Wednesday, October 29, 2014
Staving Off Mental Decline
In our digital world, it is really no surprise that mobile applications and gaming mobile applications have become a huge business, especially in the field of brain training games. It is a billion dollar industry and there is still to be hard evidence that these games improve mental function and prevent the decline of it. There is a game called Project: Evo that is proving to be above the rest. They are even seeking approval from the FDA. If they would be able to get the seal of approval, it might even be something that the doctor would be able to prescribe like another drug. If you start doing something that taxes your brain in productive ways, forcing it to repeatedly engage declining skills — learning a new language, for instance — those skills get measurably sharper. The problem, of course, is that most of us are pretty lazy. We’re not often going to take up mentally difficult activities in our dotage.Video games seemed like one possible shortcut.
Sunday, October 26, 2014
Tech Improving the World
The future is now, it is just not as well spread out as we would like it to be. With all the software development advancements as well as cloud computing, we are that much closer to solving the world's problems. Some of the things that technology can do is bring meditative practices to the mainstream and use inexpensive biometrics along with it. There could also be the offer of web-based psychotherapies as first-line interventions for depression and anxiety (and probably insomnia). Using the internet, doctors would also be able to monitor the negative cognitive and emotional side-effects from a variety of medical interventions, to ensure unintentional effects from the cure are not more harmful than the treated person's original condition. Lastly, big data model could be adopted to collect massive amount of data in order to get a better picture of the patient or disease. Technology could also promote physical activity and motivate people to do get up and do more.
Tuesday, October 14, 2014
Illutions
Is your life one? There are academics who say you don't have a life. You're just a mobile application. This idea is rather unsettling. As software development and computers became more powerful, programmers started making
simulations -- mimicking real-life situations in software. Scientists
modeled everything from pandemics to planet formation. Soon complex and
compelling societal models emerged. Extrapolating this idea, in the future there could be a possibility that we will have much more sophisticated and complex simulations that will presumably become self-aware, just like humans supposed are now. Going further with this thought, a historian might want to see what life was life centuries back and create a simulation for it. Now, what is to say that you are not just some simulation that is created? How do you know that you are real? Since we are asking these types of questions, lets take a step further and ask about morality? If this is just a Sim, why do we bother with being moral?
Be That Early Bird
Waking up early is a sign of success and ambition in our society. Yet legislature insists on making schools start later to accommodate the sleep cycles of adolescents. You do not need science to figure out that students in middle and high schools like to stay up late and then stay in bed in the mornings. I do not know about you but eight hours is eight hours whether it goes from midnight to 8 am or 10 pm to 6 am. Why don't the parents take back the responsibility and make them go to bed at a decent time. This early-to-bed approach has the benefit of not needing taxpayer
dollars. We won't waste lawmakers' time debating the merits of an 8:15
a.m. start time vs. 8:20 a.m. We will also be able to use that time on more pressing matters such as mobile applications and communication services used in schools as well as video conferencing for tutoring. Just imagine the possibilities.
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