Tuesday, July 28, 2015

The way our cultural experiences affect our brian as we get older

"Jennifer Manly, PhD, researches how people’s cultural experiences — especially the quality of their early education — affect their brains as they age.
Manly was intrigued when she saw research data showing that elderly African-Americans and Hispanics exhibited higher rates of Alzheimer’s disease than elderly whites. She launched a research project in the neighborhood near Columbia University, where she works, to study how cultural and educational differences might affect the development and diagnosis of Alzheimer’s. “I want to get people into the study who wouldn't normally be researched,” she says. “We go out and see them in their homes. That’s a really cool thing most psychologists don’t do.” The project administers a medical interview followed by standard neuropsychological testing. (...)
Another area Manly is studying is how the literacy level of older people might affect changes in the sharpness of their memory over time. “I found that elders with both high and low levels of literacy declined in immediate and delayed memory over time,” she says. “However, the decline was more rapid among low literacy elders.” This suggests that high literacy skills don’t provide complete preservation of memory skills but rather help slow age-related decline."

You may find the whole article in here.

Source: apa.org/action/careers/improve-lives/jennifer-manly

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

American novelist EL Doctorow dies at 84

EL Doctorow, critically acclaimed author of the novels Ragtime and Billy Bathgate, has died aged 84 in a New York hospital, of complications from lung cancer.
He was known for works which re-imagine the American experience, placing fictional characters in recognizable historical contexts.
In his tweeter Barack Obama wrote: "his books taught me much, and he will be missed.'' For the US President EL Doctorow was "one of America's greatest novelists".
In a 50-year career, Doctorow published 10 novels, a stage drama, two books of short fiction and numerous essays.
His talent will be missed.
You may read the whole news in here.
Source: bbc.com/news

Monday, July 20, 2015

The Little Prince Official Trailer (2015) - Marion Cotillard, Jeff Br...

From the director of Kung Fu Panda, The Little Prince official Ttailer, with Marion Cotillard and Jeff Bridges. For those who like to keep on dreaming.


Can you teach people to have empathy?


Almost everyone can learn to develop such an important trait as empathy. According to the latest neuroscience research, 98% of people (the exceptions include those with psychopathic tendencies) have the ability to empathise wired into their brains - an in-built capacity for stepping into the shoes of others and understanding their feelings and perspectives.
The problem is that most don't tap into their full empathic potential in everyday life.
You can start working this personality trait by doing a quick assessment of your empathic abilities. Neuropsychologist Simon Baron-Cohen has devised a test called Reading the Mind in the Eyes in which you are shown 36 pairs of eyes and have to choose one of four words that best describes what each person is feeling or thinking - for instance, jealous, arrogant, panicked or hateful.
The average score of around 26 suggests that the majority of people are surprisingly good - though far from perfect - at visually reading others' emotions.
There are three simple powerful strategies for unleashing the empathic potential that is latent in our neural circuitry:

  • Make a habit of "radical listening"
  • Look for the human behind everything
  • Become curious about strangers


You may read read the whole article in here.

Source: www.bbc.com/news/magazine

Friday, July 17, 2015

After all, what are people reading in New York subway?

The answer to this question is given by Subway Book Review, a project providing information about the books and the stories of travelers in New York subway.
Have you ever wanted to ask the person sitting next to you the name of the book he/she is reading? Well, Uli Beutter Cohen has already done that and that is how her project Subway Book Review came to life.
The concept is very simple: when Uli finds an appealing title or an original book cover she addresses the reader and asks him/her to share what the book is all about. Then she takes a photo of the reader and his/her book and publishes it in her blog.

You may find more information about this amazing project in here.


Source: subwaybookreview.com

Thursday, July 16, 2015

The greatest books of all time, as voted by 125 famous authors

See if you have read some of the best books of all time, according to 125 famous British and American authors.
The book Top Ten: Writers Pick Their Favorite Books asks 125 of modernity’s greatest British and American writers — including Norman MailerAnn Patchett,Jonathan FranzenClaire Messud, andJoyce Carol Oates — “to provide a list, ranked, in order, of what [they] consider the ten greatest works of fiction of all time– novels, story collections, plays, or poems.”

Here are some of this project main conclusions:

TOP TEN WORKS OF THE 20TH CENTURY
  1. Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
  2. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
  3. In Search of Lost Time by Marcel Proust
  4. Ulysses* by James Joyce
  5. Dubliners* by James Joyce
  6. One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
  7. The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner
  8. To The Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf
  9. The complete stories of Flannery O’Connor
  10. Pale Fire by Vladimir Nabokov
TOP TEN WORKS OF THE 19th CENTURY
  1. Anna Karenina* by Leo Tolstoy
  2. Madame Bovary* by Gustave Flaubert
  3. War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy
  4. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain
  5. The stories of Anton Chekhov
  6. Middlemarch* by George Eliot
  7. Moby-Dick by Herman Melville
  8. Great Expectations* by Charles Dickens
  9. Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky
  10. Emma* by Jane Austen
TOP TEN AUTHORS BY NUMBER OF BOOKS SELECTED
  1. William Shakespeare — 11
  2. William Faulkner — 6
  3. Henry James — 6
  4. Jane Austen — 5
  5. Charles Dickens — 5
  6. Fyodor Dostoevsky — 5
  7. Ernest Hemingway — 5
  8. Franz Kafka — 5
  9. (tie) James Joyce, Thomas Mann, Vladimir Nabokov, Mark Twain, Virginia Woolf — 4
TOP TEN AUTHORS BY POINTS EARNED
  1. Leo Tolstoy — 327
  2. William Shakespeare — 293
  3. James Joyce — 194
  4. Vladimir Nabokov — 190
  5. Fyodor Dostoevsky — 177
  6. William Faulkner — 173
  7. Charles Dickens — 168
  8. Anton Chekhov — 165
  9. Gustave Flaubert — 163
  10. Jane Austen — 161

You may find the whole article in here.

