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Editor in Chief Mohamed Wadie

Brain Training... Main Key to Shed off Excessive Weight- Study


Thu 31 Oct 2019 | 04:29 PM
Ahmed Moamar

A group of scientists conducted a new study in the United Kingdom (UK) and the team members found that training brain in a defined method help obese people to shed off the excessive weight.

It is worth to mention that various centers of brain lead all biological activities in the human body and control  functions of systems.

Early experiments prove that applications and activities through the Internet support power of will of a person and help him reduce consuming calories by at least 200 units a day.

The study made clear that using the Internet leads man to pick healthy food.

Participants who go under examination related to the study lost a kilogram every month by training to use  the applications and activities via the Internet.

Professor Chris Chambers, Cardiff University, UK, said that smart phones will be the promising method to get suggestions encourage people to chose healthy food.

The simple applications depend on pressing a button as the person sees the healthy foods such as banana or carrot.

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/scientists-demonstrate-direct-brain-to-brain-communication-in-humans/

He/she would be advised to avoid fat or sugary foods like chocolate or chips then fast foods become less attractive.

This new method aims to help people to  take the right  decision to choose healthy food.

The researchers plan to apply the new method on 50 thousand volunteers later this year.

They will use an application to include preferred  or prohibited foods to eat in high or lesser intakes.

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Humans have evolved a rich repertoire of communication, from gesture to sophisticated languages. All of these forms of communication link otherwise separate inpiduals in such a way that they can share and express their singular experiences and work together collaboratively.

In a new study, technology replaces language as a means of communicating by directly linking the activity of human brains. Electrical activity from the brains of a pair of human subjects was transmitted to the brain of a third inpidual in the form of magnetic signals, which conveyed an instruction to perform a task in a particular manner.

This study opens the door to extraordinary new means of human collaboration while, at the same time, blurring fundamental notions about inpidual identity and autonomy in disconcerting ways.