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kmar17

7 Steps to Effective Speaking - 1 views

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    This article gives seven way to speak more effectively. 1) Own the stage by projecting your voice throughout the whole room. 2) Start with big ideas to get your audience's attention. 3) Make your audience feel good about themselves. 4) Keep repeating one message. 5) Relate with your audience so they can understand what you are saying. 6) Define common words to wow audience. 7) End speech with a success story.
jeremyliu

How Using Emoji Makes Us Less Emotional - 3 views

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    A few weeks ago, after I said goodbye to a friend who was moving across the country, I texted her an emoji of a crying face. She replied with an image of chick with its arms outstretched. This exchange might have been heartfelt. It could have been ironic.
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    Use of emoticons varies by geography, age, gender, and social class-just like dialects or regional accents. Friend groups fall into the habit of using certain emoticons, just as they develop their own slang. Emoji have undoubtedly changed the way we text, Gchat, and tweet-but are they changing language itself? While emoji are more popular than ever, the idea behind them is actually quite old. "There's an old utopian ideal that we could create a kind of a universal pictorial language," says linguist Ben Zimmer. Emoji could even mark a return (regression?) to a more pictographic script. However, Ben Zimmer suggests that emoji help convey tone and emotion and enrich written language.
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    This article discusses both emoji use, and emoji effects in language and expression. The vast majority of web users use or have used emojis, and the emojis that we use can yield information about us such as our general age and interests. Furthermore, emojis may be a form of language simplification and a return to pictogram communications.
nicoleikeda18

The priming effect: Why you're less in control of your actions than you think - 4 views

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    The priming effect occurs when one is exposed to words or images that subconsciously influence decision-making. For example, seeing pictures of a shower would likely influence you to fill in so__p as "soap." But, seeing pictures of bread, you would probably say "soup." A somewhat controversial study has shown that subjects who were unknowingly exposed to elderly words (like bald, gray, and wrinkle) walked more slowly toward the next experiment than the control group. Another study asked participants to lie via email and another group of participants to lie via voicemail. Those who lied on the email were more likely to purchase soap, whereas the group who lied via voicemail were more likely to buy mouthwash. This wasn't included in the article, but I suspect the reason it's easy to come up with puns is because our brains are primed to think of words within a certain theme. The article mentioned that you can use priming to help you come up with new ideas around a central idea by writing related words in a list, until you think of something appropriate.
Lara Cowell

Evolution Could Explain Why Psychotherapy May Work for Depression - Scientific American - 1 views

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    Why does psychotherapy favorably compare to medication in treating depression? One reason may be rooted in the evolutionary origins of depression. Scholars suggest humans may become depressed to help us focus attention on a problem that might cause someone to fall out of step with family, friends, clan or the larger society-an outcast status that, especially in Paleolithic times, would have meant an all-but-certain tragic fate. Depression, by this account, came about as a mood state to make us think long and hard about behaviors that may have caused us to become despondent because some issue in our lives is socially problematic. Steven D. Hollon, a professor of psychology at Vanderbilt University, explores the implications of helping a patient come to grips with the underlying causes of a depression-which is the goal of CBT (cognitive behavioral therapy), and is also in line with an evolutionary explanation. The anodyne effects of an antidepressant, by contrast, may divert a patient from engaging in the reflective process for which depression evolved-a reason perhaps that psychotherapy appears to produce a more enduring effect than antidepressants. Hollon notes that depression has a purpose--it spurs rumination about complex social problems, and that CBT can expedite rumination and make it more effective. He states, "For most people, depression motivates them to think more deliberately about the causes of their problems and the solutions they can apply. In most instances in our ancestral past this worked well enough; most depressions remit spontaneously even in the absence of treatment. Cognitive therapy, at the least, hurries the process along and, at the most, helps unstick that subset of individuals who get stuck making negative ascriptions about themselves, typically about personal competence or lovability."
Christine M

Studies Look at Student Texting Habits and Effects - 2 views

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    This article reveals research about the effect of students texting in class. Not surprisingly, it was found that students who text in class receive lower grades and do not learn as much, compared to students who do not text.
tburciagareyes21

Tips for Keeping a Gratitude Journal - 2 views

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    Studies have traced a range of impressive benefits to writing down the things for which we're grateful-benefits including better sleep, fewer symptoms of illness, and more happiness among adults and kids alike. Robert Emmons, a UC Davis professor who studies the science of gratitude, offers the following research-based tips to enhance journaling effectiveness: 1. Don't just go through the motions. Research by psychologist Sonja Lyubomirsky and others suggests that journaling is more effective if you first make the conscious decision to become happier and more grateful. "Motivation to become happier plays a role in the efficacy of journaling," says Emmons. 2. Go for depth over breadth. Elaborating in detail about a particular thing for which you're grateful carries more benefits than a superficial list of many things. 3. Get personal. Focusing on people to whom you are grateful has more of an impact than focusing on things for which you are grateful. 4. Try subtraction, not just addition. One effective way of stimulating gratitude is to reflect on what your life would be like without certain blessings, rather than just tallying up all those good things. 5. Savor surprises. Try to record events that were unexpected or surprising, as these tend to elicit stronger levels of gratitude. 6. Don't overdo it. Writing occasionally (once or twice per week) is more beneficial than daily journaling.
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    Writing down what you're grateful for greatly impacts your social, physical, and physiological health but to some the impacts are unclear. This article page has a link that has created their very own technological gratitude journal that deepens and practices efficient journaling. Included in this article are 6 tips: 1) Have passion behind jotting down your gratitude. It put more motivation and thought in your writings. 2) Be specific with what you're grateful for. 3) Lean towards focusing your gratitude on people rather than things. (You learn to become less materialistic.) 4) Consider mentioning what it would be like with out the blessings. 5) Record events that were surprising & out of the ordinary. 6) Occasional writing over daily writing because it's easy for us to get numb to the good side of life. Writing our thoughts down rather than thinking about them or saying them, deepens our emotional connection and makes us more self aware.
allstonpleus19

