''' * GIRLS -STUDENTS- GURUS * '''
TALKING TO YOURSELF is a damn good sign........ Thank God for that! For off late, I have found, Zilli, muttering away incomprehensible jumbo-mumbo.
Well,
Zilli, and Students of the World : One thing that you will get to
learn in Life is that Life doesn't get handed to you on a platter.
You have to grab every opportunity.
Latest Research shows that Most importantly, we also talk to ourselves a lot.
WHEN NO ONE IS AROUND -we're all guilty of committing heinous social crimes......right?
We
pick our noses. We spend ridiculous amounts of time scrolling through
texts, emails, and histogram feeds while sitting on the toilet until our
legs turn numb.
We use our index figure to spoon Nutells into our mouths at 2am just for sake of pleasure.
Most importantly, we also talk to ourselves a Lot. While this last social crime is older than Nutella and indoor plumbing, it's a habit many of us are still embarrassed to admit.
According to Paloma Mari Beffa, a PhD, senior lecturer at psychology at Bangor University, speaking aloud is a good sign.
In
a New York magazine published a science of Us, Dr Mari Bella delved
described our ''inner talk'' as a healthy mechanism for maintaining a
''fit brain.
When we speak to ourselves we ''organise our thoughts, plan actions, consolidate memory, and mandate emotions.''
Therefore talking aloud is merely just an extension of this. So don't worry, it's totally normal..
In a study, 28 participants were asked to read a list of instructions silently or aloud to themselves.
The participants were then tasked with completing the instructions. Dr Mari-Beffa discovered that those who read the instructions aloud had better concentration levels and performance levels.
So
the next time you are repeating.... ''keys, wallet, and phone'' in an
effort to remember your essentials before leaving your home, remember
this isn't just some eccentric way to help your memory.
Your brain responds favourably to the sound of your own voice telling it what to so.
Still
don't believe it? Then look no farther than an intense sports game,
where it's often pretty natural to hear athletes give themselves a pep
talk in an effort to remain focused.
''This
can probably help explain why so many sports professionals, such as
tennis players, frequently talk to themselves during competitions, often
at crucial points in a game, saying things like:
''Come on!'' to help them stay focused, she said in New York magazine.
''Our
ability to generate explicit self-instructions is actually one of the
best tools we have for cognitive control, and it simply works better
when said aloud.''
And then, advance research has also found that Girls are more vulnerable and prone to asthma :
Absence of testosterone girls may explain why females are double like to develop asthma post-puberty.
This is a finding that could lead to new treatments for the lung condition among women, research has showed.
The
results of research in France revealed that the primary male sex
hormone suppresses the production of a type of immune cell that triggers
allergic asthma and acts as a barrier against males developing the
inflammatory airway condition.
''Our research
shows high levels of testosterone in males protect them against the
development of allergic asthma,'' said Cyril Steillet at the Physiopathology Centre of Toulouse-Purpan in France.
''We
identified that testosterone is a protein inhibitor of innate lymphoid
cells, a newly-described immune cell that has been associated with the
initiation of asthma,'' Seillet said.
These innate lymphoid cells -or ILC2s -'sense' testosterone and respond by halting production of the cells.
''Testosterone
directly acts on ILC2s by inhibiting their proliferation. So in males,
you have less ILC2s in the lungs and this directly corelates with the reduced severity of asthma,'' Seillet said in a report published in the Journal of Experimental Medicine.
ILC2s are found in the lungs, skin and other organs.
These
cells produce inflammatory proteins that can cause lung
inflammation and damage in response to common triggers for allergic
asthma, such as pollen, dust mites, cigarette smoke and pet hair.
Understanding
the mechanism that drives the sex differences in allergic asthma could
lead to new treatments for the disease, the researchers said.
With
most loving and respectful dedication to all the Women, Wives, Mothers,
Sisters, Daughters, and Students, Professors and Teachers of the World.
See Ya all on !WOW! -the World Students Society and............
Twitter-!E-WOW! -the Ecosystem 2011:
'''Life style- !WOW! '''
Good Night and God Bless
SAM Daily Times - the Voice of the Voiceless
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