Martin Giles from the Economist interviews interviews Ed Catmull, President of Pixar

The Gathering won the Man Booker Prize winner for 2007
~ Anne Enright

The Gathering is a family epic. It is also a sexual history: tracing the line of hurt and redemption through three generations - starting with the grandmother, Ada Merriman - showing how memories warp and family secrets fester. This is a novel about love and disappointment, about thwarted lust and limitless desire, and how our fate is written in the body, not in the stars.

$10.08

"Economic disaster begins with a philosophy of doing less and wanting more."

-- Jim Rohn

“You have to have confidence in your ability, and then be tough enough to follow through.”

-Rosalynn Carter

Taking a rest break—while awake—can help strengthen memories, a new   study suggests.

“Your brain is working for you when you’re resting, so rest is important for memory and cognitive function,” Lila Davachi observes.

 “This is something we don’t appreciate much, especially when today’s information technologies keep us working round-the-clock.” (Courtesy: NYU)

 The findings, which appear in the latest issue of the journal Neuron, expand our understanding of how memories are boosted. Previous studies had shown this process occurs during sleep, but not during times of awake rest.

“Taking a coffee break after class can actually help you retain that information you just learned,” explains Lila Davachi, an assistant professor in NYU’s Department of Psychology and Center for Neural Science, in whose laboratory the study was conducted. “Your brain wants you to tune out other tasks so you can tune in to what you just learned.”

The study, whose lead author was Arielle Tambini, a doctoral candidate in NYU’s Graduate School of Arts and Science, focused on memory consolidation—the period when a memory is stabilized after it is initially created, or encoded.

To determine if memory consolidation occurred during periods of awake rest, the researchers imaged the hippocampus, a brain structure known to play a significant role in memory, and cortical regions during periods of awake rest. Previous studies have demonstrated regions of the brain more active during periods of rest, but their function at these times had been unclear.

The experiment tested subjects’ associative memory by showing them pairs of images containing a human face and an object (e.g., a beach ball) or a human face and a scene (e.g., a beach) followed by periods of awake rest. Subjects were not informed their memory for these images would later be tested, but, rather, were instructed to rest and simply think about anything that they wanted, but to remain awake during the resting periods.

The researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to gauge activity in the hippocampus and cortical regions during the task and during the ensuing rest period.

Researchers found that during rest after the study experience (after the visuals were shown), there was a significant correlation between brain activity in the subjects’ hippocampus and cortical regions that were active during the initial encoding of each stimulus pair. However, this boost in brain correlations was only seen following experiences that were later memorable suggesting these parts of the brain act in tandem for a purpose—to consolidate memories during rest.

Also, when examining each subject individually, researchers found that subjects who had greater resting correlations between the hippocampus and cortex, also exhibited better performance on a subsequent associative memory test and those whose brain correlations were weaker, had worse memory—in other words, the greater the activity in hippocampus and cortical regions, the stronger the memory.

“Your brain is working for you when you’re resting, so rest is important for memory and cognitive function,” Davachi observes. “This is something we don’t appreciate much, especially when today’s information technologies keep us working round-the-clock.”

The research was supported by a grant from the National Institute of Mental Health and Dart Neuroscience.

Written by James Devitt-NYU , and published by Futurity.  Discover the future.  News from leading research universities in the u nited States, Canada and the United Kingdom

NYU news: www.nyu.edu/public.affairs/

 

 

Jason writes:

About eight minutes into my breakfast presentation to the local chamber of commerce at a fancy restaurant the fire alarm rang. The alarm was annoyingly loud so naturally I stopped speaking and forced a smile.

You can imagine my first thoughts. They were angry selfish thoughts. Why now? Why me? However I did not convey those thoughts on my face.

But the whole blog post is full of ideas, so that if it happens to you, you will be prepared. Read it here

"Wherever you are is always the right place. There is never a need to fix anything, to hitch up the bootstraps of the soul and start at some higher place. Start right where you are."

-- Julia Cameron

…………………………………………………………


Super-size your life

I know you want to achieve specific goals and enjoy tremendous success this year.

