The Art of Listening - 3 views
-
When we listen to people there is an alternating current that recharges us so we never get tired of each other. We are constantly being re-created.
Food Symbolism - Chinese Customs during Chinese New Year Celebrations - 4 views
-
Just in time to celebrate the Year of the Dragon, a comprehensive listing of lucky foods to eat for Chinese New Year. Generally, these foods fall into two categories: they either physically resemble lucky objects (e.g. dumplings look like gold ingots, carrot rounds look like coins) or are homophonic with auspicious phrases (e.g. "ye zi"= coconut, sounds like the words for "father/son", conveying the idea of harmonious parent-child relations). Food for thought.
A Voluble Visit With Two Talking Apes - 3 views
-
Feature article on Kanzi and Panbanisha, two bonobo apes, and the work of Sue Savage-Rumbaugh, head scientist at the Great Ape Trust in Iowa. Savage-Rumbaugh asserts that apes can acquire a lot of language if they learn it the same way human babies do, and is attempting to create conditions that foster the apes' acquisition of lexical symbols, as well as a greater understanding of spoken human language.
Whales | Home - 1 views
Obama to 'hang out' in live video chat room - Hawaii News - Honolulu Star-Advertiser - 4 views
How to Get Out of an Awkward or Uncomfortable Situation (Without Being an Asshole) - 21 views
Paul Ekman - 13 views
MoodGYM: MoodGYM - 6 views
Being Bilingual May Boost Your Brain Power - 8 views
-
For bilinguals, because both languages are active in the brain, the act of keeping the two languages separate sharpens the executive control system. Strengthening this area may have long-term benefits: namely, performing better on a variety of cognitive tasks and possibly delaying the onset of dementia later in life.
Impact of Symbolic Gesturing on Early Language Development - 6 views
-
This seminal longitudinal study, conducted by Goodwyn, Acredolo and Brown (2000), evaluated the benefits of purposefully encouraging hearing infants to use simple gestures as symbols for objects, requests, and conditions. Researchers measured the receptive and expressive language abilities of 103 babies via standardized language tests at the age of 11, 15, 19, 24, 30, and 36 months. Their findings suggest that symbolic gesturing does not hamper children's early verbal development, and may even facilitate it. The possible reasons underlying the results: increases in infant-directed speech, infant-selected topic selection, and scaffolding that encourages communication.
We text and walk and veer off course - 4 views
-
"Talking or texting on a phone while walking can make it difficult to stay on course and may interfere with memory recall ... Moreover, participants who were texting while walking veered off course demonstrating a 61 percent increase in lateral deviation and 13 percent increase in distance traveled."
Adolescents' Brains Respond Differently Than Adults' When Anticipating Rewards, Increas... - 6 views
-
"Teenagers are more susceptible to developing disorders like addiction and depression ... "The brain region traditionally associated with reward and motivation, called the nucleus accumbens, was activated similarly in adults and adolescents," said Moghaddam. "But the unique sensitivity of adolescent DS to reward anticipation indicates that, in this age group, reward can tap directly into a brain region that is critical for learning and habit formation." ... not only is reward expectancy processed differently in an adolescent brain, but also it can affect brain regions directly responsible for decision-making and action selection. ... "Adolescence is a time when the symptoms of most mental illnesses-such as schizophrenia and bipolar and eating disorders-are first manifested, so we believe that this is a critical period for preventing these illnesses," Moghaddam said."
« First
‹ Previous
2921 - 2940 of 3957
Next ›
Last »
Showing 20▼ items per page