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Mind Performance Hacks: Tips & Tools for Overclocking Your Brain (Hacks) | 
enlarge | Author: Ron Hale-evans Publisher: O'Reilly Media, Inc. Category: Book
List Price: $24.99 Buy New: $13.50 You Save: $11.49 (46%)
New (33) Used (11) from $12.78
Rating: 23 reviews Sales Rank: 11526
Format: Illustrated Media: Paperback Pages: 330 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 9 x 5.8 x 0.9
ISBN: 0596101538 Dewey Decimal Number: 153. EAN: 9780596101534
Publication Date: February 6, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: New softcover book.
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Product Description You're smart. This book can make you smarter. "Mind Performance Hacks" provides real-life tips and tools for overclocking your brain and becoming a better thinker. In the increasingly frenetic pace of today's information economy, managing your life requires hacking your brain. With this book, you'll cut through the clutter and tune up your brain intentionally, safely, and productively. Grounded in current research and theory, but offering practical solutions you can apply immediately, Mind Performance Hacks is filled with life hacks that teach you to: Use mnemonic tricks to remember numbers, names, dates, and other flotsam you need to recall Put down your calculator and perform complex math in your head, with your fingers, or on the back of a napkin Spark your creativity with innovative brainstorming methods Use effective systems to capture new ideas before they get away Communicate in creative new ways-even using artificial languages Make better decisions by foreseeing problems and finding surprising solutions Improve your mental fitness with cool tricks and games While the hugely successful "Mind Hacks" showed you how your brain works, "Mind Performance Hacks" shows you how to make it work better.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 18 more reviews...
Helps your brain achieve its maximum potential February 9, 2006 calvinnme (Fredericksburg, Va) 186 out of 192 found this review helpful
This book is based on information that can be found at the Mentat Wiki and consists of 75 tips and methods for helping you organize your thought processes and exercise your brain so that you think more efficiently. Some of them are well-known brain exercises, and some are not so well known. I had seen most of the memory hacks before, with the exception of the one on the "tip of the tongue" effect. In the section on creativity, I enjoyed the hack on looking at your brain as a random number generator that needs seeding by doing such tasks as picking up a magazine that you wouldn't normally look at and then reading it. I also liked the hack on learning Morse code like an efficiency expert. Although the task itself is of dubious value, the process teaches the reader the value of mnemonics which is, as the author puts it, is like putting Windows on top of DOS. The final chapter, on overall mental fitness, is of particular use to us baby-boomers as it reminds us not to neglect the essentials of basic overall physical health since this has a powerful effect on the brain. I really enjoyed this little book, since it has so many ways to expand your brain power and creativity that can easily be incorporated into your daily life. The table of contents is not shown by Amazon, so I list the table of contents/hacks here: Chapter 1. Memory 1. Remember 10 Things to Bring 2. Use the Number-Shape System 3. Make Lots of Little Journeys 4. Stash Things in Nooks and Crannies 5. Use the Major System 6. Use the Dominic System 7. Visit the Hotel Dominic 8. Dominate Your Memory 9. Memorize Numbers with Carroll's Couplets 10. Tune In to Your Memory 11. Consume Your Information in Chunks 12. Overcome the Tip-of-the-Tongue Effect Chapter 2. Information Processing 13. Catch Your Ideas 14. Write Faster 15. Speak Your Brain's Language 16. Map Your Mind 17. Build an Exoself 18. Pre-Delete Cruft Chapter 3. Creativity 19. Seed Your Mental Random-Number Generator 20. Force Your Connections 21. Contemplate Po 22. Scamper for Ideas 23. Deck Yourself Out 24. Constrain Yourself 25. Think Analogically 26. Enjoy Good, Clean Memetic Sex 27. Play Mind Music 28. Sound Your Brain with Onar 29. Keep a Dream Journal 30. Hold a Question in Mind 31. Adopt a Hero 32. Go Backward to Be More Inventive Going Forward 33. Spend More Time Thinking 34. Extend Your Idea Space with Word Spectra Chapter 4. Math 35. Put Down That Calculator 36. Make Friends with Numbers 37. Test for Divisibility 38. Calculate Mental Checksums 39. Turn Your Hands into an Abacus 40. Count to a Million on Your Fingers 41. Estimate Orders of Magnitude 42. Estimate Square Roots 43. Calculate Any Weekday Chapter 5. Decision Making 44. Foresee Important Problems 45. Predict the Length of a Lifetime 46. Find Dominant Strategies 47. Eliminate Dominated Strategies 48. Don't Overthink It 49. Roll the Dice Chapter 6. Communication 50. Put Your Words in the Blender 51. Learn an Artificial Language 52. Communicate in E-Prime 53. Learn Morse Code Like an Efficiency Expert 54. Harness Stage Fright 55. Ask Stupid Questions 56. Stop Memory-Buffer Overrun Chapter 7. Clarity 57. Learn Your Emotional ABCs 58. Avoid Cognitive Distortions 59. Use the Fourfold Breath 60. Meditate 61. Hypnotize Yourself 62. Talk to Yourself 63. Interview Yourself 64. Cultivate the Naive Mind 65. Employ Mental Momentum Chapter 8. Mental Fitness 66. Warm Up Your Brain 67. Play Board Games 68. Improve Visual Attention Through Video Games 69. Don't Neglect the Obvious: Sleep, Nutrition, and Exercise 70. Get a Good Night's Sleep 71. Navigate Around the Post-Lunch Dip 72. Overclock Your Brain 73. Learn the Facts About Cognitive Enhancers 74. Snap Yourself to Attention 75. Assemble Your Mental Toolbox
Who is this book for? March 1, 2006 Stuart Gardner (Fair Lawn, NJ) 70 out of 72 found this review helpful
Tips and tools for overclocking your brain, for me, instantly brings to mind images of Dr. Frankinstein with a saw and a sharp knife. After the initial disappointment (?), the book highlights different techniques for improving memory, problem solving, mathematics and word skills. Some (most) of the tips aren't that original mnemonics and linking object to memorable visual images aren't new. Some of the math skills are the sort of thing most people pick up in grade school. Also, the problem solving methods outlined are rather crude. But; they are the kind of tips we may "know" but don't apply. Some (a few) of the tools / techniques were new to me and very valuable. OK; after such a critical start why give the book five stars? This book is unusual, it groups useful techniques and tools for creative thinking into one short guide. Although the techniques outlined may be simple they are highly effective. The writing style is informative without being patronizing. I read this book cover to cover in four sessions; it was as interesting to read as most fiction. The author references source material very well and provides references for further exploration of the topics covered. In answer to my original question, "who is this book for?", just about everyone should be able to take away something positive from this book. Good preparation for exams such as GMAT and SATs. Also, good tips for staying sharp into old age (have to wait and see whether they work or not).
