Meeting with the faculty of the Virtual Human Interaction Lab vhil.stanford.edu/

October 11-15, 2014

 

SSIR Technology, Cognition and Behavior fall break trip to San Francisco, Palo Alto, and Mountain View, California

Francesca Vender presents on emotion and cognition in serious games

Lemur catta

 

Historically, the studies of learning and cognition in non-human primates have focused on simians (monkeys and apes), while strepsirrhine primates, such as the Ring-tailed Lemur and its allies, have been overlooked and popularly dismissed as unintelligent. A couple of factors stemming from early experiments have played a role in the development of this assumption. First, the experimental design of older tests may have favored the natural behavior and ecology of simians over that of strepsirrhines, making the experimental tasks inappropriate for lemurs. For example, simians are known for their manipulative play with non-food objects, whereas lemurs are only known to manipulate non-food objects in captivity. This behaviour is usually connected with food association. Also, lemurs are known to displace objects with their nose or mouth more so than with their hands. Therefore, an experiment requiring a lemur to manipulate an object without prior training would favor simians over strepsirrhines. Second, individual Ring-tailed Lemurs accustomed to living in a troop may not respond well to isolation for laboratory testing. Past studies have reported hysterical behaviour in such scenarios. As a result of these early studies lemurs were often omitted from further research.

 

The notion that lemurs are unintelligent has been perpetuated by the view that the neocortex ratio (as a measure of brain size) indicates intelligence. In fact, primatologist Alison Jolly noted early in her academic career that some lemur species, such as the Ring-tailed Lemur, have evolved a social complexity similar to that of cercopithecine monkeys, but not the corresponding intelligence. After years of observations of wild Ring-tailed Lemur populations at the Berenty Reserve in Madagascar and as well as baboons in Africa, she more recently concluded that this highly social lemur species does not demonstrate the equivalent social complexity of cercopithecine monkeys, despite general appearances.

 

Regardless, research has continued to illuminate the complexity of the lemur mind, with emphasis on the cognitive abilities of the Ring-tailed Lemur. As early as the mid-1970s, studies had demonstrated that they could be trained through operant conditioning using standard schedules of reinforcement. The species has been shown to be capable of learning pattern, brightness and object discrimination, skills common among vertebrates. The Ring-tailed Lemur has also been shown to learn a variety of complex tasks often equaling, if not exceeding, the performance of simians.

 

More recently, research at the Duke Lemur Center has shown that the Ring-tailed Lemur can organize sequences in memory and retrieve ordered sequences without language. The experimental design demonstrated that the lemurs were using internal representation of the sequence to guide their responses and not simply following a trained sequence, where one item in the sequence cues the selection of the next. But this is not the limit of the Ring-tailed Lemur's reasoning skills. Another study, performed at the Myakka City Lemur Reserve, suggests that this species along with several other closely related lemur species understand simple arithmetic operations.

Since tool use is considered to be a key feature of primate intelligence, the apparent lack of this behavior in wild lemurs, as well as the lack of non-food object play, has helped reinforce the perception that lemurs are less intelligent than their simian cousins. However, another study at the Myakka City Lemur Reserve examined the representation of tool functionality in both the Ring-tailed Lemur and the Common Brown Lemur and discovered that, like monkeys, they utilized tools with functional properties (e.g., tool orientation or ease of use) instead of tools with nonfunctional features (e.g., color or texture).Although the Ring-tailed Lemur may not use tools in the wild, it can not only be trained to use a tool, but will preferentially select tools based on their functional qualities. Therefore, the conceptual competence to utilize a tool may have been present in the common primate ancestor, even though the use of tools may not have appeared until much later

 

Madagascar Exhibit

Bronx Zoo New York

« transmetropolitan »

Elephants exhibit mirror self-recognition, an indication of self-awareness and cognition that has also been demonstrated in some apes and dolphins. One study of a captive female Asian elephant suggested the animal was capable of learning and distinguishing between several visual and some acoustic discrimination pairs.

October 12-16, 2013

SSIR Technology, Cognition and Behavior

CogniFit Brain Fitness Training Tasks and Games

Marcia Fusaro Pinto and Thorsten Scheiner - Contextualizing complementizing and complexifying in mathematical cognition - ICM 2018

October 11-15, 2014

 

Meeting with IGN Entertainment (www.ign.com/)

 

SSIR Technology, Cognition and Behavior fall break trip to San Francisco, Palo Alto, and Mountain View, California

October 12-16, 2013

SSIR Technology, Cognition and Behavior

 

Cancelled flight, waiting for the rebooked flight, and playing with tech games at Dr. Crawford's house

October 12-16, 2013

SSIR Technology, Cognition and Behavior

 

Meeting with the faculty of the Virtual Human Interaction Lab vhil.stanford.edu/

October 11-15, 2014

 

SSIR Technology, Cognition and Behavior fall break trip to San Francisco, Palo Alto, and Mountain View, California

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