To achieve the "Unconscious competent" state

Yes It is useful feature in that perspective. Gecko software has also a dedicated tool for that and I'm also building such a tool but specific to my trading system.


Quote from Stardust:

Ensign Software has a very interestng feature called Playback. Price data can be played back, tick by tick in any time frame and set to any speed up to 10 times normal speed. By rapidly playing back data at high speeds the sub-concious can be "programmed" to intuitvely identify price patterns and trader set-ups. It a very effective practice tool, imo.
 
Quote from harrytrader:

This is an interesting practical framework idea for achieving that:

Building Learning into Everyday Work
http://www.gurteen.com/gurteen/gurteen.nsf/0/92D41499A691935C802569910043207C/

I am building tools for my learning group inspiring from this idea which is coherent within the higher framework I am using which is famous Deming's PDCA wheel (Plan Do Check Action) of CONTINUOUS progress.

This is the implementation of the idea: integrating learning in everyday's tool see:
http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&threadid=28344&perpage=6&pagenumber=2

What I intend to add is configuring the tool either to be in learning mode for people new to the method, either in expert mode for people already accustomed to the system.

<IMG SRC=http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/attachment.php?s=&postid=430537>
 
Have you tried expanding your mind with sound? Hemi sync seems interesting.

2 frequencies in each ear makes the brain turn it into a third. So the brainwaves get syncronized.

There are different kinds: For better learning, confidence, anxiety and lucid dreaming + obe (if you have heard about it).
 
Quote from callmeput:

[...]

2 frequencies in each ear makes the brain turn it into a third. So the brainwaves get syncronized.

[...]

Hi callmeput,

You should have a look at a book on acoustics and hearing physiology. What do you mean by "synchronized brainwaves"?

nononsense
 
A sound played in the left ear is heard as a single tone.


A sound played in the right ear is also heard as a single tone.


When played together the vibrato perceived is called binaural beating.
 
To help nononsense i post some faq from hemi sync website here.

A: The audio-guidance process works quite simply by sending different sounds (tones) to each ear by stereo headphones. The two hemispheres of the brain then act in unison to "hear" a third signal - the difference between the two tones. This is not an actual sound, but an electrical signal that can only be perceived within the brain by both brain hemispheres working together. The result is a focused, whole-brain state known as hemispheric synchronization, or "Hemi-Sync" - an optimal condition for improving human performance.
 
Quote from callmeput:

To help nononsense i post some faq from hemi sync website here.

A: The audio-guidance process works quite simply by sending different sounds (tones) to each ear by stereo headphones. The two hemispheres of the brain then act in unison to "hear" a third signal - the difference between the two tones. This is not an actual sound, but an electrical signal that can only be perceived within the brain by both brain hemispheres working together. The result is a focused, whole-brain state known as hemispheric synchronization, or "Hemi-Sync" - an optimal condition for improving human performance.

Hi callmeput,

Thank you for your sincere efforts trying to help me.
I must say I tried to help you too!

May I politely suggest you look one in a book about physiology of the inner ear. You will discover something like the "cochlea" which is the basic transducer responsable for the phenomena you are alluding to.

The mechanism of "hearing" beat notes you are alluding to in your description listening to two different tones is actually rather complex and not completely understood. This involves generally a nonlinear mechanism as is easily demonstrated mathematically in any physics book. It has nothing to do with piping one tone into the left ear and another in the right ear. Beat tones are generated by a single ear! The nonlinear mechanism seems to reside in the cochlea itself.

Now going to your "synchronization of brain waves" is a rather extravagant for my understanding. I think you are walking on very thin ice here.

Be good,

nononsense
 
Quote from alain:

a german neurologist called Frederic Vester has written some valuable things about the process of learning and the usage of information. I have read several of his books years ago but I think they are only available in german.
You "should" translate them - I would be interested in buying them in English...

nitro
 
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