London taxi drivers’ brains grow to navigate London’s streets

taxis

Memorizing 25,000 city streets balloons the hippocampus.

Streets in Manhattan are arranged in a user-friendly grid.  Twenty dministrative districts, or arrondissements, form a clockwise spiral around the Seine in Paris. London is a different story. A map of its streets looks more like a tangle of yarn that a preschooler glued to construction paper than a metropolis designed with architectural foresight. Yet London’s taxi drivers navigate the smoggy snarl with ease, instantaneously calculating the swiftest route between any two points.

Continue reading… “London taxi drivers’ brains grow to navigate London’s streets”

Mind control: pushing the limits

brainwave-reading_headset-spl

There are a variety of brainwave-reading headsets on the market today.

If you want to make things move with your mind, you don’t have to be a Jedi.  Although we may not be able to lift a spaceship out of a swamp like Yoda does in The Empire Strikes Back, but it is possible to steer a model car, drive a wheelchair and control a robotic exoskeleton with just your thoughts. (Pics)

 

Continue reading… “Mind control: pushing the limits”

Brain continues to learn even while asleep

sleep memory

‘Sleep memory’ is a new, previously undefined form of memory.

According to a study by researchers at Michigan State University, even after people have gone to bed for the night their brains can carry on processing information thanks to a “separate form of memory” that processes the day’s events.

Doodling may help students learn science

doodle-4-google

Google holds a doodling contest for kids every year.

Google has a yearly doodling contest for kids ages k-12.  Why shouldn’t  teachers encourage kids to doodle while in class?  Well, there seems to be a method for this madness and educational researchers from three Australian universities have shared their studies in the August 26, 2011 journal Science.

 

Continue reading… “Doodling may help students learn science”

Natural preservative discovered that could extend life of food several years

bisin natural preservative

Bisin would keep sandwiches on the shelves for much longer.

You don’t have time to make a packed lunch before work? Soon you could make it a year in advance.  Scientists have discovered a natural preservative which could spell the end of rotting food.

 

Continue reading… “Natural preservative discovered that could extend life of food several years”

Artificial skin spun from spider silk

golden-spider-on-web

Spider silk could be an ideal answer for helping heal wounds.

Researchers may have found a better alternative for providing skin grafts to wounds.  It turns out that spider silk is legendary for its strength, as well as its possible healing properties. Tissue engineer Hanna Wendt at Medical School Hannover in Germany honed in on this and found that by creating an artificial skin spun from spider silk, we could have an ideal answer for helping heal wounds.

Northerners’ brains are bigger: study

brain

Populations in the north have evolved to cope with dull, cloudy skies and short periods of daylight.

Good news for people who are from the north: you are likely to have a bigger brain than your southern counterparts. Unfortunately, that doesn’t necessarily mean you are more intelligent than people from the south – just that you have evolved to cope with the longer winters and greyer skies in northern climates.

Futurist Thomas Frey to introduce challenge: Mankind’s Eight Greatest Competitions to World Future Society

Thomas-Frey

Frey to Deliver Closing Keynote at “WorldFuture 2011” in Vancouver, BC

On Sunday, July 10, 2011, futurist Thomas Frey will outline a series of eight massively difficult competitions as part of his closing keynote to an audience of over 1,000 people attending the World Future Society’s “WorldFuture 2011” event in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

 

Continue reading… “Futurist Thomas Frey to introduce challenge: Mankind’s Eight Greatest Competitions to World Future Society”

Small habits slowly pack on the pounds over the years: Study

heavy-woman-watching-tv-while-eating-junk-food

Watching TV, eating potato chips, having a sugary soda are a few bad habits that slowly pack in the pounds.

Just a few bad habits like watching TV, eating potato chips, having a sugary soda at lunch or staying up too late at night are just a few bad habits that can add up to a steady creep of pounds over the years, U.S. researchers have found.

 

Continue reading… “Small habits slowly pack on the pounds over the years: Study”

Discover the Hidden Patterns of Tomorrow with Futurist Thomas Frey
Unlock Your Potential, Ignite Your Success.

By delving into the futuring techniques of Futurist Thomas Frey, you’ll embark on an enlightening journey.

Learn More about this exciting program.