#attention

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Bimbos are here and they are here to stayNatural is boring and if girls want attention in the future

Bimbos are here and they are here to stay
Natural is boring and if girls want attention in the future there going to have to become dumb slutty and looking good , natural girls will simply not be able to compete with these attention sucking black holes our society has created
There is no turning back now , either stay ahead or get left behind ladies  


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In this new world where moving towards being natural is not enough for women to get attention.They h

In this new world where moving towards being natural is not enough for women to get attention.
They have to physically enhance them self to look fun and up to date , there no limit on where this will take our society and a great way to enhance yourself is to get great big cock sucking lips.
Not only do they display that you are for fun and enhanced for sex but it also helps making you look stupid and clearly display your role in modern society.
all women that refuse to enhance them self should be treated as lesser and be picked on by women who already learned there place in society 


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Attention is everything for a woman and without it she is nothing , she has no meaning in life excep

Attention is everything for a woman and without it she is nothing , she has no meaning in life except obtaining attention and she will do anything necessary to achieve it. 
Attention is like a drug for girls once they get it they cant stop , they put on fake nails fake eyelashes high heels slutty cloths and objectify them self just to get it.
We men have something that they need , and they need us more then we need them, without us they have no meaning in life and bimbos understand that. 
This is how the world works and Subwomen need to understand this
The only way to achieve your true potential is to accept without attention you are nothing , only then will you have true meaning in life.  


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“You always hear what you wanna hear!”

“A glass of wine? I’d love to!”

There’s always someone who’s got the attention

There’s always someone who’s got the attention


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A baby’s cry not only commands our attention, it also rattles our executive functions—the very neural and cognitive processes we use for making everyday decisions, according to a new University of Toronto study.

“Parental instinct appears to be hardwired, yet no one talks about how this instinct might include cognition,” says David Haley, co-author and Associate Professor of psychology at U of T Scarborough.

“If we simply had an automatic response every time a baby started crying, how would we think about competing concerns in the environment or how best to respond to a baby’s distress?”

The study looked at the effect infant vocalizations—in this case audio clips of a baby laughing or crying—had on adults completing a cognitive conflict task. The researchers used the Stroop task, in which participants were asked to rapidly identify the color of a printed word while ignoring the meaning of the word itself. Brain activity was measured using electroencephalography (EEG) during each trial of the cognitive task, which took place immediately after a two-second audio clip of an infant vocalization.

The brain data revealed that the infant cries reduced attention to the task and triggered greater cognitive conflict processing than the infant laughs. Cognitive conflict processing is important because it controls attention—one of the most basic executive functions needed to complete a task or make a decision, notes Haley, who runs U of T’s Parent-Infant Research Lab.

“Parents are constantly making a variety of everyday decisions and have competing demands on their attention,” says Joanna Dudek, a graduate student in Haley’s Parent-Infant Research Lab and the lead author of the study.

“They may be in the middle of doing chores when the doorbell rings and their child starts to cry. How do they stay calm, cool and collected, and how do they know when to drop what they’re doing and pick up the child?”

A baby’s cry has been shown to cause aversion in adults, but it could also create an adaptive response by “switching on” the cognitive control parents use in effectively responding to their child’s emotional needs while also addressing other demands in everyday life, adds Haley.

“If an infant’s cry activates cognitive conflict in the brain, it could also be teaching parents how to focus their attention more selectively,” he says.

“It’s this cognitive flexibility that allows parents to rapidly switch between responding to their baby’s distress and other competing demands in their lives—which, paradoxically, may mean ignoring the infant momentarily.”

The findings add to a growing body of research suggesting that infants occupy a privileged status in our neurobiological programming, one deeply rooted in our evolutionary past. But, as Haley notes, it also reveals an important adaptive cognitive function in the human brain.

“It’s rude to point” - maybe not…The old adage that ‘it’s rude to point’ mi

“It’s rude to point” - maybe not…

The old adage that ‘it’s rude to point’ might need a rethink after new research showed that young children struggle to make sense of common symbols like arrows, and respond best to a pointing finger to direct their gaze.

Psychologists from the University of Lincoln, UK, found that the attention of pre-school and early school year children is strongly influenced by the direction of a pointing finger – but other visual directional cues such as arrows or pictures of peeking eyes are often ineffective.

The new findings challenge previous theories that the ability to direct visual attention to where others are looking relies on an innate brain module. The findings indicate that this cognitive ability must develop with age.

Researchers asked 137 children aged between three and ten years to play a specially-designed computer game. In the game, the children were asked to keep their eyes on a cartoon character, Buzzy Bee, which repeatedly jumped unpredictably from the middle to the left or right of the computer screen.

The researchers used eye-tracking technology to study the children’s responses. The children were instructed to follow the character with their eyes, but not to pay attention to pictures of eyes, arrows and pointing fingers which also flashed up on screen. These ‘directional cues’ could be pointing in either the same direction as the bee or in another direction. The bee would then jump around the screen, and the researchers monitored where the child’s gaze followed, as well as how quickly and accurately they followed the bee when it was displayed with the visual cues.

The findings showed that the youngest age group – three to five year-olds – were only influenced by the pointing fingers and tended to look in the direction it was pointing. Older children demonstrated a stronger ability to follow the bee correctly despite the directional cues.

Researcher Professor Tim Hodgson, neuroscientist and Head of the University of Lincoln’s School of Psychology, said: “In infancy a child develops brain circuits in the frontal cortex of the brain, an area which allows us to control our eyes and attention.

“Children have to learn to link what they see in the world around them with the direction of interesting information and events. One of the first ’cues’ to attention that young children learn may be the direction of an adult’s pointing index finger.”

The experiment was carried out at the University of Lincoln’s annual Summer Scientist event, in which hundreds of children and their parents participate in a range of fun games, quizzes and challenges which inform real psychology research.

The study is published in the Springer academic journal Experimental Brain Research.


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#Attention #Uptownies: #LaLucha #GroupArtShow… (at Rio’s Penthouse Gallery)

#Attention #Uptownies: #LaLucha #GroupArtShow… (at Rio’s Penthouse Gallery)


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NEW MUSIC: OMAH LAY X JUSTIN BIEBER - ATTENTION

Following on from his feature on Wizkid’s & Tems double-platinum record “Essence”, Justin Bieber has now hooked up with Omay Lay to feature on his new single “Attention”.

Omah Lay’s first official single for 2022, “Attention” serves as a pathway to his forthcoming album tagged Boy Alone.

The visuals were shot and directed by CollinTilley.

Watch, Share and Enjoy “No Wahala”

Follow @AfrobeatsCity on Facebook | Instagram | Twitter

« […] Were it not for the way you taught me to look
at the world, to see the life at play in everything,
I would have to be lonely forever. »

― Ted Kooser, “Mother” in Delights and Shadows

attention

Modern Daydreaming.

#new media    #new media art    #conceptual    #create every day    #flocking    #attention    #social media    #facebook    #youtube    #instagram    #snapchat    #twitter    #processing    
I wantend to focus on the jacket but my chihuahua stole it’s thunder #me #girl #woman #today #

I wantend to focus on the jacket but my chihuahua stole it’s thunder #me #girl #woman #today #vintage #jacket #patches #chihuahuasofinstagram #chihuahua #pet #dog #baby #attention #ootd #outfit #look #fashion #style #blog #blogger #reallife #fashionblog #fashionblogger #notperfect #fashiondisaster #fashiondisastercc


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