Just How Effective Are Language Learning Apps? - 3 views

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    An app called Duolingo is the top app to learn a new language. The site includes learning vocab and grammar and doing exercises that are tailored to what the person learns quickly and what the person need to repeatedly review. Teaching language has changed from early "grammar translation" (learning grammar rules and translating sentences) to "audiolingualism" (learn rules and patterns by repeating sentences over and over) after World War II to other methods in the 60s and 70s that turned into a general "communicative approach" which focuses on the function of language as communication not the rules and structure. The app is mostly "audiolingual" because it drills users to repeat words and phrases over and over, but it also helps users learn a lot of words, reminds them to practice, and keeps them practicing with virtual rewards so can be effective.
kiragoode23

https://www.nu.edu/blog/negative-effects-of-technology-on-children-what-can-you-do/ - 0 views

This article talks about the negative effects that technology can have on children, as well as what we can do to prevent these negative effects.

language brain words WordsRUs technology

started by kiragoode23 on 21 May 23 no follow-up yet
Nicholas Ulm

Superman Finds New Fans Among Reading Instructors - New York Times - 1 views

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    This article describes the effects of comic books in children's education, how the preconceived idea is that comic books lead to lower reading scores. The research found that this assumption was wrong and it promotes more organized thoughts and more linear narrative writing.
Miki Kusaka

No LOL matter: Tween texting may lead to poor grammar skills | Penn State University - 3 views

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    Texting's effect on English grammar
Shawn McCarthy

A Study of the Effects of Texting and Social Networking on Teens - 2 views

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    This article talks about how texting can affect a teenager's brain
caitlyniwamura13

The Effects of Cell Phone Conversations on the Attention and Memory of Bystanders - 2 views

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    A in depth formal write up of the experiment ran to test the effects of cellphones and data collected.
kloo17

Debates: Linguistic trick boosts poll numbers - 0 views

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    This article talks about a study of the effect of language used during debates and its effect on the polls. It was written right before the last of the 2016 presidential debates. "Linguist style matching" is a trick that linguists have studied, and it focuses on how candidates state their points, not what their points are.
michaelviola17

Study: Receiving a Compliment has Same Positive Effect as Receiving Cash - 0 views

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    A recent study was conducted with 48 adults who were asked to perform a finger exercise as fast as they can. Some participants were given compliments after the task. The researchers concluded that, "To the brain, receiving a compliment is as much a social reward as being rewarded money." They have found scientific proof that people perform better after receiving a social reward such as a compliment.
malfelor16

Writing and Remembering: Why We Remember What We Write - 0 views

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    Teachers often tell students to write notes instead of type notes to retain the information being presented more effectively. Scientists and psychologists describe what is going on in the brain that helps us retain the information more effectively while writing notes.
Lara Cowell

The Language of Persuasion - 1 views

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    Suppose you are preparing for a potentially contentious meeting with someone with whom you've worked closely for years. She could be a fellow manager you want to convince to support an initiative but whose position in the matter differs from yours: how do you convince that person? While coercion and logic are not effective, "relationship-raising" is. According to a 2002 psychology study by Oriña, Wood, and Simpson, before making a request for change, mention your existing relationship with the other person and any mutually-shared goals/objectives, before delivering your appeal. " Or, in the most streamlined version of the relationship-raising approach, incorporate the pronouns "we," "our," and "us" into the request. The outcome? The relationship partners exposed to this technique shifted significantly in the requested direction. Similarly, in a British longitudinal study of effective professional negotiators, researchers found that the most successful bargainers spent 400% more time looking for areas of mutuality (e.g., shared interests) than did their mediocre counterparts.
Peyton Lee

Body Language to Power Your Career - 0 views

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    Three separate experiments were conducted which all showed that individuals in the open body position took more action than those who were constricted. "Going into the research, we figured role would make a big difference. But shockingly, the effect of posture dominated the effect of role in each and every study," Li Huang, a doctoral student at Kellogg and co-author of the study, said.
Lara Cowell

Enough With Baby Talk: Infants Learn From Lemur Screeches, Too - 0 views

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    New research suggests that 3-month-old human babies can use lemur calls as teaching aids. The findings hint at a deep biological connection between language and learning. But not everyone agrees that the new work shows that primate sounds can stimulate a child's linguistic instinct. "This work tells us that sounds that are more like human language are more effective," says , a psychologist at the University of California, Davis. "What is more controversial is why they are effective." She says it's still unclear whether the primate sounds are stimulating some deep linguistic circuit in the brain or just getting the babies to look.
Gabrielle James

Effects of Texting on Learning - 0 views

http://www.sterling.edu/news/students-study-effects-texting-learning

started by Gabrielle James on 20 Mar 14 no follow-up yet
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