Posts tagged as:

thinking

Does Music Sometimes Give You Chills?

by mark on May 8, 2011

Not all people feel them. This is article is very interesting:

Who feels chills while listening to music? People “open to experience” (Source: Collision Detection)

I bet this strongly correlates to people who have a need for better quality audio equipment. I know few people who seek out really high quality audio systems for that ultimate music listening experience. They strive to reproduce the most authentic and realistic sound. The put in audiophile headphones, sit, and close their eyes, and completely get lost in the sound.

I had somebody question my need to spend money on high-end equipment many years ago. They said, “I don’t hear that much of a difference.”

I demonstrated, by hooking up a pair of low end speakers that didn’t have that much clarity and had no tightness in the bass, and switched between the to… A… B… A… B…

“I still don’t get it. They sound the same to me.”

So this article about the study linked to above isn’t shocking to me. This person I refer to is the least open to new experiences of any person that I’ve ever met. Been listening to the same kind of music for four decades, been eating the same kind of food for four decades, been partaking in the same activities for over four decades. Present something new to try and the stock response is, “Why would I want to do that? No thanks.”

I wonder about the entire generation of kids being brought up with iPods and their inferior white ear bud headphones. If these kids get chills from listening to certain songs, then they really have to give some higher-end audio a chance. Get a pair of Sennheiser headphones to replace those stock ear bud headphones.

To me, music hasn’t generally been about the lyrics so much as it’s been about the sonic experience. What’s your experience? Have you noticed the difference in what people hear when they listen to music? Does music give you chills sometimes? Do you actively seek out new forms of music (and food, places to go, thinks to try)?

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…and again, and again…

Basically don’t stop thinking. You’ve graduated from a fine school perhaps, but that’s no reason to stop learning. The benefits of education don’t end.

Some studies even suggest a correlation between longevity and continuing education.

Reading won’t just stave off Alzheimer’s by exercising your mind, you will learn to make better decisions in all aspects of your life.

Learning new things improves your job prospects or can help you succeed in your own business.

The Internet is great for researching topics and quickly jumping to a piece of information with a Google search. But what about deeper learning? There are libraries of ebooks that you can read for free. Many of the classics of literature. There are course that you can take online. Free course materials that you can dig through at your own pace. Educational Podcasts.

A great place to start would be the Self-Education Resource List.

You could easily lose yourself for eight hours a day with all of these resources. However, you know the Families and Technology shtick: The Internet is a wonderful tool, but it should not supplant the very valuable interaction with real people, the outdoors, and actually doing things.

If you find yourself getting addicted to online learning, install ComputerTime to reintroduce some balance in your activities.

How do you make good use of information resources?

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Is the Internet Making Us Stupid?

by mark on June 27, 2008

Something profound seems to be happening to the human brain,” says Susan Greenfield, Oxford professor and head of the Royal Institution of Great Britian, “and what really worries me is that we could be sleepwalking into a new world of technology without even considering what it is doing to our brains.”

Hours spent in front of computer screens and TV everyday increase dopamine production in our brains, she contends, and other scientists suggest that these higher dopamine levels can result in changes in how the brain works.

Are the changes good or bad? Perhaps a little of both. On the negative side, shorter attention spans and being more risk-averse are some of the changes that she’s noted. This might be playing into afflictions that are on the rise in young people, such as obesity, gambling, drinking and violence.

She adds, speaking of the generations attached to screens, “They will be people who are more hedonistic and tend to live for the moment, a life that is more sensory and less cognitive.”

On the positive side, some people can actually benefit from being less cautious or more risk-averse, she admits. She’s not against the use of technology. She strongly advocates research and large-scale studies to determine how technology affects our brains. So far, all we seem to have is mostly anecdotal evidence; we need some science to back up our observations.

Parents do not want to wait five to ten years for science to provide an unequivocal answer. There seems to be plenty of anecdotal evidence to convince any parent that too much screen time isn’t good for kids.

Once I was a scuba diver in the sea of words. Now I zip along the surface like a guy on a Jet Ski.” That’s how Nicholas Carr describes how heavy use of the Net has changed his reading ability. “The deep reading that used to come naturally has become a struggle.” he says. He also has anecdotes from his friends — including a medical blogger, and a literature major — who say that they’ve experienced the same changes in reading habits.

“I think I know what’s going on. For more than a decade now, I’ve been spending a lot of time online, searching and surfing and sometimes adding to the great databases of the Internet. The Web has been a godsend to me as a writer. Research that once required days in the stacks or periodical rooms of libraries can now be done in minutes. A few Google searches, some quick clicks on hyperlinks, and I’ve got the telltale fact or pithy quote I was after. Even when I’m not working, I’m as likely as not to be foraging in the Web’s info-thickets—reading and writing e-mails, scanning headlines and blog posts, watching videos and listening to podcasts, or just tripping from link to link to link. (Unlike footnotes, to which they’re sometimes likened, hyperlinks don’t merely point to related works; they propel you toward them.)”

Even though we are on the Internet, we’re still reading. It’s just a web browser instead of a book, and some studies suggest that kids are reading more because of the Internet. While that may be true, online reading is less focused, people read short snippets before they click on a link and are zipped off to read another snippet, and there are a lot of distractions online.

Reading differently results in us thinking differently. We’re not reading as deeply. We aren’t as engaged and we’re easily distracted. This new reading style favors efficiency and immediacy rather than depth, reflection, and contemplation.

So what’s the takeaway from all of this? Like wine and chocolate, the Internet is good for you, but only if you use it moderately.

References:

Hat Tip to Kevin Arthur who brought one of the articles to my attention.

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