Author Topic: left and right handed brain in people  (Read 783 times)  Share 

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Offline piersdad

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left and right handed brain in people
« on: August 06, 2008, 08:04:52 AM »
 
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Logical Vs. Intuitive Processing
The left brain processes in a linear, sequential, logical manner. When you process on the left side, you use information piece by piece to solve a math problem or work out a science experiment. When you read and listen, you look for the pieces so that you can draw logical conclusions. If you process primarily on the right side of the brain, you use intuition. You may know the right answer to a math problem but not be sure how you got it. You may have to start with the answer and work backwards. On a quiz, you have a gut feeling as to which answers are correct, and you are usually right. In writing, it is the left brain that pays attention to mechanics such as spelling, agreement, and punctuation. But the right side pays attention to coherence and meaning; that is, your right brain tells you it "feels" right.


 so thats why i can see the solution well before i can work it out.
been working lately on a walking system for a robot and can 'see' the solution but have trouble working it out.

also I am always frustrated at the lineal thinkers I find in the universities.
this explains why  right thinking people are rare  in higher education  they just  don't hack it with their lineal teaching

ie if this is so then that is so etc etc.

 http://brain.web-us.com/brain/LRBrain.html


 
Quote
By, contrast, the approach of the right-brained student is random. If you are right-brained, you may flit from one tack to another. You will get just as much done, but perhaps without having addressed priorities. An assignment may be late or incomplete, not because you weren't working but because you were working on something else. You were ready to rebel when asked to make study schedules for the week.  But because of the random nature of your dominant side, you must make lists, and you must make schedules. This may be your only hope for survival in college. You should also make a special effort to read directions. Oh yes, the mention of spelling makes you cringe. Use the dictionary, carry a Franklin speller, use the spell checker on your computer. Never turn in an assignment without proofing for spelling. Because the right side of the brain is color sensitive, you might try using colors to learn sequence, making the first step green, the second blue, the last red. Or you may want to "walk" a sequence, either by physically going from place to place or by imagining it. For the first step of the sequence, you might walk to the frond door; for the second, to the kitchen; for the third, to the den, etc. Or make Step One a certain place or thing in you dorm room or study place, and Step Two another. If you consistently use the same sequence, you will find that this strategy is transferable to many tasks involving sequence.



 
you can try  the impossible now  but miracles take a little longer

Storydad.com

left and right handed brain in people
« on: August 06, 2008, 08:04:52 AM »