Exhibit 52
Exhibit 53
Transport - Before installation
Exhibit 54
Exhibit 55
Exhibit 56 ~ Painter
Exhibit 59
Exhibit 57
Exhibit 58
Exhibit 60
Exhibit 61
Exhibit 62
Exhibit 63
Exhibit 64
Exhibit 65
Peacock
Exhibit 18 A
Exhibit 66
Reflection
Flowers by the lake
A Tree by the lake
In a picture frame
On a Summer afternoon
On a Summer afternoon
Exhibit 50
Exhibit 49
138
Flowers
Exhibit 48
Exhibit 39 A
Exhibit 47
Exhibit 46
Exhibit 45
Exhibit 44 *
Exhibit 43
Exhibit 42
Exhibit 41
Exhibit 40
Exhibit 39
exhibit 38
Exhibit 37
Exhiit 36
Exhibit 26 A
Exhibit 35
Exhibit 34
Exhibit 33
Exhibit 32
Exhibit 31
Exhibit 30
Exhibit 29
Exhibit 28
Exhibit 27
Exhibit 25
Exhibit 21
Exhibit 20
Exhibit 22
Exhibit 19
Exhibit 18
Exhibit 16
Exhibit 15
Exhibit 15~A
Exhibit 13
Exhibit 8
Exhibit 7
Exhibit 6
Peacock
Peacock
Peacock
Mummy.... I want these ......
Exhibit 3 ~ Reading
Exhibit 2
Entrance ~ I drink to your arrival
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
- Photo replaced on 05 Jun 2014
-
95 visits
Exhibit 51 ~ Reading
www.groundsforsculpture.org
The amazing efficiency of our reading process only serves to thicken the mystery surrounding its origins. How can our brain be so well adapted to a problem for which it could not possibly have evolved? How can the brain architecture of a strange bipedal primate turned hunter-gatherer have adjusted so perfectly, and in only a few thousand years, to to the challenges of visual word recognition? To clarify this problem, we will now turn to the cerebral circuits for reading. An amazing recent discovery shows that there is a specific cortical area for written words, much like the primary auditory area or the motor cortex that exist in all our brains. Even more surprisingly perhaps, this reading area seems to be identical in readers of English, Japanese, and Italian. Does this mean that there are universal brain mechanisms for reading?
The amazing efficiency of our reading process only serves to thicken the mystery surrounding its origins. How can our brain be so well adapted to a problem for which it could not possibly have evolved? How can the brain architecture of a strange bipedal primate turned hunter-gatherer have adjusted so perfectly, and in only a few thousand years, to to the challenges of visual word recognition? To clarify this problem, we will now turn to the cerebral circuits for reading. An amazing recent discovery shows that there is a specific cortical area for written words, much like the primary auditory area or the motor cortex that exist in all our brains. Even more surprisingly perhaps, this reading area seems to be identical in readers of English, Japanese, and Italian. Does this mean that there are universal brain mechanisms for reading?
Fred Fouarge, Aschi "Freestone", Pano ☼ Rapi ♫✯♫, Dimas Sequeira and 6 other people have particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2024
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
The good things in life do not come only through the senses. Some of the most exhilarating experiences we undergo are generated inside the mind, triggered by information that challenges our ability to think, rather than from the use of sensory skills. As Sir Francis Bacon noted almost four hundred years ago, wonder – which is the seed of knowledge – is the reflection of the purest form of pleasure. Just as there are flow activities corresponding to every physical potential of the body, every mental operation is able to provide its own particular form of enjoyment.
Among the many intellectual pursuits available, reading is currently perhaps the most often mentioned flow activity around the world. . . Page 117
Dinesh club has replied to Christa1004 clubHBM:)
Happy new week:)
HBM Dinesh
Funny, this is my favorite reading position, friends dont understand how I can hold it at my age.
HBM Dinesh
www.ipernity.com/doc/hh-volker2/49996398
Sign-in to write a comment.