Showing posts with label Genius. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Genius. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Great Way To Learn:Test Yourself!

Fascinating article from Scientific American on one awesome way to learn and retain new information. It revolves around answering questions about the subject first before diving into the material...

Check out the article on this link: Getting It Wrong: Surprising Tips on How to Learn

Sunday, March 15, 2009

The Three Brains

In his book, Study Smarter, Not Harder, Kevin Paul talks about "The Three Brains" other wise known as the "Triune Brain," and how they apply to learning. Very Interesting. Here is the nutshell:

Lower Brain: aka Mammalian Brain
Responds to stress, reacts to 'fight or flight.'
This response wants to block out our higher thought processes and operate on 'instinct' mode during times of stress. Thus it is necessary to "quiet" the mammalian brain during studies, test-taking, performing surgeries, taking a penalty kick, or any other highly intense situation where we need to stay calm, cool, and collected in order to think brilliantly. One way to train the ability to stay cool under pressure is to train under pressure.

In an article from Scientific American Mind, RaƓul R. D. Oudejans, a psychologist at Free University Amsterdam, "The best way to make a performance situation feel like rehearsal, is to subject yourself to the same anxiety-packed conditions during practice that you expect to encounter during your moment in the spotlight"...he goes on to say:

These results indicate that turning up the heat from the very first day of practice may be one of the most effective ways to immunize yourself against blowing it. “Performers train and train, but it’s not that common to specifically train under these kinds of psychological constraints,” Oudejans says. “They’re trained in how to play their game, but they don’t train under pressure, so they fail.” Training in such situations minimizes the possibility of freezing up for the same reason that letting spiders crawl all over you makes them less frightening: your brain gradually adapts, so that circumstances that once would have made you uneasy no longer feel novel or threatening. “The more exposure you get to these high-pressure situations, and the more you succeed [despite them], the less likely you’re going to get that whole affective experience,” explains Art Markman, a psychologist at the University of Texas at Austin. In other words, the more comfortable you feel, the less likely you are to be affected by pressure.

Middle Brain: aka Limbic Brain
Responds to emotions, long term memory.
Studying, learning with strong emotions attached will increase our long term memory.

Higher Brain: aka Cortical Brain (Neocortex:cerebral cortex)
Responsible for our high level thinking. The mind must be "quiet" and in a state of relaxed intensity in order to think at such high levels. Listening to Baroque music composed at 60 beats per minute is a great way to induce "the zone" and relaxed intensity due to the stimulation of the alpha waves of the brain (which are active during times of relaxed intensity).

I'm going to go and turn on some baroque music now and activate my cerbral cortex!

Monday, February 23, 2009

Cognitive Horsepower

Really cool study in the February/March 2009 issue of Scientific American Mind about Cognitive Horsepower. Here is the short version:

In theory, "stress uses up the same cognitive horsepower that would typically be devoted to mental tasks, scuttling the performance of capable people who depend on their superior abilities," says Sian L. Beilock, psychologist at the University of Chicago.

"When you've got high levels of working memory, you actually use cognitive horsepower to do tasks,...and when you worry or stress during a test, then that stress is competing for the same resources as you are using to think at high levels and great speeds.

So if If you find yourself stressing during a test or another high level thinking activity, and your thinking, 'Crap,' then that worry is definitely a problem because it is competing for the same resources as your working memory.

Bottom Line: Stressing and worry want to use the same space and resources as high level thinking and problem solving. Don't let them compete. Quiet the mind so that you can think and ace all tests and other activities with a clear mind!

The solution: Do a "Real-Time Simulation." Rehearse in a situation similar to the performance scenario. Take timed tests, practice sports in extremely high pressured and intense environment, visualize, etc, so that when the heat is on during the real event, it will be like second nature to you and you will perform and excel at peak levels!

Friday, February 20, 2009

Genius

Three thoughts on being and becoming a Genius:

1. Make the complex simple
2. Learn from the success of others
3. Learn from the mistakes of others