3.21.2008
Eye Craze hits games
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Nintendo's Flash Focus trains people to use their eyes and peripheral vision to improve attentiveness.
But, rather than buy their program, you can play here
with scientific exercises that do improve acuity and focus, along with mental speed.
The craze towards visual attentiveness is moving right into our "sweet spot".
What about my swing? you say. It's Spring training. Whether you're like Billy Crystal fulfilling a dream and suiting up in the pinstripes, or a serious player, it might be worth a little time to take some practice swings in the on-deck circle.
We've actually had pro (Major League Baseball) players use our games and report good results. Mostly, they've stumbled upon them and then just sent in a note telling us they were helpful. One of these players was a National League MVP.
But, rather than buy their program, you can play here
with scientific exercises that do improve acuity and focus, along with mental speed.
The craze towards visual attentiveness is moving right into our "sweet spot".
What about my swing? you say. It's Spring training. Whether you're like Billy Crystal fulfilling a dream and suiting up in the pinstripes, or a serious player, it might be worth a little time to take some practice swings in the on-deck circle.
We've actually had pro (Major League Baseball) players use our games and report good results. Mostly, they've stumbled upon them and then just sent in a note telling us they were helpful. One of these players was a National League MVP.
Labels: baseball, eyes, Flash_focus, focus, MVP

9.25.2007
How Eye Motion Impacts Cognitive Processes
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Scientists assert that guiding eye movements impacts how people think.
What if our thoughts were actually controlled by our eyes?
By occasionally guiding the eye movements of participants with a tracking task unrelated to a primary investigative problem in a recent study, researchers boosted their chances of problem-solving success. Stimulated groups outperformed the control group at solving the defined problem, demonstrating that "it is now clear that eye movements reflect what we are thinking, and they can also influence how we think," said researcher Laura Thomas.
In addition to providing insights into problem-solving, the results have implications for how psychologists think about cognition.
"Earlier researchers found a link between eye movements and problem solving, but they could not directly show that the former can precede or affect the latter," Thomas added.
"They couldn't go further than saying cognition affects eye movement pattern. They're very close to it but they cannot argue more than that. We went a step further and said eye movements are actually influencing cognition and this is the way to prove it."
Just thinking about a task apparently activates structures in the brain normally associated with completing a task. So it could be that there is a matrix after all.
Labels: eyemotion, eyes, matrix, research, tracking

5.05.2007
Scientists: Eye Exercises Can Boost Memory 10%
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Moving your eyes from side to side for 30 seconds every morning can boost memory by up to 10 per cent, a study suggests, reports Lewis Smith in the London Times. The findings appear to support the use of Visuospatial processing exercises - "games" that focus on eye movement in boosting memory and recall and provide independent verification of findings observed using these exercises.
Students who took part in the eye exercise tests found that their memory recall was boosted by a spot of eye jiggling. The exercises work, it is thought, because the eye movements cause the two hemispheres of the brain to interact more efficiently with each other.
Research led by Andrew Parker of Manchester Metropolitan University, identified the potential exam revision technique while studying false recall. "This could be important in situations where we feel uncertain, unclear or maybe even just confused about what we may have done or said," he said. "It may help someone recall an important piece of information for an exam or for a shopping list."
He presented 102 university students with recordings of a male voice reading 20 lists of 15 words. The subjects were then handed a list of words and asked to pick out those that they had just heard. On average, the students who had moved their eyes from side to side performed 10 per cent better than the rest. Up and down eye movement was of no use at all to recall.
Contained within the lists were "lure" words that were not in the spoken list but were similar to some of those that were. Students who had moved eyes sideways were 15 per cent better at ignoring the misleading words.
Dr Parker said: "Our work shows that true memory can be improved and false memory reduced. One reason for this is that bilateral eye movements may improve our ability to monitor the source of our memories. He said that people are often confused over whether a memory is real or imagined, such as whether a bill was paid or a door locked.
"The problem is to determine the source of one’s memory — real or imagined. Bilateral eye movements may help us to determine accurately the source of our memory," he said.
He came up with the idea of testing students and getting them to move their eyes after previous research indicated that some memories are dependent on the level of activity between the brain’s two hemispheres.
The researchers, who published their findings in the journal Brain and Cognition, anticipated a reduction in false memory but were taken aback to find that the eye movements assisted recall of true memories.
"The effects are so counter-intuitive," Dr Parker said. "That such a straightforward experimental manipulation can bring about enhanced memory for studied information and lower the number of memory errors is quite exciting."
More work has to be done to establish in what contexts the technique will be effective and whether it really will help in an exam. But he added: "If one does forget something then it will do no harm to try moving one’s eyes from side to side — to see if it does make a difference."
Labels: eyes, movement, times, visual processing

2.07.2007
Video games: good for eye power
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Action-oriented video games, according to a new study, can increase visual dexterity. 
Labels: eyes, videogames

