Managing Information and Comunication Overload
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Managing Information and Communication Overload

Is the constant crushing burden of information and communication overload dragging you down? By the end of your workday, do you feel overworked, overwhelmed, stressed, and exhausted? Would you like to be more focused, productive, and competitive, while remaining balanced and in control?

If you're continually facing too much information, too much paper, too many commitments, and too many demands, you need Breathing Space.


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Recommended Reading
Neil Postman: Amusing Ourselves to Death

Ben Bagdikian: The New Media Monopoly

Jeff Davidson: Complete Idiot's Guide to Getting Things Done

David Allen: Ready for Anything

Jim Cathcart: The Acorn Principle

Aldous Huxley: Brave New World

Kirsten Lagatree: Checklists for Life

Williams and Sawyer: Using Information Technology

Snead and Wycoff: To Do Doing Done

Larry Rosen and Michelle Weil: Technostress

Sam Horn: Conzentrate

John D. Drake: Downshifting

Don Aslett: Keeping Work Simple

Jeff Davidson: The 60 Second Organizer

Jeff Davidson: The 60 Second Procrastinator

Recommended Blogs


Managing Information and Communication Overload

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Processing New Info at any Age

Matthew Blakeslee writing for Discover says, "If old dogs haven’t been able to learn new tricks, maybe that’s because no one has known how to teach them properly. Until quite recently orthodox neuroscience held that only the brains of young children are resilient, malleable, and morphable—in a word, plastic."

"This neuroplasticity, as it is called, seems to fade steadily as the brain congeals into its fixed adult configuration. Infants can sustain massive brain damage, up to the loss of an entire cerebral hemisphere, and still develop into nearly normal adults; any adult who loses half the brain, by contrast, is a goner. Adults can’t learn to speak new languages without an accent, can’t take up piano in their fifties then go on to play Carnegie Hall, and often suffer strokes that lead to permanent paralysis or cognitive deficiencies. The mature brain, scientists concluded, can only decline."

"It turns out this theory is not just wrong, it is spectacularly wrong. Two new books, Train Your Mind, Change Your Brain (Ballantine Books, $24.95) by science journalist Sharon Begley and The Brain That Changes Itself (Viking, $24.95) by psychiatrist Norman Doidge, offer masterfully guided tours through the burgeoning field of neuroplasticity research. Each has its own style and emphasis; both are excellent.".

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Jeff Davidson, MBA, CMC, Executive Director -- Breathing Space Institute © 2010
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