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  1. TopTop #1
    weegiwoman's Avatar
    weegiwoman
     

    Brain Training with Posit Science-anybody have experience?

    My Dear Wacco Community - I am seeking improved brain functioning. Have heard of Posit Science's software Training, but it costs too much to just try out to see if it works.
    Has anyone worked with their (expensive)software? Weegiwoman
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  2. TopTop #2
    Sara S's Avatar
    Sara S
    Auntie Wacco

    Re: Brain Training with Posit Science-anybody have experience?

    from delancyplace.com:

    In today's excerpt - practice. Rather than being the result of genetics or inherent
    genius, truly outstanding skill in any domain is rarely achieved with less than
    ten thousand hours of practice over ten years' time
    "For those on their way to greatness [in intellectual or physical endeavors],
    several themes regarding practice consistently come to light:
    1. Practice changes your body. Researchers have recorded a constellation of physical
    changes (occurring in direct response to practice) in the muscles, nerves, hearts,
    lungs, and brains of those showing profound increases in skill level in any domain.
    2. Skills are specific. Individuals becoming great at one particular skill do not
    serendipitously become great at other skills. Chess champions can remember hundreds
    of intricate chess positions in sequence but can have a perfectly ordinary memory
    for everything else. Physical and intellectual changes are ultraspecific responses
    to particular skill requirements.
    3. The brain drives the brawn. Even among athletes, changes in the brain are arguably
    the most profound, with a vast increase in precise task knowledge, a shift from
    conscious analysis to intuitive thinking (saving time and energy), and elaborate
    self-monitoring mechanisms that allow for constant adjustments in real time.
    4. Practice style is crucial. Ordinary practice, where your current skill level
    is simply being reinforced, is not enough to get better. It takes a special kind
    of practice to force your mind and body into the kind of change necessary to improve.
    5. Short-term intensity cannot replace long-term commitment. Many crucial changes
    take place over long periods of time. Physiologically, it's impossible to become
    great overnight.
    "Across the board, these last two variables - practice style and practice
    time - emerged as universal and critical. From Scrabble players to dart players
    to soccer players to violin players, it was observed that the uppermost achievers
    not only spent significantly more time in solitary study and drills,
    but also exhibited a consistent (and persistent) style of preparation that K. Anders
    Ericsson came to call 'deliberate practice.' First introduced in a 1993 Psychological
    Review article, the notion of deliberate practice went far beyond
    the simple idea of hard work. It conveyed a method of continual skill improvement.
    'Deliberate practice is a very special form of activity that differs
    from mere experience and mindless drill,' explains Ericsson. 'Unlike playful
    engagement with peers, deliberate practice is not inherently enjoyable. It ...
    does not involve a mere execution or repetition of already attained skills but
    repeated attempts to reach beyond one's current level which is associated with
    frequent failures.' ...
    "In other words, it is practice that doesn't take no for an answer; practice that
    perseveres; the type of practice where the individual keeps raising the
    bar of what he or she considers success. ...
    "[Take] Eleanor Maguire's 1999 brain scans of London cabbies, which revealed greatly
    enlarged representation in the brain region that controls spatial awareness. The
    same holds for any specific task being honed; the relevant
    brain regions adapt accordingly. ...
    "[This type of practice] requires a constant self-critique, a pathological restlessness,
    a passion to aim consistently just beyond one's capability so that daily disappointment
    and failure is actually desired, and a never-ending resolve to dust oneself off
    and try again and again and again. ...
    "The physiology of this process also requires extraordinary amounts of
    elapsed time - not just hours and hours of deliberate practice each day,
    Ericsson found, but also thousands of hours over the course of many years. Interestingly,
    a number of separate studies have turned up the same common
    number, concluding that truly outstanding skill in any domain is rarely achieved
    in less than ten thousand hours of practice over ten years' time (which comes to
    an average of three hours per day). From sublime pianists to unusually profound
    physicists, researchers have been very hard-pressed to find any examples of truly
    extraordinary performers in any field who reached the top of their game before that
    ten-thousand-hour mark."
    Author: David Shenk
    Title: The Genius in All of Us
    Publisher: Doubleday
    Date: Copyright 2010 by David Shenk
    Pages: 53-57
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



    Quote Posted in reply to the post by weegiwoman: View Post
    My Dear Wacco Community - I am seeking improved brain functioning. Have heard of Posit Science's software Training, but it costs too much to just try out to see if it works.
    Has anyone worked with their (expensive)software? Weegiwoman
    Last edited by Barry; 07-24-2010 at 06:32 PM.
    | Login or Register (free) to reply publicly or privately   Email

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