Sunday 8 August 2010

Mind Mapping


What’s the relationship between brain and mind? Is mental illness physical condition rather than sickness of the soul? Would it be possible to make a complete brain map that tells us different functions of different brain parts and their relationships? It just scares me what we call ‘spiritual experience’ might be actually heavily related to physical conditions of brain.

Rita Carter, 2006, Mapping the mind, http://interactive.usc.edu/members/doox/archives/2006/02/, Date Accessed – July, 2010

Sunday 1 August 2010

Mapping



Benefits and Uses
I think I already gave away the benefits of mind mapping and why mind maps work. Basically, mind mapping avoids dull, linear thinking, jogging your creativity and making note taking fun again.
But what can we use mind maps for?
• Note taking
• Brainstorming (individually or in groups)
• Problem solving
• Studying and memorization
• Planning
• Researching and consolidating information from multiple sources
• Presenting information
• Gaining insight on complex subjects
• Jogging your creativity

How to Draw a Mind Map
Drawing a mind map is as simple as 1-2-3:
• Start in the middle of a blank page, writing or drawing the idea you intend to develop. I would suggest that you use the page in landscape orientation.
• Develop the related subtopics around this central topic, connecting each of them to the centre with a line.
• Repeat the same process for the subtopics, generating lower-level subtopics as you see fit, connecting each of those to the corresponding subtopic.

Luciano Passuello, 2007, What is Mind Mapping? , http://litemind.com/what-is-mind-mapping/, Date accessed July, 2010