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Rating: Summary: Who is Snowdon Parlette? Review: I don't have a review, but was uncertain how to direct the question I have...which is, who is Snowdon Parlette? I searched for biographical info and found none. What I have read of the book thus far seems helpful and engaging, but I would like to know more about Snowdon Parlette (which I perceive to be a pseudonym) and his credentials. How is he qualified to draw these conclusions and write this book? I will submit an honest rating when I've finished the book and ascertained whether or not he has data to back up his assertions.
Rating: Summary: While it seems helpful. . . Review: I recently finished reading this book as an assignment for a graduate class in which we had to analyze a pop psychology book. I have to say, it fits in with what I believe most of pop psych to be: dumbed-down science that does not in actuality tell you anything. While Mr. Parlette does appear to have a basic knowledge of the brain and its anatomy, the 'exercises' he details in his book in no way give the reader any indication of how they are supposed to enhance brain functioning. If a book is supposed to improve my cognitive abilities, I would appreciate references that back up the predictions as well as some sort of follow-up plan to denote any supposed improvements, neither of which I found in this book. Please, I ask all of you to think about who is giving you the information before you follow it - in this case, it is someone who has neither credentials nor research to back up his statements.
Rating: Summary: While it seems helpful. . . Review: I recently finished reading this book as an assignment for a graduate class in which we had to analyze a pop psychology book. I have to say, it fits in with what I believe most of pop psych to be: dumbed-down science that does not in actuality tell you anything. While Mr. Parlette does appear to have a basic knowledge of the brain and its anatomy, the 'exercises' he details in his book in no way give the reader any indication of how they are supposed to enhance brain functioning. If a book is supposed to improve my cognitive abilities, I would appreciate references that back up the predictions as well as some sort of follow-up plan to denote any supposed improvements, neither of which I found in this book. Please, I ask all of you to think about who is giving you the information before you follow it - in this case, it is someone who has neither credentials nor research to back up his statements.
Rating: Summary: The Brain Workout Book Review: Snowdon Parlette didn't fill The Brain Workout Book with the brain boggler type of exercises seen in magazines. He opted instead for a collection of simple, practical, and often fun, activities. For example, he suggests that if you're right-handed, try using your left hand to hold a key and unlock a door. Parlette first dispels common myths about brains, such as whether brain power depends on brain size. He also says that intelligence is "an individual measure of how we employ the brain power and the talents we have been given. In other words, intelligent people make the most of what they have." His exercises are all designed to help stimulate your brain to enable you to make the most of what you have. He offers a simple quiz for determining how fit your brain is. He says "a fit brain welcomes new interactions, new challenges, new experiences." We have to get out of our daily rut. His first exercise is to simply "take a completely different route home from work" once a week. One section of the book discusses the functions of the right brain and the left brain, and how to stimulate each side. Putting together a jigsaw puzzle is a right brain stimulus, while working a crossword puzzle delights the left-brain. Reciting written material, such as a poem, aloud gets both halves of the brain working together. Parlette then explains the different kinds of memory and provides exercises that help increase the ability to remember. He also includes a chapter on exercising your imagination through daydreaming. Another section of his book describes special brain exercises for writers, artists, actors, musicians, scientists, and athletes. He also discusses how to rest the brain when suffering from mental fatigue. "For exercise our brain wants stimulation, fresh stimulation, new stimulation. Our brain needs to experience the unfamiliar, to go where it has not gone before," says Parlette. The Brain Workout Book helps all readers learn the best ways to give the brain the stimulation it craves and to allow it to travel to new levels of functioning.
Rating: Summary: The Brain Workout Book Review: Snowdon Parlette didn't fill The Brain Workout Book with the brain boggler type of exercises seen in magazines. He opted instead for a collection of simple, practical, and often fun, activities. For example, he suggests that if you're right-handed, try using your left hand to hold a key and unlock a door. Parlette first dispels common myths about brains, such as whether brain power depends on brain size. He also says that intelligence is "an individual measure of how we employ the brain power and the talents we have been given. In other words, intelligent people make the most of what they have." His exercises are all designed to help stimulate your brain to enable you to make the most of what you have. He offers a simple quiz for determining how fit your brain is. He says "a fit brain welcomes new interactions, new challenges, new experiences." We have to get out of our daily rut. His first exercise is to simply "take a completely different route home from work" once a week. One section of the book discusses the functions of the right brain and the left brain, and how to stimulate each side. Putting together a jigsaw puzzle is a right brain stimulus, while working a crossword puzzle delights the left-brain. Reciting written material, such as a poem, aloud gets both halves of the brain working together. Parlette then explains the different kinds of memory and provides exercises that help increase the ability to remember. He also includes a chapter on exercising your imagination through daydreaming. Another section of his book describes special brain exercises for writers, artists, actors, musicians, scientists, and athletes. He also discusses how to rest the brain when suffering from mental fatigue. "For exercise our brain wants stimulation, fresh stimulation, new stimulation. Our brain needs to experience the unfamiliar, to go where it has not gone before," says Parlette. The Brain Workout Book helps all readers learn the best ways to give the brain the stimulation it craves and to allow it to travel to new levels of functioning.
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