Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Norman's is not the Normal//Thanksgiving

Norman Rockwell's family meal painting is sometimes know as Norman Rockwell's Thanksgiving.


But he called it Freedom from Want, as part of a four oil painting series based on Franklin D. Roosevelt's 1941 State of the Union Address (aka The Four Freedoms Speech):


Norman Rockwell (1894-1978) is regarded as one of the most prominent painters in 20th century United States. His works tend to reflect American consumerism, culture, as well as social tensions:

The Problem We All Live With, 1964


If you have a mental picture of 1950s, it is probably oiled over by Norman Rockwell's work.
He worked for the Saturday Evening Post, one of the most widely circulated publications among the American middle class from the 20s to the 60s–the trunk of the 20th century.


Rockwell's art was so popular with the American people that newsstand sales of The Saturday Evening Post would increase by 50,000 to 75,000 copies every time his art appeared on the cover. <-----(thanks)

ALSO, Rockwell had a 64-year relationship with the Boy Scouts of America, for which he worked as a staff artist with Boys' Life Magazine. He was promoted to magazine arts' editor when he was only 19.


and some more Rockwell:


We're coming full circle: Which is your favorite farce/recreation/adjusted for inflation:

http://humor.gunaxin.com/rockwells-thanksgiving-parodies/178165

(im making you copy and paste it into your browser yes)



unless u click hur



Saturday, November 21, 2015

ANIME//body positions\\mannerisms


EMBODIED COGNITION: 
a growing research program in cognitive science that emphasizes the formative role the environment plays in the development of cognitive processes.

that's the first response from google. 
Let's review the concept while lying comfy with a cherished ***anime***
        
Introduction to Embodied Cognition Through Media
         Death Note, a Japanese manga series that has gained popularity for its anime adaptation, follows a young boy who seeks to better the world (VIZ, 2014).  From manga to television set, audiences watch as the boy, Light Yagami, attempts to cleanse the social landscape of evil with the help of a death note, or supernatural notebook, that allows the holder to kill any known person whose name he or she transcribes. 
         From a rating pool of 530,473 who watch the Death Note anime, the show scores an 8.75 out of 10 (myanimelist.net).  The high rating lends to media success through synergistic media deals.  The stories and iconography of the anime echo those of the original manga edition, from author Tsugumi Ohba and artist Takeshi Obata.  What occupies the minds of forum fans, however, is not Ohba’s moral dilemmas, or Light’s questionable heroism; instead, they ask, why does L, another character, squat “when he can jolly well just sit?” (Minitokyo.net).
         Figure 1 shows a freeze frame of L in his characteristic stance.  He is crouched over with both feet flat on the armchair, facing a porcelain tea set.  Forum users suggest explanations for his behavior: he thinks he is so “special that he can’t do what normal people do”; “he probably sat like that as a child and it’s a habit he can’t get rid of”; “his intellect will drop by 40% if he sits normally.”  Later posts do in fact corroborate the statistic; Ohba’s manga notes that if L were to sit “normally,” with both feet flat on the ground, his concentration power would drop. 
         Authors and artists often create behavior specific to characters.  The Big Bang Theory’s Sheldon Cooper dons comic t-shirts and a gawky stance; Orange Is The New Black’s Galina “Red” Reznikov maintains her hair a dyed bright red; Family Matters’ Steve Urkel stands wide-legged with pelvis forward and walks, as another character describes, “like you still have the hanger in your shirt” (phantomflapjack, 2009).  The behaviors are specific to the characters and play a role in defining their personas.  As a forum user writes of L, “it won’t be normal for a weird guy to sit properly” (Minitokyo.net).
         Media representations are planned and purposeful.  They form cameos that come to affect character relationships.  In the untelevised social word, social presentations can be just as specific to an individual as the “hanger” walk is to Urkel.  Likewise, psychological state can be as conditional on behavior as L’s mental prowess is on his squatting.

         Visual culture reflects everyday human understanding (Greysen & Chretien, 2010; Van Cleave, 2010).  Interpretation of one’s social world is ongoing, as is research in the field of social psychology.  By shifting study from the observable world to the body, social phenomena and issues can be understood differently.  Theories of “embodied cognition” postulate social thinking, influence, and relation as originating within the body and being maintained through bodily interpretation and action.   The emerging literature interprets social life as emanating from an organism, rather than from the surrounding world.

Sunday, November 15, 2015

oh. so you need your coffee in the morning//well, maybe you really do.

BEFORE I IMPLANT my arduously-researched two paragraphs about psychological dependencies on coffee, let's gorge:

classic.

look at that angle.

I'm LinkedIn.

ooh, switching it up now.

that's it.

okay, guy.

"you take cream, but that's okay."

Now, a sentimental account of your psychological dependence on coffee:

Another study followed 83 college students across two days to see if physical experience facilitated explicit memory recall (Kelemen & Creeley, 2003).  All participants were asked to drink a beverage before studying 40 pairs of words, with about half being given a caffeinated beverage and the remaining participants a placebo (Kelemen & Creeley, 2003).  Participants were also given one of the two beverages the next day, right before a an assessment testing memory of the words studied the day prior (Kelemen & Creeley, 2003).  Data showed that those who were given the same beverages, caffeinated or not, on both days recalled more word pairs than those who drank different beverages between days (Kelemen & Creeley, 2003).  
         
