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Expand your Thinking
Welcome to Your Mind PDF Print E-mail
Written by Art Mason   
Monday, 25 August 2008 23:12
 

The Brain

Welcome to Your Mind.

A website dedicated to helping you to develop Your Mind to it's fullest potential. The human brain is an amazing thing, and we are only using an estimated 5-10% of it! Now even though we are showing a brain in the article, this is not a medical site. This site is about expanding your way of thinking, increasing your memory, your reading speed and even your iQ. It will be an amazing resource for parent's with children you have various learning disabilities too! We are going to change the paradigm about how learning is done.

Albert Einstein was one of the greatest thinkers the 20th century has ever know. We will dive into information about what made him the genius he was.

Prepare for an amazing journey. A journey to unlock the GENIUS with YOU!

 

Last Updated on Wednesday, 27 August 2008 22:54
 
Build your Memory with Sudoku PDF Print E-mail
Written by Art Mason   
Monday, 25 August 2008 23:07

Sudoku is a great game to build your memory functions.You can play the game off the Main Menu. Below are the directions.

 

How to Play Sudoku?

Sudoku requires no calculation or arithmetic skills. It is essentially a game of placing numbers in squares, using very simple rules of logic and deduction. It can be played by children and adults and the rules are simple to learn.

Sudoku Objective

The objective of the game is to fill all the blank squares in a game with the correct numbers. There are three very simple constraints to follow. In a 9 by 9 square Sudoku game:

  • Every row of 9 numbers must include all digits 1 through 9 in any order
  • Every column of 9 numbers must include all digits 1 through 9 in any order
  • Every 3 by 3 subsection of the 9 by 9 square must include all digits 1 through 9

Similarly, smaller Sudoku puzzles, such as the 4x4 puzzle, must have the numerals 1 through 4 in each row, column and subsection. Larger Sudoku games (16 by 16) must have numerals 1 through 16 in each row, column and region. The principles are the same whatever the size of the game.

Every Sudoku games begins with a number of squares already filled in, and the difficulty of each game is largely a function of how many squares are filled in. The more squares that are known, the easier it is to figure out which numbers go in the open squares. As you fill in squares correctly, options for the remaining squares are narrowed and it becomes easier to fill them in. The Sudoku games on SudokuDaily.net let you check your progress as you go, to help prevent going down a wrong path.

Sudoku Solution Techniques

Sudoku PuzzleThe first things to do in tackling a Sudoku puzzle is to scan the rows and columns to see where a certain number might go, given the 3 constraints listed above. For example, the fact that a 7 is required in the top right corner can be determined by first analyzing its 9 square sub-region. The only numbers missing in the region are a 5 and a 7. However, putting a 5 in the top right box would conflict with the 5 already in the top row and the rightmost column. The 7, on the other hand, would not conflict with any of the given numbers.

Once the 7 is filled in, deduction requires that only a 5 can go beneath it as all digits from 1 through 9 must be represented in the region. From there, one can turn to the two remaining open boxes in the right column - these must include a 2 and a 4 as the column's digits must represent 1 through 9. One of these options, placing the 4 beneath the 1, would lead to a conflict with the 4 already in that horizontal row, so the only option for this box must be a 2.

However, options for boxes are often not that easy to deduce. Another technique is to "pencil in" possibilities and then follow the possible solutions that emerge until a conflict is found. Often these conflicts appear after 2 or 3 numbers are penciled in, and one can return to the start and try the next option until something clicks.

The Sudoku puzzles on SudokuDaily.net make penciling in options very easy. Just put a possible number in a box, click on it, and it is moved to the top left light blue area of the box. From there you can start considering possibilities until the solution to a box or two emerges, or until you need to pencil in another option and start again.

The great thing about Sudoku is that every step makes the next step easier by narrowing possibilities. Every solved box makes filling the next box a little bit easier.

 
Memory Loss is Preventable PDF Print E-mail
Written by Art Mason   
Monday, 25 August 2008 21:56

It may come as a surprise to many of you that memory loss is totally preventable. Now someone who is already suffering from this tragic event is past the help I am going to offer, but those of you who still posses a good memory, can indeed keep it all you life.

The first step to consider is reading. Please who are avid readers increase their memory because they are exercising the memory web that exists in them. The memory web is a way to refer to the neuro connections in the brain in which memories exist. When you read, not only are you feeding your intelligence, but the words you read are also creating associations with other words and memories. By this example, the more you read, the better your memory. It does not matter how much of what you read you remember, the affect is cumulative.

Another important way to increase memory is to talk about events of the past. It is alway best to focus on the positive, but talking about what you did, when you did it etc all contribute to a better memory later in life. 

In a subsiquent article I will discuss some 'games' that will help you increase your memory!

Last Updated on Monday, 25 August 2008 22:08
 

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Common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by age eighteen

Albert Einstein

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