Hello, dear classmates and teacher!
The semester is gone and make a reflexion about this subject is necessary. For all of us, this is the last English level in the university (duty is complete!)
I really enjoy pass my time with you, because I had the possibility to know you a little more. This group was awesome, very nice and I will remember you like the "always somnolent and hungry group" haha.
About learning, speaking was the most important area for me, because I can lose my shyness and I can "think in English" faster. The activities in the first hour were interesting and the activities in the second hour were very useful. I liked the PET exercises, because they were a challenge! I enjoyed the blog, because I can read about the important things for my partners.
Now... about negative aspects... Maybe, we could practice listening more, I don't feel ready for understand the words of a native person, but the hope is the last thing that we lost!
Thank you miss for your dedication and patience. Classmates: I send you my better wishes in this new phase; I know that all of you're going to be great professionals.
Regards! <3
martes, 15 de diciembre de 2015
jueves, 3 de diciembre de 2015
New: Can food psychology help Alzheimer’s patients?
Summary:
My reason why I chose it:
I choose this new because the Alzheimer's disease is very current in this moment of my life. My grandmother lives with us and she suffers it. I think that psychology's advances can help a lot of people whit their problems, and in this case, psychology can give a great contribution for this hard complaint. Hopefully, the professionals can discover any kind of cure someday.
The link: http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2015/sep/20/food-psychology-alzheimers-patients-multisensory-eating-kitchen-theory
Youssed,
the chef, talks about the power of the senses when we eat something. He worked
with Oxford professor Charles Spence who probed the psychology of diners. In
that moment, the Kitchen Theory was born; it’s about the influence of the
different senses in the perception of a meal and consists in a “synaesthesia”
experience, in other words: all the senses interact when people eat. There’s a
multisensory nature of flavors, incorporating sight, sound, smell, taste and
touch; all this factors make people have expectations thanks their perceptions,
and there’re psychological studies about that, for example: a research about
sounds discovered that loud white noise can affect the taste of food, finding sweetness
and sourness to correlated with high sound; a research about vision discovered
that looking at images of high-calorie food is linked to a rise in levels of an
appetite-inducing hormone, while research the following year found that looking
ar images of salty foods decreased enjoyment of eating a salted snack. Many scientist
follow this line of investigation. Even though this results can help to big
companies make money, Spence and Youseef want apply his insights to hospitals:
for the medication in cancer patients and using multisensory stimuli to help Alzheimer’s
patients.
My reason why I chose it:
I choose this new because the Alzheimer's disease is very current in this moment of my life. My grandmother lives with us and she suffers it. I think that psychology's advances can help a lot of people whit their problems, and in this case, psychology can give a great contribution for this hard complaint. Hopefully, the professionals can discover any kind of cure someday.
The link: http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2015/sep/20/food-psychology-alzheimers-patients-multisensory-eating-kitchen-theory
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