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Showing posts with label brain on freestyle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label brain on freestyle. Show all posts

Saturday, 17 November 2012

This Is Your Brain On Freestyle Rap: Study Reveals Characteristic Brain Patterns of Lyrical Improvisation

 This Is Your Brain On Freestyle Rap: Study Reveals Characteristic Brain Patterns of Lyrical Improvisation

 

National Institutes of Health deafness and other communication disorders in the National Institute (NIDCD) (NIH) voice, speech, and language functional magnetic resonance imaging branch used by the researchers rappers brain activity when they freestyling "study" - spontaneously improvising lyrics in real time.

Results, on-line Journal of scientific reports published in the November 15 issue, shows that brain activity in the prefrontal cortex, a unique vocal work improving reallocation is associated with this form is a novel neural network improvisatory and creative proposal that includes sexual relations effort.

Researchers, Siyuan Liu, Ph.D., led by the 12 freestyle rap artists (of which at least 5 years experience rapping) scan of the brain while a couple of times a music track using the 8 tasks The performance is demonstrated. Back to work, they just beat the rhyming pattern rythmk songs and improvised guide. In other work, the songs with a good set of exercises performed.

occurred.Freestyling the perisylvian system (involved in language production), amygdala (a region of the brain associated with emotion) increase in brain activity, and motor areas, cingulate, improve brain network has been proposed that encourage the link, language, mode, and action.

Tuesday, 4 September 2012

Physicist

Physicist



Isaac Newton was a revolutionary figure in the development of modern physics as an exact science.
A physicist is a scientist who does research in physics. Physicists study a wide range of physical phenomena in many branches of physics spanning all length scales: from sub-atomic particles of which all ordinary matter is made (particle physics) to the behavior of the material Universe as a whole (cosmology).

Etymology

The term "Physicist" was coined by English philosopher, priest, and historian of science William Whewell in 1840, to denote a cultivator of physics.[1]

Education


Albert Einstein developed the theory of general relativity.
Most material a student encounters in the undergraduate physics curriculum is based on discoveries and insights of a century or more in the past. Alhazen's intromission theory of light was formulated in the 11th century; Newton's laws of motion and Newton's law of universal gravitation were formulated in the 17th century; Maxwell's equations, 19th century; and quantum mechanics, early 20th century. The undergraduate physics curriculum generally includes the following range of courses: chemistry, classical physics, kinematics, astronomy and astrophysics, physics laboratory, electricity and magnetism, thermodynamics, optics, modern physics, quantum physics, nuclear physics, particle physics, and solid state physics. Undergraduate physics students must also take extensive mathematics courses (calculus, differential equations, advanced calculus), and computer science and programming. Undergraduate physics students often perform research with faculty members.
Many positions, especially in research, require a doctoral degree. At the Master's level and higher, students tend to specialize in a particular field. Fields of specialization include experimental and theoretical astrophysics, atomic physics, molecular physics, biophysics, chemical physics, medical physics, condensed matter physics, cosmology, geophysics, material science, nuclear physics, optics, particle physics, and plasma physics. Post-doctoral experience may be required for certain positions.

Employment

The three major employers of career physicists are academic institutions, government laboratories, and private industries, with the largest employer being the last.[2] Many trained physicists, however, apply their skills to other activities, in particular to engineering, computing, and finance, often quite successfully. Some physicists take up additional careers where their knowledge of physics can be combined with further training in other disciplines, such as patent law in industry or private practice. In the United States, a majority of those in the private sections having a physics degree actually work outside the fields of physics, astronomy and engineering altogether.[3]
Nobel laureate Sir Joseph Rotblat has suggested that physicists going into employment in scientific research should honour a Hippocratic Oath for Scientists.

Honors and awards

The highest honor awarded to physicists is the Nobel Prize in Physics, awarded since 1901 by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.