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Language Game: Anagrams

Tana: Isolating my country in terms of solo play is hard for me. I’ve been so embroiled in the online environment for so many years now, I tend to think of role players as a global community. My sense is, though, that solo play is fairly uncommon in the United States, but for those who engage in it they are passionate about it. GamePigeon is an iMessage extension which features following games: 8-Ball Poker Sea Battle Anagrams Gomoku More games are coming very soon!

Being clever with language can help us develop our social relationships.

Solve as many anagrams as fast as you can in 1 minute by rearranging the letters of one word into another word.

Language and Age

Language (both written and spoken) is a great communication tool. It is mostly processed by the left-hemisphere of your brain. The left-hemisphere of your brain is more logical and process orientated than the right-hemisphere. As we get older the language center moves more to the right-hemisphere. It has been theorized that this is because our brains are compensating for age-related loss of functional capacity.

Males are usually a bit more left-hemisphere dominant than females. But the scientists still don't know if this make males more likely to struggle with language as they age.

In a recent study 93% of Americans said they wished they had a quicker sense of humor. Speed is important in language because sentences have rhythm, if you often find yourself stuck mid conversation searching for the right word then you need to train your brain to process language better.

How Language Works

For us to write, speak and to understand speech and writing requires an enormous amount of brain resources. These resources not only have to manage information about many thousands of words but many different relationships between words that give them different meanings. This complex combination of brain structures is called your linguistic system.

Larger brain regions are involved in more abstract operations while smaller regions that are nearer to sensory cortex are involved in operations that are closer to basic sensory processing. Thus, putting together the pieces of the puzzle of the how the brain is organized to input and output language may be a very complex task. The application of new imaging techniques is moving research in this area along very fast.

Researchers from University College London found learning other languages altered gray matter - the area of the brain which processes information - in the same way exercise builds muscles. We know the brain has the ability to change its structure as a result of stimulation - an effect known as plasticity - but this research demonstrates how learning languages develops it.

How can I improve my language?

Vocabulary acquisition can be enhanced when it is embedded in real-world complex contexts that are familiar to us. But we need time and experience ('practice') to consolidate new skills and knowledge to become fluent and articulated. So don't go and start reading anything too crazy, but keep pushing yourself - if you see a word you don't know, look it up.

Crossword puzzles are great, and they will improve your vocabulary. But just because you have memorized the dictionary doesn't mean you will be the world’s best communicator. Listening is half of good communication. As we get older we don't just lose our listening skills because we are hard of hearing. Time after time we think we have heard it all before and begin to lose interest. Finding something we are interested in may be half the battle won. I haven't yet learnt a second language but I plan to. My father doesn't give a speech without reference to the Maori words for family. Learning a new language in his 50's was hard but it has really enriched his life.

(Redirected from Fidget Spinner)
Fidget spinner
TypeStress-relieving toy
CountryUnited States
Availability1993–present
MaterialsBrass, stainless steel, ceramic, titanium, copper, plastic, latex etc.
Game

A fidget spinner is a toy that consists of a ball bearing in the center of a multi-lobed (typically two or three) flat structure made from metal or plastic designed to spin along its axis with very little effort. Fidget spinners became trending toys in 2017, although similar devices had been invented as early as 1993.[1]

The toy has been promoted as helping people who have trouble focusing or those who may need to fidget to relieve nervous energy, anxiety, or psychological stress. There are claims that a fidget spinner can help calm down people who have anxiety and other neurological disorders like ADHD and autism.[2] However, as of May 2017, there is no scientific evidence that they are effective as a treatment for ADHD.[3][4]

Design[edit]

Spinning fidget spinner

Fidget spinners are toys not unlike yo-yo or other skill toys, designed to spin with little effort.[5][6] A basic fidget spinner usually consists of a two- or three-pronged design with a bearing in its center circular pad. However, the number of prongs may vary - some may have six or more.[6][7] A person holds the center pad while the toy spins.[7] They are made from various materials including brass, stainless steel, titanium, copper, aluminium, and plastic.[5][6] The bearings are generally ceramic, metal (stainless steel or chrome), and some are hybrids—such as ceramic balls with stainless races and cages. Each fidget spinner also has two or more weights on the outside that make it spin faster and stay balanced. Bearings can vary to adjust for the design's spin time, vibration, and noise, causing unique sensory feedback.

