الاثنين، 8 ديسمبر 2014

ملف الاشخاص الذين يملكون ذاكرة قوية ردا على من يتعجبون من ذاكرة البخاري رحمه الله

  • 03-27-2008
    قتيبة
    فتي عمره 11 عام قوة ذاكرته تدخله كتاب جينيس للارقام القياسية
    فتى يبلغ 11 سنة يدخل اسمه في كتاب جينس للارقام القياسية لقوة ذكرته وتذكره اسماء 225 قطعة ولتاليفه 11 كتاب للرياضيات الاساسية


    Memory wizard in Guinness Book

    Hyderabad: A 11-year-old student of a city school, Nischal Narayan, has entered the Guinness Book of World Records for his ability to memorise and recall the names of many objects at random.

    The Guinness World Records Ltd, London, has awarded the certificate to Nischal for performing the feat of memorising and recalling the names of 225 objects at random.

    His parents Nagesawara Rao and N.Padmavathy, while expressing happiness over Nischal’s achievement said that at the age of nine, he took a fascination for numbers and would try out simple ways to find logical solutions to intricate arithmetic problems. This helped him remain focussed and determined.

    He also showed his expertise in blindfold chess with his surprise moves criss-crossing the board and checkmating the opponents.

    He also conceived the concept of mathematics made simple and created a primary mathematics lab called ‘Nischal Math Lab’, as a tool to tackle numbers.

    He also achieved the rare distinction of being the youngest author of six volumes of books in primary maths.

    Expressing happiness over the achievement, Nischal thanked his parents and teachers for their support. He had two years of training from his master for the Guinness feat, he said

    Memory wizard in Guinness Book

    http://www.winentrance.com/news/Memo...ness-Book.html
  • 03-27-2008
    قتيبة
    ياباني يسترجع من ذاكرته اكثر من 83000 رقم رياضي ويدخل كتاب جينيس للارقام القياسية
    ياباني يسترجع من ذاكرته اكثر من 83000 رقم رياضي ويدخل كتاب جينيس للارقام القياسية اسمه Akira Haraguchi

    مستشار ياباني يستذكر 100 ألف معلومة رياضية عشرية - 09-10-2006, 05:20 مساءً

    طوكيو ـ أ.ب: - 17/09/1427هـ
    استطاع أكيرا هارجوشي، مستشار الطب النفسي الياباني استذكار 100 ألف معلومة رياضية عشرية الأربعاء الماضي، ضارباً بذلك رقماً قياسياً عالمياً حسب المعلومات الصادرة عن مكتبه.
    أكيرا (60 عاماً) من العمر، احتاج إلى 16 ساعة لاستذكار هذا الكم من المعلومات الرياضية العشرية من ذاكرته. وبذلك يكون كسر رقمه القياسي الذي حققه عام 1995 حين تمكن من استذكار 83.431 معلومة.
    ونفذ المستشار محاولته الجديدة في قاعة عامة في مدينة كيزارازو التي تقع إلى الشرق من العاصمة اليابانية طوكيو. وتتعلق هذه المعلومات بالنسبة التقريبية البالغة 3.141، التي تحدد النسبة بين محيط الدائرة وقطرها.
    مع أن هذا هو الرقم الذي يرد في كتب الرياضيات، إلا أنه لا حدود له من الناحية النظرية، حيث يمكن كتابة كسور عشرية له إلى مالا نهاية. ويظهر هذا الثابت الفيزيائي في البرهنة على كثير من المعادلات التي تحدد حركة الكون.
    ويقول المستشار " إنني لا أهدف فقط إلى ممارسة استذكار الأرقام، ولكنني مأخوذ بالإمكانات غير المحدودة لاشتقاق المنازل العشرية". ويسجل كتاب جينيس للأرقام القياسية الرقم القياسي لهذا النوع من الاستذكار الرقمي العشري باسم هيرويوكي جوتو الياباني الذي تمكن من استذكار 42.195 معلومة من هذا القبيل عام 1995.
    ولم يسجل كتاب جينيس محاولة هاراجوشي التي جرت في عام 1996، كما أننا لم نتمكن من الاتصال بمحرري هذا الكتاب للحصول على تعليق بخصوص محاولته الأخيرة.

