Posted on 08/11/2013 11:43:39 AM PDT by Errant
Roger Sperry won the Nobel Prize in 1981 for his work on what is now commonly known as right brain-left brain thinking. Sperry theorized that some very specific activities were controlled by one side of the human brain or the other for example, the right side controlled creative tasks, while the left side was where logic, language and reasoning lived.
People were fascinated by the idea, and in the three decades since, bookstores, television, the Internet and college psychology classes everywhere have been filled with endless discussions of the differences between right-brain, left-brain, and whole-brain thinkers.
(Ironically, Sperrys Nobel prize, like his theory, was also split: two Harvard doctors were also recognized that year in the same medicine and physiology category for their discoveries in visual system processing.)
(Excerpt) Read more at theblaze.com ...
I think I saw a nipple.
That means you are a lower-head thinker.
BOW CHICKA BOW WOW
Damn!
Now you’ve got me seeing (and watching) it too!
sorry....but I have a eye for such things
I see counter clockwise
I like going barefoot in the house (cleaner floors) plus I can count on my toes when needed!
:-D
Yes have often affixed my I to much the same pursuits.
Mmmmmm...
What exactly is that vision problem that you were describing with the brain? It sounds like a learning disability.
I was just thinking, my daughter cannot pass those 3-D type of eye tests because her eyes do not track together. She had to get a note from a doctor to excuse her from the eye test in order to get drivers’ license.
If you have concerns, you might want to see what you can find on the net and maybe even talk to your physician about it. There is a really simple eye test for finding out how much your vision is affected by it. We all have some decree of it - most never know it.
That means you are using both sides of your brain to process this moving image -- both analytically (left-brain) and spatially (right-brain).
I did look it up. It wasn’t very informative, but they did say that it could be an indicator for Alzheimer’s. What my daughter has is not an interpretation from the brain, though. Her brain is getting two different messages because the eyes don’t track together.
Bookmark
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.