It's not that hard to do--especially when you have the right tools.

Click on the link that follows as you are just 3 minutes away from lighting the fuse.

http://www.pivotalpersonalbest.com/thought_personalstrategicplan.htm

Think of your Speech Title as if it were the Title of a Book Display on a shelf at Barnes & Noble.

When someone is eyeing the selections on the shelf where they have an interest, yours should jump out at them!

The Title should jump out so much that the person actually takes the book from the shelf, reads the back cover, and opens it to read the front and back flaps.

After "investigating" the book (i.e., your speech) because the title grabbed their attention, they "buy" it; that is, they come to see you speak because they want to learn more!

Unless you've given this lots and lots of thought, pencil the title to your speech in. Remember, this must be something that will make people want to come and see you speak.

The Title of your Speech is your: newspaper headline, title on the spine of your book, and the verbiage in the 'Subject Line' of your most important email, all rolled up in one.

Just like the title of a new movie might get you to go online and look at the trailers, your speech title needs more consideration than many people think.

Editors know if the Headline of a newspaper article doesn't get your attention, you probably won't read the article. Likewise, the Subject Line of an email that doesn't immediately grab the recipient's attention, might be deleted without opening it.

Until someone quotes you on national television or radio program, a great title that draws people to your presentation wanting to know more, is your best chance at filling the auditorium.

Realistically, you may have been assigned, or asked to do this talk by your boss or other official. Still, give it the thought it deserves. It may be after completing the development of your speech that the 'Ah Hah!' title will come to you.

You want the title to whet the appetite of the person who sees it. Whet it enough for them to want to know more, to see if it's something they could benefit from.

You may even find it's easiest to write your speech first, and then come up with a title. Have several titles in mind and bounce them off friends and family before deciding on one

The same holds true for a subtitle. It explains more about the contents and goals of the speech, and is an integral and important part of the title.

The Title is an integral part of your Speech.  Give it the same thorough thought and attention all the other parts and elements of your speech are getting.   Then the Title will fill the seats in the audience!

Fred E. Miller is a speaker, coach and author.     His book, to be released later this year, is: "NO Sweat Public Speaking!" How to Develop, Practice, and Deliver a 'Knock Your Socks Of!' Speech with NO Sweat!

Do you think a million dollars is out of your reach?

(It's not, by the way, and I'll show you why in just a second.)

Whenever someone mentions "My goal is to make a million dollars this year", I hear what you're saying. But let me ask you another question... do you believe it's possible for YOU?

If you become aware of the things you're doing now that are actually holding you back from ever reaching that million-dollar benchmark, then it IS possible! That's why I'd like to tell you about a no-cost teleseminar with Ali Brown and her mentor Anne McKevitt, as they share the million-dollar habits that must become part of you and your team in order to fast-forward your business and actually bring one million dollars within your grasp.

==============

"Your First Million: Keys to Creating Your Business Cash Windfall"
with Ali Brown and special guest Anne McKevitt Wednesday, April 28, 2010 at 8pm Eastern Learn more and reserve your spot now.
http://bit.ly/4VwY1M

==============

On this no-cost 75-minute call, Ali and Anne will reveal:

* the million-dollar habits you must instill in yourself and your team in order to fast-forward your business (take it from us, these are a must!)

* how to learn what is stopping you from reaching your financial goals -- it may be at a completely unconscious level, and it's important you nip this in the bud now before you suffer any longer

* the difference between being smart and being financially successful (There are many more smart people in the world than wealthy. Why? We'll explain, and show you how to be both.)

* why most of what you've learned about success and becoming rich is WRONG and what you need to know in order to change your destiny right now

* simple ways to reset your internal success compass to attract the results you want using finesse - not struggle or hard effort

If you're anxious to break out of the million-dollar barriers surrounding your own business, don't miss out on your only opportunity to hear Ali Brown and the "Billion-Dollar-Woman," Anne McKevitt on this call!
http://bit.ly/4VwY1M

Can words really account for only 7 percent of the meaning of a spoken message? This short video animation puts 'Mehrabian's rule' under the magnifying glass and shows why it can't be true