Ways to tap into your mind.... March 25, 2006 Thomas Duff (Portland, OR United States) 21 out of 22 found this review helpful
Do you want to stretch your mind's capabilities and understand how to get the most out of that thing we call a brain? Ron Hale-Evans has written a good O'Reilly Hacks book titled Mind Performance Hacks: Tips & Tools for Overclocking Your Brain. Content: Memory; Information Processing; Creativity; Math; Decision Making; Communication; Clarity; Mental Fitness; Index In this book, you'll find 75 hacks/tips/tricks that you can use to take your memory, focus, and concentration to a new level. Some are complex and require some practice, like #5 - Use the Major System. This is a series of mnemonics that you can use to help remember large numbers of related and unrelated items. There are also alternatives to that system, such as the Dominic System (#6). Either way, you may find that something like this can help you dramatically improve your "remember-y". Other hacks are more in line of making changes in your lifestyle that will affect your cognitive abilities, such as #70 - Get a Good Night's Sleep and #71 - Navigate Around the Post-Lunch Dip. Simple steps you can take to avoid mental pitfalls. I particularly enjoyed #27 - Play Mind Music. I finally understand why I find that I can't listen to a podcast and program at the same time. Very good stuff... You won't adopt and use every one of these hacks, nor does the author intend you to do so. But you can think of this as a toolbox that you can use to improve your performance and understand things that often are unconsciously occurring to us on a regular basis. A very good read...
Brain Hacks!!! May 20, 2006 Warren Kelly (Southern Ohio) 10 out of 12 found this review helpful
Have you ever forgotten something? Do you want (or need) to improve your memory? Then this book is for you. Mind Performance Hacks is written by Ron Hale-Evans, who is an expert on memory. He has created the Mentat Wiki (which was the inspiration for this book). But memory tricks aren't all that the book has to offer - in fact, the many other tricks and "hacks" were more appealing to me than the memory tips. Hale-Evans gives a great overview of the prevailing memory tricks, including the Dominic System. These tricks to improve memory have helped thousands of people, but they've always seemed to be more work than they're worth to me. My memory isn't the greatest, but most of the time it's easier for me to just write things down to remember them. The thing that first attracted me to this book was the mental math. Who wouldn't want to be able to count to a million on their hands (Hack #40)? Estimating sqare roots and testing for divisibility are both tricks that I've seen taught in the classroom, and are worth knowing and remembering. But there's a lot more to this book even than that. There are valuable tips on enhancing your own creativity (I especially liked the 'mental random number generator' in Hack 19). Hale-Evans encourages the reader to develop their inductive reasoning skills (especially in Hack 48), which is something we could all use. He also includes tips on "mental fitness" - how to get your brain warmed up and ready to process information. I got the book for the "brain math," but I'll keep referring back to it for the brainstorming. You can learn a lot about how people think, and maybe even pick up some techniques that will improve your own memory and help spark your creativity. If nothing else, that counting to a million trick could win you a few bar bets - even if you only get to a thousand!
Valuable and entertaining January 31, 2008 L. F. Smith (E. Wenatchee, WA) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is a valuable book that is also very entertaining. The book is a compilation of seventy-five "hacks" designed to help us "overclock" our brains. Catchy! What it means is that the book is a collection of tips and techniques that speed and enhance our mental abilities. And they do. The tips deal with memory enhancement, perception, decision making, math applications, and general mental fitness. Most of them aren't really new, but all of them are very clearly explained and illustrated with real-world examples. Every tip has citations for further research, a feature that led me to several hours of surprising and useful reading. This is not a mental fitness system; that is, the author does not expect the reader to adopt and use every one of the tips. It's a loose collection of tools, and like all tools, the trick is to select the appropriate one for the task. I'm using several of the tools on a regular basis, and that more than justifies the cost of the book for me. Finally, the book is a very entertaining and very quick read. The author's style is just right. The information is presented in easy-to-digest blocks, and the explanations are very clear. The author clearly has expertise, but he's never condescending. The tone is light and slightly self-deprecating without being cutesy. I really liked this book. It's rare to find such a finely balanced combination of entertainment and utility. I'm very happy I bought it, and I recommend it highly.
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