By: Alvaro Fernandez
Today we introduce a highly evolved version of brain teasers.
How quickly can you provide the correct answer to these 3 questions?
- 1) What is going on in these 2 pictures below?
- 2) what may explain it?
- 3) Is there some element out of place?
Ready. Set. Go! Read the rest of this entry »
By: Alvaro Fernandez
Dr. Pascale Michelon recently shared with our readers which brain areas and cognitive functions are engaged as we solve the type of brain teaser known as Spot the Difference, where we have to find the differences between two versions of one image: Read the rest of this entry »
By: Alvaro Fernandez
Readers have contributed a good number of haikus on brain-related topics. Below you have my  Favorite 7, and many other fun ones…which ones do you like the most?
Also, Can you write a haiku describing anything crossing your mind now? Remember the simple rules: write 3 lines,
which don’t need to rhyme, containing 5,7, and 5 syllables. You can leave your haiku as a comment for extra points…
My Favorite 7 Brain and Mind Haikus
- Techne, the philosopher, wonders:
Solve the big questions:
How do I know when I know?
Who knows the knower?
- Steve, the environmentalist, requests:
Neuroplastic good.
Plastic, though lasts forever.
Always recycle!
Read the rest of this entry »
By: Alvaro Fernandez
It is always good to stimulate our minds and to learn a bit about how our brains work. Here you have a selection of the 50 Brain Teasers that people have enjoyed the most in our blog and speaking engagements.
Fun experiments on how our brains work
1. Do you think you know the colors?: try the Stroop Test.
2. Can you count?: Basketball attention experiment (Interactive).
3. Who is this?: A very important little guy (Interactive).
4. How is this possible?.
5. Take the Senses Challenge (Interactive).
6. Are there more brain connections or leaves in the Amazon?.
Attention
7. How are your divided attention skills? check out “Inside and Outside” (Interactive, from MindFit).
8. Can you walk and chew gum at the same time? try “Two in One” (Interactive, from MindFit)
9. Count the Fs in this sentence.
10. What do you see? can you alternate between 2 views?.
Memory
11. Easy one…draw the face of a penny, please. Read the rest of this entry »
By: Alvaro Fernandez

Welcome to the August 19, 2007 edition of medicine 2.0.
Medicine 2.0? Yes, some pioneers are already making good use of Web 2.0 tools to improve Medicine in a new, collaborative way. This blog carnival seems to me to be, in itself, living proof.
Let’s see.
You may wonder, what exactly is “Medicine 2.0″? well, Constructive Medicine takes a stab at it, showing how it may be much older than we thought.
You want an example? see a blogger (Bertalan) chronicle an amazing medical simulation in Second Life. Â
Some bloggers provide great overview posts:
- A Beginner’s Guide to Reading Medical Blogs (Vitum Medicinus) provides a fantastic resource covering everything you need to know about medical blogs and blogs in general, including why to subscribe to RSS feeds (for How, keep reading).
- Nursing and Web 2.0 (Universal Health) is a thoughtful post on the gap between nursing research and practice…and how blogging and 2.0 can help.
- Essay on the effect of Web 2.0 on the future of medical practice and education (Medical Journal of Australia), that provides a great overview of medicine 2.0, defining and listing blogs, wikis, podcasts and more.
- Social science as infectious disease (Mining Drug Space) is an essay on how blogs are contributing to knowledge creation and exchange, and includes the writer’s reflections on blogging.
…while others are already addressing some of the important points raised:
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