This study suggests that the ability to perform a task is influenced by the completion of tasks associated with it.  Despite societal beliefs and jests surrounding caffeine in the United States–that coffee enhances mental ability at no effort of the consumer–a “need” for coffee may be created through more than a chemical dependence.  The act of drinking coffee in the morning may enhance the individual’s apparent cognitive ability by simply fulfilling the necessitation of routine.  Ironically, modular views are aided by the perception of the mind as independent of the body–that is, unless a foreign substance is introduced.  Here, embodied cognition triumphs the mind over the body. 

*******the above was extracted from Sarah Simon's term paper

Sunday, November 8, 2015

cleaver//

this is the definition i get when i inquire into the meaning of "cleaver" on the Apple Dictionary app:


people in Russia are visiting this page. And 1 person in Costa Rica. hey.

Aggression cues.

Studies show that arousal fuels emotions–whatever they may be. This plays into the two-factor theory of emotion (Schachter & Singer, 1962) which puts words to a human tendency; we sometimes misattribute physical excitement to mushy emotion. 

When I say "misattribute," I do not mean that this tendency is inherently wrong or flawed; it just happens–and can actually lead to serious pleasure. Take this example, for instance:

A study by Dutton and Arthur Aron (1974) arranged for a young woman to approach
a number of young men as they crossed a narrow, wobbly, 450-foot-long suspension walkway hanging 230 feet above British Columbia’s rocky Capilano River.

sup.

During each approach, the woman asked that the participants help her fill out a class questionnaire. After they complied, she offered her name and number, and suggested that each guy call–if he wanted to hear more about the project (mm-hmm, right). Of those who accepted the phone number (most), half called.

so where's the statistical significance? she was probably hot.

So, half the guys called back. This isn't surprising–maybe they found the digit-sharing inquisitor attractive. 

i love you, stock.

But here's the big find: men who were instead approached by the same woman on a low, solid, and therefore SAFER bridge, rarely called. 

This is where the participants' physical arousal on the dangerous bridge may have been attributed to attraction.

From our own experiences, we know that emotion can, and always does, have some sort of physiological effect. The two-factor theory of emotion can help us to see why accompanying sweethearts during arousing activities can really pick up the romance. 

The theory writes kissing-in-the-corner of cinemas as more than a social script, amusement parks more than a trite date idea; scary movies and rollercoasters can bring expectation to fruition, a fear-laden pump of blood, suddenly, the anticipated tryst.

talk about paranormal activity.

just kidding, all i want is this tangerine-colored liquid.

I haven't thought of tangerines in a while. Did you know they got their name from their source of export? Me neither.

While I just gave you (or reinforced) an idea for a sultry evening, let's get back to aggression. I don't mean the hot and bothered kind.

If physical arousal can fuel sexual desire, can it fuel other emotions? Yes. The principal seems to be that "a given state of bodily arousal feeds one emotion or another, depending on how the person interprets and labels the arousal" (Myers, 2013, pp. 368).

Have you ever gotten really into a song at the gym, feeling as if it's carrying you through an episode of squats and you freakin LOVE TOM PETTY? Have you ever sat dwelling in a few moments of silent, otherwise benign frustration, and suddenly felt enraged at an unexpected and LOUD telephone ring? Have you received bad news after running home, and volcanoed? Are you angry right now?

cool it, it's only a rupture in the Earth's crust.

Studies by Leonard Berkowitz and colleagues (1968, 1961, 1995) zeroed in on the power of aggression cues. They found that children who had just played with toy guns became more willing to 
knock down another child’s blocks.

Another study showed college men giving more electric shocks to a person who had just angered them when a rifle and a revolver (supposedly left over from a previous experiment) were nearby than when badminton rackets had been left behind.


Let's go back to the idea of a cleaver. The above one was possibly used to dice garlic, or diced garlic was used to consummate the action connoted by the image. I think this is one of ShoutWithYourMouthFull's most photo-loaded posts. What are you thinking of when you look at this photo?

hah. i just linked myself.

I'm learning that it's important to consider the impact of environment on the individual psyche. And when I say I'm learning, I mean I try to step outside of my impulse, let its anger or sadness flow through me as i experience it, fascinated. I am fascinated by how I can connect my sadness to the idea of suicide when I see a knife drying on the dish rack.

To be sure, I am not considering killing myself. But it's important to talk, to think about, to observe.
The power a suggestion has over you is up to you.


“IF YOU DON’T GO TO 
SOMEBODY’S FUNERAL, 
THEY WON’T COME TO 
YOURS.”


—YOGI BERRA

WORKS CITED GODDAMMIT THEY'RE DRILLED INTO ME

Myers, David (2013-01-01). Social Psychology, 11th edition (Page 368). McGraw-Hill Higher Education -A. Kindle Edition. 

^^^i am not going to indent the second line. <3

Tuesday, November 3, 2015