Being a kind of a flywheel of a gyroscope in principle, fidget spinners come with similar effects enabling a player to pull various tricks and stunts while forces of a gyroscope take hold. A fidget spinner can be balanced on top of fingers, thrown and caught, and so on.[8]

Origin[edit]

As of 2017, the patent status of the various fidget spinners on the market was unclear.[9]

Catherine Hettinger, a chemical engineer by training, was initially credited by some news stories as having been the inventor of the fidget spinner, including by media outlets such as The Guardian,[10]The New York Times,[11] and the New York Post.[12] Hettinger filed a patent application for a 'spinning toy'[13] in 1993 and a patent was issued, but Hettinger allowed the patent to lapse in 2005 after she could not find a commercial partner.[9][10]A May 2017 Bloomberg News article showed that Hettinger was not the inventor of the fidget spinner, and Hettinger agreed.[9]

In an interview appearing on 4 May 2017 on NPR, Scott McCoskery described how he invented a metal spinning device in 2014 to cope with his own fidgeting in IT meetings and conference calls.[14] In response to requests from an online community, he began selling the device he called the Torqbar online.[14]

Popularity and adolescent usage[edit]

Google Search popularity of fidget spinners in early 2017.
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With the rapid increase in the popularity of fidget spinners in 2017, many children and teenagers began using them in school, and some schools also reported that students were trading and selling the spinner toys.[15][16][17]

As a result of their frequent use by school children, many school districts banned the toy.[10][11] Some teachers argued that the spinners distracted students from their schoolwork.[15] According to a survey conducted by Alexi Roy and published in May 2017, 32% of the largest 200 American public and private high schools had banned spinners on campus.[18]

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When fidget spinners rose in popularity in 2017, many publications in the popular press discussed the marketing claims made about them for people with ADHD, autism, or anxiety.[4][10][11] However, there is no scientific evidence that fidget spinners are effective as a treatment for children with ADHD.[3][4][19] They quickly fell in popularity and sales after peaking in May 2017.[20]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^Calfas, Jennifer. 'Meet the Woman Who Invented Fidget Spinners, the Newest Toy Craze Sweeping America'. Time. Retrieved August 31, 2018.
  2. ^McGri, David (2017-08-18). 'Fidget Spinners'. Huffington Post. Retrieved 2017-08-21.
  3. ^ abCalfas, Jennifer (May 11, 2017). 'Do Fidget Spinners Really Help With ADHD? Nope, Experts Say'. Money. Time. Retrieved May 16, 2017.
  4. ^ abcSingh, Anita; Horton, Helena; Fuller, George (May 3, 2017). 'Fidget spinners: the new classroom craze being banned across the nation'. The Telegraph. Retrieved May 16, 2017.
  5. ^ abArnett, Dugan (March 30, 2017). 'Need to focus? Fidget toys may help'. The Boston Globe. Retrieved April 4, 2017.
  6. ^ abcTuttle, Brad; O'Brien, Elizabeth (April 21, 2017). 'Meet the Fidget Spinner, the New Toy Craze Entrancing Kids and Grownups Alike'. Money. Retrieved April 22, 2017.
  7. ^ abVerstegen, Dominic (April 21, 2017). 'Your kid probably has a fidget spinner already, but let me tell you about it anyway'. USA Today. Retrieved May 7, 2017.
  8. ^Benwell, Max (May 15, 2017). 'Fidget spinners: What are they and why are they so addictive?'. The Independent. Retrieved August 17, 2017.
  9. ^ abcBrustein, Joshua (May 11, 2017). 'How the Fidget Spinner Origin Story Spun Out of Control'. Bloomberg News. Retrieved May 12, 2017.
  10. ^ abcdLuscombe, Richard (May 5, 2017). 'As fidget spinner craze goes global, its inventor struggles to make ends meet'. The Guardian. Retrieved 11 May 2017.
  11. ^ abcWilliams, Alex (May 6, 2017). 'How Fidget Spinners Became a Hula-Hoop for Generation Z'. The New York Times.
  12. ^Miller, Joshua Rhett (May 5, 2017). 'Woman who invented fidget spinners isn't getting squat'. New York Post.
  13. ^US 5591062A, Catherine A. Hettinger (Disputed), 'Spinning toy', published 1997-01-07, issued 1997-01-07
  14. ^ abMalone, Kenny (May 4, 2017). 'Fidget Spinner Emerges As Must-Have Toy Of The Year'. Planet Money. NPR. Retrieved May 18, 2017.
  15. ^ abCalfas, Jennifer (May 4, 2017). 'Here's Everything You Need To Know About Fidget Spinners'. Money. Time. Retrieved May 6, 2017.
  16. ^'Many Schools Ban Hot Toy For Being Distraction'. CBS Los Angeles. May 4, 2017. Retrieved May 6, 2017.
  17. ^'Fidget Spinners For Kids: Reports Say It's Distracting, Parents Say Not So'. CBS Miami. May 2, 2017. Retrieved May 7, 2017.
  18. ^Roy, Alexi (May 10, 2017). 'The Fidget Spinners Are Banned in 32% of the Largest High Schools U.S.'Spinner List.
  19. ^Bogost, Ian. 'The Fidget Spinner Explains the World'. The Atlantic. Retrieved 2017-07-09.
  20. ^'Get Over It. Fidget Spinner Trend Is Dead'. Fortune. Retrieved Sep 1, 2020.

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External links[edit]

  • Media related to Fidget spinners at Wikimedia Commons
  • The dictionary definition of fidget spinner at Wiktionary

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