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WINGED WORDS, PHRASEOLOGICAL UNITS
Directory / Winged words, phraseological units / What does the coming day prepare for me?

Winged words, phraseological units. Meaning, history of origin, examples of use

Winged words, phraseological units

Directory / Winged words, phraseological units

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What is the coming day for me?

Pushkin A.S.
Pushkin A.S.

Phraseologism: What is the coming day for me?

Meaning: Thinking about the future, about destiny.

Origin: From the novel in verse "Eugene Onegin" (1823-1831) by A. S. Pushkin (1799-1837) (ch. 6, stanza 21). The line became popular after the production of P. I. Tchaikovsky's opera (1878). It sounds in Lensky's aria: "Where, where have you gone, my golden days of spring ..."

Random phraseology:

Normal heroes always go around.

Meaning:

About someone's strange, unreasonable, indirect ways to achieve the goal (jokingly-iron.).

Origin:

From the song of the robbers, written by the composer Boris Tchaikovsky to the verses of Vadim Nikolaevich Korostylev (1923-1997) for the film "Aibolit-66" (1967, director Rolan Bykov). This song of the robbers is sung by Barmaley and his accomplices.

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Random news from the Archive

Brain wave control 08.12.2019

Diagnosable electrical vibrations of the brain are called rhythms. Recently, researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology managed to teach subjects to manipulate their own alpha waves, thereby increasing attention when performing a certain task. Alpha waves describe the electrical activity of the brain at a frequency of 8-12 Hz. The results of the study, which is published in the journal Neuron, may in the future provide an opportunity for people who experience learning problems to get feedback on their brain activity.

This is a completely non-invasive way to monitor and test the role of various types of brain activity.

The study found that by suppressing alpha waves in one half of the parietal cortex - the lobe responsible for touch, the ability to navigate in space, and attention - the subjects paid more attention to objects on the screen. It should be noted that the relationship between attention and alpha waves has been established in previous studies. At the same time, according to the authors of the scientific work, it still remained unclear whether this connection is a by-product of another process, or whether alpha waves directly control attention.

The subjects were asked to use neurofeedback, which described their alpha waves. They had to look at the grating pattern in the center of the monitor, and put in the mental effort to increase the contrast of the pattern, making it more visible. The contrast became more pronounced when the asymmetry of alpha waves in both the left and right hemispheres of the parietal cortex increased based on data obtained by monitoring brain activity. In other words, alpha waves were suppressed in one hemisphere of the parietal cortex, but increased in the other.

One group of subjects managed to suppress alpha waves in the left hemisphere, and the other - in the right. Moreover, both groups showed opposite results: heightened response or attention to flashes of light on the right and left side of the screen, respectively. Surprisingly, after ten minutes of the exercise, the subjects learned to increase the contrast, potentially increasing their control over their attention. After the experiment, the subjects told the researchers that they knew they were controlling the contrast, but didn't know how.

The scientists concluded that the manipulation of alpha waves did indeed control the attention of the subjects. However, several significant questions remain, including how exactly brain waves are controlled, as well as how long they can be controlled. What's more, the researchers don't yet know if this technique can be applied in real life to teaching people with behavioral or concentration problems. It also remains unclear whether this method is applicable to other types of brain waves, such as beta waves, which are associated with Parkinson's disease. At the same time, the experiment seems to demonstrate that we have an amazing degree of subconscious control over the mechanics of our own brains.

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