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For me it is All About Being of Service & Living the Life of the Give-Away....

Being Mindful of those who are unable to speak for themselves; our Non-Two Legged Relations and the Future Generations.

It's about walking on the Canka Luta Waste Behind the Cannunpa and the ceremonies.

It's about Mindfulness and Respect. It's about Honesty and owning up to my foibles.

It's about: Mi Takuye Oyacin

Saturday, January 10, 2015

Reading Fiction


Image Credit: Flickr

Science Shows Something Surprising About People Who Still Read Fiction

They tend to be more 
empathetic toward 
others. 
It's not news that reading has 
countless benefits: 
Poetry stimulates parts of the 
brain linked to memory
 and sparks self-reflection; kids 
who read the Harry 
Potter books tend to be 
better people. But what 
about 
people who only read 
newspapers? Or people who 
scan 
Twitter all day? Are those 
readers' brains different 
from literary junkies who 
peruse the pages of 19th 
century fictional classics? 
Short answer: Yes — reading 
enhances connectivity 
in the brain. But readers of 
fiction? They're a special breed. 
The study: A 2013 Emory 
University study looked 
at the brains of fiction readers. 
Researchers 
compared the brains of people 
after they read to 
the brains of people who didn't 
read. The brains of 
the readers — they read 
Robert Harris' Pompeii over 
a nine-day period at night — 
showed more activity 
in certain areas than those 
who didn't read.
Specifically, researchers found 
heightened connectivity 
in the left temporal cortex, 
part of the brain typically 
associated with understanding 
language. The 
researchers also found 
increased connectivity in 
the central sulcus of the brain, 
the primary sensory
 region, which helps the brain 
visualize movement. 
When you visualize yourself 
scoring a touchdown 
while playing football, you can 
actually somewhat 
feel yourself in the action. A similar 
process happens 
when you envision yourself as
 a character in a 
book: You can take on the emotions
 they are feeling.

Source: CaptPiper/Flickr

It may sound hooey hooey, 
but it's true: Fiction 
readers make great friends 
as they tend to be more
 aware of others' emotions. 
This is further apparent in a 
2013 study that 
investigated emotional
 transportation, which 
is how sensitive people are 
to others' feelings. 
Researchers calculated 
emotional transportation 
by having participants express 
how a story they 
read affected them emotionally
 on a five-point 
scale — for example, how th
e main character's
 success made them feel, 
and how sorry they felt 
for the characters. 
In the study, empathy was
 only apparent in the 
groups of people who read
 fiction and who were 
emotionally transported. 
Meanwhile, those who 
were not transported 
demonstrated a decrease 
in empathy. 

Source: brioso/Flickr







Need more proof? Psychologists
 David Comer 
Kidd and Emanuele Castano
 at the New School 
for Social Research focused
 on the effect of 
literary fiction, rather than 
popular fiction, on readers. 
For the experiment, 
participants either read a 
piece of literary fiction or 
popular fiction, followed 
by identifying facial emotions
 solely through the 
eyes. Those who read literary
 fiction scored 
consistently higher, by 
about 10%. 
"We believe that one critical
 difference between 
lit and pop fiction is the extent
 to which the 
characters are complex, 
ambiguous, difficult 
to get to know, etc. 
(in other words, human) 
versus stereotyped, simple," 
Castano wrote to Mic

Source: brunaferrara/Flickr

Literary fiction enhanced 
participants' empathy 
because they had to work
 harder at fleshing 
out the characters. The 
process of trying to 
understand what those 
characters are feelings 
and the motives behind 
them is the same in our 
relationships with other 
people. 
As the Guardian reports, Kidd 
argues that applying
 the skills we use when reading 
critically to the real
 world makes sense because 
"the same psychological 
processes are used to navigate
 fiction and real 
relationships. Fiction is not
 just a simulator of a
 social experience, it is a
 social experience."
The world around is as rea
l as it gets. Might as
 well indulge in some fiction.
 Science says it'll
 make you better at interacting
 with people. 

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