An animated cartoon showing how the right brain and the left brain put together a bicycle. The left brain needs to follow instructions, while the right brain doesn't think instructions are necessary.
For the book "i'm not stupid, I'm Right-Brained" by Evie Fishkin. Be sure to visit the website: www.rightbrainintelligence.com to take a free brain dominance test.
domingo, 3 de octubre de 2010
What is the difference between right-brain activities and left-brain activities?
Your right side of your brain controls the left side of your body. your left side of your brain controls the right side of you body.
Left brain function: number skills , written language , reasoning , spoken language , scientific skills, right side of body...
Right brain function: 3-D shapes, art awareness, imagination, music, left side of the body...
Left brain function: number skills , written language , reasoning , spoken language , scientific skills, right side of body...
Right brain function: 3-D shapes, art awareness, imagination, music, left side of the body...
DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE LEFT AND RIGHT SIDES OF THE BRAIN
In 1981 Roger Sperry received the Nobel Prize in Physiology "for his discoveries concerning the functional specialisation of the cerebral hemispheres". Sperry, his student Michael Gazzinga and the neurosurgeon Joseph Bogden, performed the first 'split brain operation', and can be credited with some of the most important insights we have of the physiology of the brain today. They found that the left side of the brain is concerned with language, words, analysis, and figures. The right side is concerned with patterns, relationships, art, and music.
The left brain is the clever part. The left brain is so clever it's taken us to the moon and developed our wonderful technologies. The trouble is it's so clever that if we're not careful it will kill us off. It's the part that has developed the nuclear bomb and is in the process of polluting the world.
This is why it's so important to set up conditions and expectations in creativity sessions, so that things can be wrong or at least partly wrong, we need to change the inclination to reject the whole notion, by playing with ideas and using words like: "that's interesting".
The left brain is the clever part. The left brain is so clever it's taken us to the moon and developed our wonderful technologies. The trouble is it's so clever that if we're not careful it will kill us off. It's the part that has developed the nuclear bomb and is in the process of polluting the world.
It's the piece of the brain that's always scheming, it never stops. Its the bit that wakes you up in the middle of the night with this wonderful idea that in the morning never looks quite so good. This part of our brain is like a bossy manager who needs to be in control, demands to be heard and thinks he is the only one with any ideas. Indeed it so bossy that sometimes when it is scheming, worrying or thinking in the middle of the night, even the best strategies are insufficient to keep it under control and quiet. For example, sometimes I try to get back to sleep by counting down slowly from 20 to 0, relaxing more after each number, but unless I'm totally disciplined, in between the numbers my left brain will race off on to some new subject.
The left brain is a straight line calculator that deals in words and numbers, likes things in sequence and has a need to explain things rationally and a need to always be in control. It likes logic and things that are 100% correct. It has trouble dealing with ambiguity, partial truth and uncertainty. It needs to be right and it needs to be 100 percent right. If something is only partly right, even if it is only slightly wrong, the left brain is inclined to reject the whole notion rather than play with the idea and work with it to see what can be extracted from the good parts. This is why it's so important to set up conditions and expectations in creativity sessions, so that things can be wrong or at least partly wrong, we need to change the inclination to reject the whole notion, by playing with ideas and using words like: "that's interesting".
Suscribirse a:
Entradas (Atom)