Sentences with phrase «one's mental maps»

Brain Talk is based on the science of mind mapping, the brain's ability to make mental maps of how other people feel and think.
He creates mental maps, which then are transformed into compositions of color and form.
From the outset, you'll learn about the brain science of «mind mapping» (making mental maps of your partner's mind), which goes on constantly in relationships.
Understand how to use mental maps to organize information about people, places, and environments in a spatial context.
The concept of mental maps does have, I believe, potential for further research at both the individual and group level.
New research suggests the great apes keep a geometric mental map of their home range, moving from point to point in nearly straight lines.
Still, work like this definitely relates to mental maps as well as the physical objects.
Bees don't have the brain structure, called the hippocampus, thought to store the spatial memories underlying mental maps in humans.
First - person games are so much about looking anyway — the player encounters views and collates them into mental maps of three - dimensional space.
These findings, the researchers conclude, suggest that the subterranean mole - rats form mental maps of their dark environs using magnetosensory inputsomething other animals do using visual and auditory information, among other kinds.
Pipes overhead accompany one through the exhibition, titled «Just Knocked Out,» competing with one's own mental map of the space.
Janice Caswell: When I finished art school I started cataloging my memories of place by drawing mental maps of places I'd lived or... Continue reading →
New studies show how such mental maps blur with age and readily extend to accommodate bionic limbs.
Alexandra Handal's Labyrinth of Remains and Migration (2000/01) is a series of mental maps charting spaces of obliteration, dispossession, memory and destruction in Palestine.
There are exceptions to this distinction between the way mental maps are formed and the way they are applied: as Archie Brown shows in his chapter on Gorbachev (on which more below), one of his distinguishing features was his ability to keep learning in office.
If instructors provide a brief description or a preview of the information which is about to be learned, learners will be able to start with the big picture of things and then link new ideas, theories, and concepts to existing mental maps of the related field.
They build dynamic mental maps of all the food trees in their leaf - cloud canopies.
Dying Light is continuously throwing off the players mental mapping of distance.
To move away from overfocus on legal technology and also address the matter of «privilege», it would be useful for lawyers, law librarians and records managers to focus on: * human behaviour and how human beings each have a different mental mapping of information — people might use different phrases or words to mean the same thing.
in his book Getting the Love You Want) is our unique mental map of what love is supposed to look like.
Perceptions of and emotional responses to a relationship are contained within an often unexamined mental map of the relationship, also called a love map by John Gottman.
This creation of a narrative or mental map in which to place memories is called the «method of loci».
Neglect creates mental maps used by children, and their adult selves, to survive.
Kidnapped, drugged, and left abandoned in a field, bees can still find their way home using mental maps of their surroundings, according to a new study that could pose a major challenge to current thinking about human memory and cognition.
In the 1950s, celebrated urbanist Kevin Lynch studied how people make mental maps of built - up locations.
People with the condition struggle to form mental maps and so can't easily orientate themselves.
Each of us has our own mental map, a theory of action that directs our behavior in any situation (Argyris & Schön, 1974).
Alexandra Handal's Labyrinth of Remains and Migration (2000 - 01 & 2010) is a series of mental maps charting spaces of obliteration, dispossession, memory and destruction in Palestine.
The hippocampus also plays an important role in forming new memories and creating mental maps of space.
Scientists think this is because, as we memorize more details about a particular stretch of road, we have more landmarks to squeeze into our mental maps.
REALITY is so infinitely vast that we can only take in and re-present «mental maps» or perceptions of what we «believe» to out there.
So, Korzybski's... «The Map is not the Territory» really makes sense when it comes to understanding that our «mental maps» are just guides... they are not the actual «Territory» that they represent.
He draws into his «mental map» a wide range of cultural commentators from G.K. Chesterton to Salman Rushdie.
Interestingly The Commonwealth wasn't used by any of the online services for their UK sites, so it's clearly not as strong a «mental map» in the UK or, we just don't like to think of our «Empire» (do you know of any services that do use that «geography to model shipping to?).
Some countries (e.g. France) have «territories» (DOM TOM) that are part of their «Empire» and are part of a «mental map» of the world which is useful for services to model to.
These «mental mapping» activities help a child understand the parts of his body and the way they relate to each other.
A new rhetoric has abruptly resurfaced which in turn requires us to redraw our own «mental map» and its matching glossary (p. 56).
The great crises of the twentieth century sometimes allowed leaders even with very different ideologies to find something in common, a shared orientation in their mental maps.
On behalf of his co-editor Steven Casey, as well as of each contributing author, Jonathan Wright makes the case that, «The great crises of the twentieth century sometimes allowed leaders even with very different ideologies to find something in common, a shared orientation in their mental maps
The mental maps of individuals are both shaped by structural forces and help to shape those structures.
His mental map never became fixed.
Did the leaders of non-state organisations (I think of figures like Lech Wałęsa, co-founder of the Solidarity movement in Poland), or the mental maps of broader publics play as important a role, or were they less critical to the course of international politics?
A recent workshop in Stockholm brought together work as varied as West European attitudes to Eastern Europe from the eighteenth century to 1989, Israeli students» knowledge of the Palestinian areas of the country, the conflicting mental maps of 20th century Lebanon, mental maps of Europe based on quantitative evidence from surveys of European and extra-European students, and comparative work on mental maps in the Baltic and Mediterranean regions.
Gorbachev's role was clearly fundamental and that is reflected in the mental maps of all the other key players.
In brief, Ostpolitik had substantial support but Brandt's mental map had the unusual extra dimension — of exile — which made him uniquely qualified to put it into practice.
The idea of exploring their «mental maps» as a way into understanding the international history of a particular era (earlier volumes explored the era of the two world wars and the era of the early Cold War) is to uncover not only what made these leaders unusual but also their sense of the constraints, both domestic and international, with which they were faced, and also the opportunities that might arise.
So there is a case for allowing «mental maps» to continue to be interpreted freely as portraits in prose.
Yet, when he emerged from prison in 1990, he was able to adjust his mental map to become a beacon of unity and humanity in a post-Cold War world.
His mental map was shaped by exploiting the opportunities of a loosely bipolar world order, and showed no trace of self - criticism.
To what extent were the mental maps of others important in the development of the later Cold War?
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