Changes To Brain When Challenged - Deepstash

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Changes To Brain When Challenged

  • Scientists know much less about how the brain changes in response to mental challenges. One major difference between the body and the brain is that the cells in the adult brain do not generally divide and form new brain cells. There are a few exceptions, such as in the hippocampus, where new neurons can grow
  • Instead, the brain rewires those network by strengthening or weakening the various connections between neurons and also by adding new connections or getting rid of old ones. There can also be an increase in the amount of myelin, which allows nerve signals to travel more quickly

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MORE IDEAS ON THIS

Deliberate Practice Traits

Deliberate practice develops skills that other people have already figured out how to do and for which effective training techniques have been established. The practice regimen should be designed and overseen by a teacher or coach who is familiar with the abilities of expert performers and with h...

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Deliberate practice takes place outside one’s comfort zone and requires a student to constantly try things that are just beyond his or her current abilities. Thus it demands near-maximal effort, which is generally not enjoyable.

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Deliberate practice involves well-defined, specific goals and often involves improving some aspect of the target performance; it is not aimed at some vague overall improvement. Once an overall goal has been set, a teacher or coach will develop a plan for making a series of small changes that will...

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Deliberate practice both produces and depends on effective mental representations. Improving performance goes hand in hand with improving mental representations; as one’s performance improves, the representations become more detailed and effective, in turn making it possible to improve even more....

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Deliberate practice involves feedback and modification of efforts in response to that feedback. Early in the training process much of the feedback will come from the teacher or coach, who will monitor progress, point out problems, and offer ways to address those problems. With time and experience...

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Deliberate practice nearly always involves building or modifying previously acquired skills by focusing on particular aspects of those skills and working to improve them specifically; over time this step-by-step improvement will eventually lead to expert performance. Because of the way that new s...

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Misconception About Practice

  • People often misunderstand this because they assume that the continued driving or tennis playing or pie baking is a form of practice and that if they keep doing it they are bound to get better at it, slowly perhaps, but better nonetheless
  • But when we don't get out of our comfort zone...

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Potential is an expandable vessel, shaped by various thing we do throughout our live

ANDERS ERICSSON

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Usual Approach To Practice

Usual Approach To Practice

  1. Start with a general idea of what we want to do
  2. Get instruction from teacher, coach or book
  3. Practice until we reach acceptable level
  4. Let it become automatic
  5. We stopped improving

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Deliberate practice is deliberate, that is, it requires a person’s full attention and conscious actions. It isn’t enough to simply follow a teacher’s or coach’s directions. The student must concentrate on the specific goal for his or her practice activity so that adjustments can be made to contro...

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Mental Representation

  • A mental representation is a mental structure that corresponds to an object, an idea, a collection of information, or anything else, concrete or abstract, that the brain is thinking about
  • A simple example is a visual image. Mention the Mona Lisa, for instance, and many people will im...

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Purposeful Practice In A Nutshell

Get outside your comfort zone but do it in a focused way, with clear goals, a plan for reaching those goals, and a way to monitor your progress. Oh, and figure out a way to maintain your motivation.

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Difference Between Traditional Practice And Deliberate Practice

The traditional approach is not designed to challenge homeostasis (comfort zone). It assumes, consciously or not, that learning is all about fulfilling your innate potential and that you can develop a particular skill or ability without getting too far out of your comfort zone

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Purposeful Practice

Purposeful Practice

  • Has well-defined, specific goals
  • All about putting a bunch of baby steps together to reach a longer-term goal
  • Purposeful practice are focused
  • Purposeful practice involve feedback
  • Purposeful practice require getting out of one comfort zone

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Difference Between Traditional Practice And Deliberate Practice

With deliberate practice, however, the goal is not just to reach your potential but to build it, to make things possible that were not possible before. This requires challenging homeostasis—getting out of your comfort zone—and forcing your brain or your body to adapt. But once yo...

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CURATED FROM

IDEAS CURATED BY

ianpuang

Welcome, I post what i read Everything I post is in the book, I'll quote it if it's my own opinion

The book summarizes the findings of Ericsson's 30-year research into the general nature and acquisition of expertise.

Other curated ideas on this topic:

How The Brain Works

The brain’s building blocks are neurons: nerve cells that receive and transmit signals along neural pathways. Certain pathways are forged at birth. Others can be manipulated by learning. 

So when you’re stuck in a rut, your brain’s neurons could literally be stuck on a neural pathway...

The idle-brain theory

Irrespective of what a person is doing, the entire brain is generally active and, depending on the task, some areas are more active than others. 

People can always learn new ideas and new skills, not by tapping into some unused part of the brain, but by forming new or stronger connection...

The connection between walking and thinking

The connection between walking and thinking

  • Walking changes our chemistry. The heart pumps faster, circulating more blood and oxygen to all the organs and the brain.
  • Walking promotes new connections between brain cells and increases the volume of the hippocampus (a brain region essential fo...

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