    وكان المستشار النفسي، الذي يعمل أيضا في مجالات استشارات النشاطات العملية، يأخذ استراحة لمدة خمس دقائق بعد كل ساعة أو ساعتين من الاستذكار. وكان يذهب إلى الحمام، أو يتناول كميات من كرات الأرز خلال المحاولة، حسب ما صرح به ناوكي فوجي، من مكتب هذا المستشار. وأضاف فوجي أنه تم تسجيل كل لحظات المحاولة، وذلك لإرسالها لاحقاً إلى محرري كتاب جينيس للأرقام القياسية للتثبت من صحة المحاولة.
    وعمل على مراقبة سير عملية الاسترجاع اثنان من المسؤولين التربويين المحليين الذين اشتركوا مع 29 موظفاً من قاعة العرض في التناوب على المراقبة. وبدأ المستشار محاولته الجديدة عند التاسعة من صباح الثلاثاء الماضي، ووصل إلى رقمه السابق البالغ 83.431 أثناء الليل محققاً 100 ألف معلومة في الواحدة وثمانية وعشرين دقيقة من صباح اليوم التالي.
    وكان علماء رياضيات من جامعة طوكيو الذين استعانوا بكمبيوتر عملاق عام 2002، قد استطاعوا تحقيق رقم آلي بلغ 1.24 مليار معلومة.





    Japanese breaks pi memory record

    A Japanese mental health counsellor has broken the world record for reciting pi, the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter, from memory.
    Akira Haraguchi, 59, managed to recite the number's first 83,431 decimal places, almost doubling the previous record held by another Japanese.

    He had to stop three hours into his recital after losing his place, and had to start from the beginning.

    Pi is an infinite decimal whose numbers never repeat in a pattern.

    Mr Haraguchi, from Chiba, east of Tokyo, took several hours reciting the numbers, finishing in the early hours of Saturday.

    "I thank you all for your support," he told reporters and onlookers at the public hall in Tokyo.

    He hopes to be listed in the Guinness Book of World Records to replace his fellow countryman Hiroyuki Goto, who managed to recite 42,195 numbers as a 21-year-old student in 1995.

    Mr Haraguchi had already recited the ratio up to about 54,000 digits last September, but was forced to drop the challenge when the facility hosting the event closed for the night.

    So far, pi has been calculated to 1.24 trillion decimal places with the aid of a supercomputer.

    Conventionally, 3.14159 is used as pi.

    Pi is known for turning up in all sorts of scientific equations, including those describing the DNA double helix, a rainbow, ripples spreading from where a raindrop fell into water, waves, navigation and more.



    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4644103.stm
  • 03-27-2008
    قتيبة
    ذاكرة سيدة اميركية تثير انتباه الباحثين في جامعة كاليفورنيا !
    ذاكرة سيدة اميركية تثير انتباه الباحثين في جامعة كاليفورنيا حيث تتذكر يوم اي تاريخ يعطى لها وتتذكر احداثه و اخباره وحالة الطقس في ذلك اليوم


    ==========

    Woman With Perfect Memory Baffles Scientists

    Patient Remembers Every Day and Almost Every Detail of Her Life

    March 20, 2006 --


    James McGaugh is one of the world's leading experts on how the human memory system works. But these days, he admits he's stumped.


    McGaugh's journey through an intellectual purgatory began six years ago when a woman now known only as AJ wrote him a letter detailing her astonishing ability to remember with remarkable clarity even trivial events that happened decades ago.


    Give her any date, she said, and she could recall the day of the week, usually what the weather was like on that day, personal details of her life at that time, and major news events that occurred on that date.


    Like any good scientist, McGaugh was initially skeptical. But not anymore.


    "This is real," he says.


    Soon after AJ took over his life, McGaugh teamed with two fellow researchers at the University of California at Irvine. Elizabeth Parker, a clinical professor of psychiatry and neurology (and lead author of a report on the research in the current issue of the journal Neurocase), and Larry Cahill, an associate professor of neurobiology and behavior, have joined McGaugh in putting AJ through an exhaustive series of interviews and psychological tests. But they aren't a lot closer today to understanding her amazing ability than they were when they started.


    "We are trying to find out, but we haven't hit 'bingo' yet," says McGaugh.


    His initial hypothesis, like several others, has turned out to be wrong -- or at least incomplete.


    McGaugh has spent decades studying how such things as stress hormones and emotions affect memory, and at first he thought AJ's memories were of such emotional power that she couldn't forget them.


    But that hypothesis fell short of the mark when it became obvious that "the woman who can't forget" remembers trivial details as clearly as major events. Asked what happened on Aug 16, 1977, she knew that Elvis Presley had died, but she also knew that a California tax initiative passed on June 6 of the following year, and a plane crashed in Chicago on May 25 of the next year, and so forth. Some may have had a personal meaning for her, but some did not.


    "Here's a woman who has very strong memories, but she has very strong memories of things for which I have no memory at all," McGaugh says.


    That became particularly clear one day when he asked her out of the blue if she knew who Bing Crosby was.


    "I wasn't sure she would know, because she's 40 and wasn't of the Bing Crosby era," he says.


    But she did.


    "Do you know where he died?" McGaugh asked.


    "Oh yes, he died on a golf course in Spain," she answered, and provided the day of the week and the date when the crooner died.


