Post by khatunejannat on Feb 14, 2024 23:15:59 GMT -10
And the ball bounces quickly from one to the other. So our brain is in Focused Thinking Mode! But to really understand it, let's take a slice of our head and look inside to see what's happening when we use Focused Mode. Let's imagine, as we said before, that the bollards, obstacles, loops, etc., are all very close together. And the ball bounces quickly between them, drawing a pattern, which from now on we will call “Thought Pattern”, which will be similar to this image: focused_mode7 Do you notice that Red “pattern” at the top of the Dashboard? That is a “ familiar thought pattern.
It is a system that is related to something that we already know, and that we can “decompose” into simpler concepts, such as addition, multiplication, or also with complex ideas such as statistical calculation, syntactic analysis, etc. But in any case everything related to knowledge that we already know and have assimilated.
Imagine: Suddenly BOOM, you have a thought and WHAM, you shoot the ball and it starts moving easily and quickly bouncing from one idea to another inside your head. And while the San Marino Email List thought-ball” bounces around quickly in our mind, connecting ideas, memories and knowledge we already have, this process is so fast that you are not even aware of it, or fully aware of all the ideas you are looking at…… until you finish relating..Request information. If you have been interested in this article by our industrial area professor, Luis Carlos Gracia, European Welding Engineer, and you want to continue expanding information on these topics, at SEAS we can help you with our online training in mechanical design , such as the Solid Course Edge or the TIG Welding Course .
AND ERUREKA, suddenly you understand!! That is the time in which you manage to solve the problem, or the time in which you manage to “grasp” the concept you are trying to understand. Summarizing the Key Ideas: We will use Focused Mode when we want to learn, or assimilate, something that is related to concepts that we already know. We will identify it because thoughts will move in our brain quickly and fluidly, and we will be able to make analogies with ideas that we already know. In this learning process we will not experience tension, stress , or stiffness, on the contrary, we will find ourselves enjoying the study. Bibliography:
It is a system that is related to something that we already know, and that we can “decompose” into simpler concepts, such as addition, multiplication, or also with complex ideas such as statistical calculation, syntactic analysis, etc. But in any case everything related to knowledge that we already know and have assimilated.
Imagine: Suddenly BOOM, you have a thought and WHAM, you shoot the ball and it starts moving easily and quickly bouncing from one idea to another inside your head. And while the San Marino Email List thought-ball” bounces around quickly in our mind, connecting ideas, memories and knowledge we already have, this process is so fast that you are not even aware of it, or fully aware of all the ideas you are looking at…… until you finish relating..Request information. If you have been interested in this article by our industrial area professor, Luis Carlos Gracia, European Welding Engineer, and you want to continue expanding information on these topics, at SEAS we can help you with our online training in mechanical design , such as the Solid Course Edge or the TIG Welding Course .
AND ERUREKA, suddenly you understand!! That is the time in which you manage to solve the problem, or the time in which you manage to “grasp” the concept you are trying to understand. Summarizing the Key Ideas: We will use Focused Mode when we want to learn, or assimilate, something that is related to concepts that we already know. We will identify it because thoughts will move in our brain quickly and fluidly, and we will be able to make analogies with ideas that we already know. In this learning process we will not experience tension, stress , or stiffness, on the contrary, we will find ourselves enjoying the study. Bibliography: