Tuesday, October 20, 2009

New Jouralism


New Journalism was a style of writing which was first used in the 1960s. New journalism was literary techniques that were not really accepted by many other authors of this time. Tom Wolfe published his first new journalism article in 1963. New journalism brought new approaches to areas of writing. Authors soon started to use his new technique of writing, because it was seen as very helpful. In my opinion new journalism is a great way of writing, not only for the writer but the readers. It makes it more interesting for the readers, and it gives the authors new ideas on what to write.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Journalism

"Everybody, everybody everywhere, has his own movie going, his own scenario, and everybody is acting his movie out like mad, only most people don’t know that is what they’re trapped by, their little script."(Wolfe)

Huxley Footnote


Aldous Huxley is a famous author who wrote The Doors of Perception in which he explains his use of mescalin. Mescaline is a hallucinogen obtained from a small, spineless cactus Peyote. In earlier times it was used for traditional religious reasons. (http://www.drugs.com/mescaline.html) Huxley instead used it for a more different reason; he said that everyone should take “chemical vacations”. I agree with Huxley that everyone at a point might need a break from reality and there busy lives. Which to Huxley’s break was the excessive use of mescalin, not everyone may agree with the way he did it, but everyone has there own way of dealing with life.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Abstract: Chewing Gum Can Improve Memory.


New research shows that chewing gum can improve your memory. One of the first studies they did was in 2002, researchers took seventy five adults and split them into three different groups. The first group chewed gum for a twenty minute test of memory and attention. The second group mimicked the chewing, and the third group didn't chew at all. Researchers found that people who chewed gum scored better on long term and short term memory tests. The explanation for these findings are the brain activity in the hippo campus increases while people chew. So this might be a factor in improved memory. Also chewing can increase heart rate and increase blood flow which delivers more oxygen to the brain. A recent study in 2009 stated that not only gum improves memory but any type of candy. They had students volunteer to test whether word recall was improved chewing gum or cinnamon candy. They found that there was no difference in the groups and it might be that having your mouth moving while learning can help cue up your memory. http://www.divinecaroline.com/22177/81478-chewing-gum-improve-memory--say