Source: brainpickings.org

Tuesday, July 14, 2015

An extraordinary discovery found underneath the Easter Island Heads


Who would have thougth? 

"The giant stone statues scattered around remote Easter Island are even more impressive than they first appear. Hidden from view, the heads are attached to bodies that extend meters underground.
The bodies are covered in ancient and as of yet indecipherable writings called petroglyphs.
Easter Island is one of the most remote inhabited islands in the world, located over 2,000 miles off the coast of Chile. The statues, called Moai, were carved by the Rapu Nai people sometime between 1250 and 1500 CE."

The images are amazing. Not in a million years Iwould imagine that the statues were even bigger and were hidden underground.


You may find the article and extraordinary photos in here.


Source: www.artfido.com

Monday, July 13, 2015

Digital amnesia: the side effects of our smartphones and internet

“Most adults can call the phone number of the house where they lived when they were 10 years old but can not remember their children’s number. Why does this phenomenon occur?
A few decades ago remembering the phone number of your house or the house of your friends and family was something usual. However, with the advent of smartphones, people gradually began to forget even their own number.
This is a phenomenon called by experts as "digital amnesia". For example, if your phone is lost tomorrow, how many phone numbers would you be able to know by heart?
A recent research, conducted by security firm Kaspersky Lab, seeks to address precisely this issue. The study found a direct link between the data that is available when you press a phone button, and our inability to save the data in our memory.
Thus, this phenomenon of 'digital amnesia' is the experience of forgetting information that we entrust to a digital device to store and recall for us.”


This is a partial and rough translation of the article AMNESIA DIGITAL: EL EFECTO SECUNDARIO DE NUESTROS SMARTPHONES E INTERNET that you can find in here.

Source: tecno.americaeconomia.com

Poor sleep negatively nnfluences self-control and increases hostility, a new study says

According to a new study, "poor sleep habits can have an undesirable effect on self-control. (...) In the study, titled “Interactions between Sleep Habits and Self-Control,” Clemson psychologists concluded a sleep-deprived individual is at increased risk for succumbing to impulsive desires, inattentiveness, and questionable decision-making. “Self-control is part of daily decision-making. When presented with conflicting desires and opportunities, self-control allows one to maintain control,” said June Pilcher, Clemson Alumni Distinguished Professor of psychology, one of four authors of the study.
“Our study explored how sleep habits and self-control are interwoven and how sleep habits and self-control may work together to affect a person’s daily functioning.” (...) Poor sleep habits, which include inconsistent sleep times and not enough hours of sleep, can also lead to health problems, including weight gain, hypertension, and illness, according to prior research. Studies have also found that sleep deprivation decreases self-control but increases hostility in people, which can create problems in the workplace and at home,” Pilcher said."

You can read the whole article in here.

Source: psychcentral.com

Photograph source: cbsnews.com

Friday, July 10, 2015

The most toxic types of people to avoid at work- an interesting article


How to deal with complainers, gossipers and bullies.



I have found this interesting article about relationships at work. It is important to identify and to learn how to deal with difficult collegues, for your own sake.

"Anyone who has ever worked in an office knows there’s more to succeeding at your job than just doing the work itself. A big part of almost any position involves “relationship management” – in other words, knowing how to get along with different personality types (...)
While it’s impossible to avoid all difficult people at work, learning to recognize common problematic personalities can be helpful, and in some cases, it can save your career. Once you know the type of person you’re dealing with, it’s easier to shift gears from “business as usual” relationship management to specific strategies that can minimize the damage such people can do to those around them when left unchecked in the office."

You may find the complete article in here.

Source: money.usnews.com



What about that? Future Doctors Could Be Learning With Holograms

Future doctors could be learning with holograms.  A medical school is partnering with Microsoft to bring their augmented-reality headsets to the classroom. I have found the news in here


.
Source: vocativ.com

Thursday, July 9, 2015

Wayne Rooney is going to be a father for the third time

Congratulations to football player Wayne Rooney and his wife Coleen who are expecting their third child. The baby is expected in January 2016. The good news was given on Twitter.

Photograph source: theguardian.com

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Because sometimes we must joke about serious things...

I have found this on facebook. I must share it because I think it is really funny!

It says:












Save Greece from bankruptcy. Adopt a Greek!







If only would be that easy and pleasant to save the country everybody would help, don't you think? I would!!!!

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Bill Cosby's downfall


Today I came across this astonishing news: Bill Cosby, the american stand-up comedian, admitted sometime ago he had drugged a woman to have sex with her. I ask you: what was he thinking? Had he lost his mind? How low can one person get? How despicable this is!

Was he not interesting enough to get laid without needing to force a woman on it? Who would have thought?

Friday, July 3, 2015

The Greek problem

Is it me, or the whole world is anxiously waiting for the greek people to vote sunday to see if things will not collapse once and for all? This is one of the most difficult questions of all times. What is the right answer? It seems to me that whatever they will choose there will be no winners at the end. That is a no winners situation...