    When the researchers asked her to list the dates when they had interviewed her, she "just reeled them off, bang, bang, bang."


    She also told McGaugh that on the day after a particular interview, which took place several years ago, he flew to Germany.


    "I said what? I went to Germany? I couldn't even remember what year I had gone to Germany," he says.


    That level of recall suggests another hypothesis. Some people are able to recall past events by categorizing them. Certain events, or facts, are associated with others, and filed away together so that they may be easier to access. That's a trick that is often used by entertainers who use feats of memory to wow their audience.


    AJ does have "some sort of compulsive tendencies. She wants order in her life," McGaugh says. "As a child, she would get upset if her mother changed anything in her room because she had a place for everything and wanted everything in its place.


    "So she does categorize events by the date, but that doesn't explain why she remembers it."


    Also, her degree of recall is so much greater than any other person's in the scientific literature that it seems unlikely to be the complete answer, McGaugh adds.


    She is also quite different from savants who have surfaced from time to time with extraordinary abilities in music, art or memory.


    "Some of them can remember every single detail about the particular hobby that they have, such as baseball or calendars or art, but they are very narrow," he says. McGaugh described one person who could memorize a piece of music instantly, and not forget it, but who "couldn't make change or couldn't take a bus because he didn't know where he was."


    By contrast, AJ is a " fully functioning person," McGaugh says.


    The researchers are preparing to take their work in a new direction in hopes of understanding what is going on here. It's possible AJ's brain is wired differently, and that may show up through magnetic resonance imaging. Testing is expected to begin within six months.


    "We will be looking at her brain, using brain scanning techniques, to see if there's anything that is dramatically different that we can point to," McGaugh says.


    Those of us with normal, very fallible memories function somewhat like a computer in that different areas of our brains are interconnected and thus better-suited for general memories. We know where we live and how to get to work, but we may not know what the weather was like on this date four years ago.


    It's possible that AJ's brain has some "disconnections" that help her recall past events from her memory bank without interference from the parts of her brain that act as general processors. But the problem is that even if they find some interesting wiring through brain scans, the researchers will be limited in their conclusions by the fact that AJ seems to be unique.


    So unique, in fact, that the Irvine team has given her condition a new name. They call it hyperthymestic syndrome, based on the Greek word thymesis for "remembering" and hyper, meaning "more than normal."


    Some day, the researchers say, they hope to know what's different about AJ's brain, but they are still a ways off.


    "In order to explain a phenomenon you have to first understand the phenomenon," McGaugh says. "We're at the beginning."
    http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/sto...1738881&page=1
  • 03-27-2008
    قتيبة
    ملف الاشخاص الذين يملكون ذاكرة قوية ردا على من يتعجبون من ذاكرة البخاري رحمه الله
    ملف الاشخاص الذين يملكون ذاكرة قوية ردا على من يتعجبون من ذاكرة البخاري رحمه الله


    فتى يبلغ 11 سنة يدخل اسمه في كتاب جينس للارقام القياسية لقوة ذكرته وتذكره اسماء 225 قطعة ولتاليفه 11 كتاب للرياضيات الاساسية


    http://eltwhed.com/vb/showthread.php?t=12392

    ياباني يسترجع من ذاكرته اكثر من 83000 رقم رياضي ويدخل كتاب جينيس للارقام القياسية

    http://eltwhed.com/vb/showthread.php?t=12393

    ذاكرة سيدة اميركية تثير انتباه الباحثين في جامعة كاليفورنيا !

    http://eltwhed.com/vb/showthread.php?t=12394

    جامعة كاليفورنيا الحكومية تسمح للفتيان من عمر 10 بالالتحاق بالجامعة بصفتهم موهوبين

    http://eltwhed.com/vb/showthread.php?t=12253

    كتب الضال كيف استطاع البخاري يطالع 600 ألف رواية !!!

    http://eltwhed.com/vb/showthread.php?t=11542
  • 03-28-2008
    قتيبة
    كتب الضال كيف استطاع البخاري يطالع 600 ألف رواية !!!

    http://eltwhed.com/vb/showthread.php?t=11542


    جامعة كاليفورنيا الحكومية تسمح للفتيان من عمر 10 بالالتحاق بالجامعة بصفتهم موهوبين

    http://eltwhed.com/vb/showthread.php?t=12253
  • 04-13-2008
    lo9man
    جزاك الله خيرا وأحسن إليك
    أمثال هؤلاء يريدون ليطفئوا نور الله بأفواههم والله متم نوره ولو كره الكافرون
    أما ترى الأسد تخشى وهي صامتة والكلب يخزى لعمر الله نباح
  • 10-25-2008
    قتيبة
    الرد بالارقام على دعوى كثرة الاحاديث التي رواها ابوهريرة /د محمد عبدة يماني

    http://www.eltwhed.com/vb/showthread.php?t=14162

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