Pin
Registered
I seem to recall at least one study has even found that strength training gave slightly better results for a group visualizing doing the exercise than for those actually working out.
And when visualizing, you can get very small impulses firing to the muscles. (Derren Brown does a trick on mind-reading people's computer passwords by making them imagine it, feeling tiny movements their mouths make when imagining the word, and intuiting what the word is. At least that's how I think he does it!)
It stands to reason that you'd need some level of practical experience to be able to visualize in a way that meaningfully represented what would happen in the real world.
All very interesting. I wonder if there's best practice for how to visualize in a way that gives best results. Perhaps it depends on your learning style. Or lack thereof!
And when visualizing, you can get very small impulses firing to the muscles. (Derren Brown does a trick on mind-reading people's computer passwords by making them imagine it, feeling tiny movements their mouths make when imagining the word, and intuiting what the word is. At least that's how I think he does it!)
It stands to reason that you'd need some level of practical experience to be able to visualize in a way that meaningfully represented what would happen in the real world.
All very interesting. I wonder if there's best practice for how to visualize in a way that gives best results. Perhaps it depends on your learning style. Or lack thereof!