ברוכים הבאים! בלוג זה נועד לספק משאבים לפסיכולוגים חינוכיים ואחרים בנושאים הקשורים לדיאגנוסטיקה באורייטנצית CHC אבל לא רק.

בבלוג יוצגו מאמרים נבחרים וכן מצגות שלי וחומרים נוספים.

אם אתם חדשים כאן, אני ממליצה לכם לעיין בסדרת המצגות המופיעה בטור הימני, שכותרתה "משכל ויכולות קוגניטיביות".

Welcome! This blog is intended to provide assessment resources for Educational and other psychologists.

The material is CHC - oriented , but not entirely so.

The blog features selected papers, presentations made by me and other materials.

If you're new here, I suggest reading the presentation series in the right hand column – "intelligence and cognitive abilities".

נהנית מהבלוג? למה שלא תעקוב/תעקבי אחרי?

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Friday, August 24, 2018

Your brain was designed to be distracted


 By DAPHNE LEPRINCE-RINGUET, WIRED.





While it may seem that you are continuously focusing on reading this … the reality is that you’re zooming in and out of attention up to four times per second.  During those periods of distraction, the brain pauses and scans the environment to see if there is something outside the primary focus of attention that might be more important. If there is not, it re-focus back to what you were doing.  The reason why we are not aware of those gaps is because the brain tricks us into perceiving reality as a continuous movie.

Why does our brain make us go through attention pulses at such a fast rate? Researchers suggest that it corresponds to an evolutionary advantage. “Think about when life was more dangerous," Fiebelkorn says. "You would have to constantly be on the lookout, you would want to always be aware if there was something around you with bigger teeth.”

“Whether you are talking about the hyper-focused type of ADHD or the distractible type, you can easily draw a parallel with the two states that normal brains alternate between,” she says. “It could be that brains affected by ADHD are unable to balance between the two attentional spaces and instead get locked into one or the other.” 

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