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                              |  Thursday, 5 July 2007  | 
                             
                            
                              |   Study Of Albert Einstein's Brain.......................   | 
                             
                            
                              Was Einstein's Brain Different? 
 
     Of course it was-people's brains are as different as their faces. In his lifetime many wondered if there was anything especially different in Einstein's. He insisted that on his death his brain be made available for research. When Einstein died in 1955, pathologist Thomas Harvey quickly preserved the brain and made samples and sections. He reported that he could see nothing unusual. The variations were within the range of normal human variations. There the matter rested until 1999. Inspecting samples that Harvey had carefully preserved, Sandra F. Witelson and colleagues discovered that Einstein's brain lacked a particular small wrinkle (the parietal operculum) that most people have. Perhaps in compensation, other regions on each side were a bit enlarged-the inferior parietal lobes. These regions are known to have something to do with visual imagery and mathematical thinking. Thus Einstein was apparently better equipped than most people for a certain type of thinking. Yet others of his day were probably at least as well equipped-Henri Poincaré and David Hilbert, for example, were formidable visual and mathematical thinkers, both were on the trail of relativity, yet Einstein got far ahead of them. What he did with his brain depended on the nurturing of family and friends, a solid German and Swiss education, and his own bold personality. A late bloomer: Even at the age of nine Einstein spoke hesitantly, and his parents feared that he was below average intelligence. Did he have a learning or personality disability (such as "Asperger's syndrome," a mild form of autism)? There is not enough historical evidence to say. Probably Albert was simply a thoughtful and somewhat shy child. If he had some difficulties in school, the problem was probably resistance to the authoritarian German teachers, perhaps compounded by the awkward situation of a Jewish boy in a Catholic school. | 
                             
                            
                              posted by The Key For Succes @ 3:01 am         | 
                             
                            
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                              |   Feeling Bored In Office......................Try This   | 
                             
                            
                              If you  find it very boring in the office, here are some tips: 
  1. Form a detective agency to  find out who is quitting next.
  2. Make blank calls to your  Boss.
  3. Send mails from lotus notes (outlook) to your internet mail (and  immediately get to the internet and see who reaches first, you or your mail?)  and read them there, and note down the time they take to reach there. Then  do vice versa....... ...... !!
  4. Rearrange the furniture, i.e. flick  someone else's chair just to irritate him/her.
  5. Count your fingers (and  toes if you still get bored).
  6. Watch other people changing their facial  ex-pressions while working and try changing your ex-pressions also.
  7.  Try to stretch status meetings as longer as possible, just by asking silly  doubts.
  8. Make faces at strangers in office.
  9. Have a two hour  lunch; it's a big social occasion.
  10. Learn to whistle.
  11.  Revise last week's newspaper.
  12. Hold "How fast my computer boots"  competitions.
  13. Practice aiming the coffee cup into the  dustbin.
  14. Enhence your Literature skills. you can author "1001  innovative ways to waste your day" to help your collegues
  15. Pick up  phone and dial non-existing nos. | 
                             
                            
                              posted by The Key For Succes @ 2:40 am         | 
                             
                            
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