Showing posts with label solve. Show all posts
Showing posts with label solve. Show all posts

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill, pro golfer Tiger Woods

Maze Cartoon - Tigers Woods in the Gulf

gulf and Golf with Tiger Woods
Editorial maze cartoon of Tiger Woods in the Gulf, the crewman apologizes for the mix up, says "We need a GULF clean up."
Can't solve the maze? Click here for the maze solution

Visit these sites for more Yonatan Frimer Mazes
Latest Political Maze Cartoon
Political Maze on Comic Sherpa
Yonatan Frimer Maze Art
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Maze Blog
Team Of Monkeys Maze Blog

Thanks, hope you've enjoyed this Maze cartoon of Tiger Woods Gulf Golfer. The entrance and exit of the maze is at the upper-right and lower-left corners of the image. A link to the solution of the maze is right under the image. Created by Yonatan Frimer

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Dream a Little Dream of Recall - Those who dream about mazes solve them better

Dream a Little Dream of Recall

As the sleeping brain builds memories it generates dreams about recently learned material

Click here for source article

By Bruce Bower, Science News

People who have nap-time dreams about a task that they’ve just practiced get a big memory boost on the task upon awakening, Harvard researchers report.

Those who dream about anything else have no such enhanced recall, the team reports in a paper published online April 22 in Current Biology. Neither do those who stay awake, even if they think about the task.

Click here to find out more!

“I was startled by this finding,” says study coauthor Robert Stickgold, a cognitive neuroscientist at Harvard Medical School. “Task-related dreams may get triggered by the sleeping brain’s attempt to consolidate challenging new information and to figure out how to use it.”

His new findings elaborate on research suggesting that sleep generally enhances memory and learning (SN: 4/28/07, p. 260).

Dreaming about a demanding undertaking doesn’t cause enhanced memories for that experience, Stickgold emphasizes. Rather, memory-fortifying brain processes during sleep cause the dreams, he proposes. During slumber, Stickgold posits, a structure called the hippocampus integrates recently learned information, such as how to navigate a virtual maze, while other brain regions apply this information to related but broader situations, such as how to navigate a maze of job application forms.

That’s a “tempting speculation,” remarks physiological psychologist Jan Born of the University of Lübeck in Germany. Stickgold’s idea has much potential for fostering advances in dream research, Born says.

Stickgold’s group focused on dreams that occur during non–rapid eye movement, or NREM, sleep. Previous studies found links between chemical and electrical activity in the brain during NREM sleep and better learning by rats and people. Neural activity sparked by recent learning has not been observed during rapid eye movement, or REM, sleep, which often includes especially vivid and bizarre dream elements.

In the new investigation, 99 college students age 18 to 30 spent an hour practicing a virtual maze task on a computer. In a series of trials, volunteers navigated through a complex, three-dimensional maze, starting from a different spot each time. They were instructed to remember the location of a particular tree in the maze.

For the first 90 minutes of a five-hour break from practicing, students were assigned either to take a nap or to engage in quiet activities such as watching videos.

Nappers’ electrical brain activity was monitored with scalp sensors. Experimenters questioned the students about their dreams just before they fell asleep, after one minute of continuous NREM sleep and at the end of the nap period. Volunteers who stayed awake recounted their thoughts at the start, middle and end of the 90-minute session.

After lunch and a period of quiet activity, participants reentered the virtual maze at random spots and were asked to find the tree that they had previously tried to remember.

Those who had dreamed of the experimental task — four of 50 nappers — found the tree much faster than they had in initial trials. These individuals described dreams such as seeing people at particular locations in a maze or hearing music that had played in the lab during testing.

All of the volunteers who dreamed about the maze had performed relatively poorly during pre-nap training, Stickgold notes. Memory processes invoked by the sleeping brain may respond most strongly to challenges perceived as difficult and important to solve, he suggests.

Stickgold’s group is now designing a more exciting maze task intended to elicit task-related dreams in a larger proportion of volunteers.

The researchers also plan to examine whether people who have REM dreams about a maze task during a full night’s slumber navigate that maze better the next day.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Happy Illusion Maze, By Yonatan Frimer

Happy Illusion Maze, By Yonatan Frimer
Optical Illusion of a happy face

Happy Illusion Maze, click to view the maze larger
Can't solve it? click here for the solution of the happy maze

Arrows mark the entrance and exit of the maze. Psychedelic maze of an optical illusion that appears as a happy face. Caused by the conflicting horizontal and vertical lines.

Want to check out other mazes by Yonatan Frimer, check out these links:
Ink Blot Mazes - Maze Art by Yonatan Frimer
Team Of Monkeys - Editoral Cartoon Mazes and maze cartoons by Yonatan Frimer
Buy Yonatan Frimer maze art Print-on-demand

Friday, March 12, 2010

Brain replays control decision-making process

Replaying recent events in the hippocampus of the brain has more to do with active decision-making process than with creating long-term memories, according to a new study.

Conducted by researchers at Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Minnesota Medical School, the study of rats navigating a maze found that replays occurring in the hippocampus were not necessarily recent or frequent paths through the maze, as would be expected if the event was being added to memory.

On the other hand, the replays often were paths that the rats had rarely taken or, in some cases, had never taken, as if the rats were trying to build maps to help them make better navigation decisions.

Dr. Anoopum Gupta, and his colleagues said that their findings suggest replays in the hippocampus are not merely passive echoes of past events, but part of a complex, active process of decision-making.

"Our work provides clues into how animals construct a complete, fully navigable representation of their environment, even if they’ve only partially explored that environment. The cognitive maps created in this way may allow animals to plan novel routes or shortcuts. As we learn more about the neural mechanisms that enable animals to flexibly navigate through the world, we hope to apply those lessons to research in robotics that could improve autonomous navigation systems," said Gupta.

The team used electrode ‘hats’ to record brain activity of rats as they navigated a maze. In particular, they monitored certain neurons, called place cells, which fire in response to physical locations.

That enabled the researchers to identify where an event that was being replayed was located based on which place cells were firing.

During an experiment, a rat might be in one portion of the maze, while the firing of place cells in the hippocampus indicated that the rat was replaying information about a different location.

On a task with two behavioral sequences, A and B, the researchers found that the animals would replay sequence B more often though they spent most of their time running sequence A.

This meant that the rats were most likely to replay the path they had experienced less often, which indicated that replay is not just a function of helping an animal remember what it has experienced most frequently or most recently, but an important function in helping it map its whole environment.

During the replay process, the research team also was able to observe the animal making connections between paths that it had never physically traveled before.

This further suggested that replay plays a role in helping an animal learn and maintain the entire map of its environment and make connections within it.

The rats were not just reviewing recent experience to move it to long-term memory.

The study was published in the journal Neuron.

Want to test the theory, try solving some of these mazes, created by Yonatan Frimer
The maze entrances and exits are marked by arrows.


Maze of the statue of david, by Yonatan Frimer
maze of david by michaelangelomaze of Michalangelo's david statue of marble in italy
Maze Portrait Of Michalangelo's David

Check out more mazes at these links
Maze cartoon - Team Of monkeys maze
maze art - inkblot mazes


Maze portrait of Madonna, by Yonatan Frimer
Madonna Ciccone Portrait Maze

Check out more mazes at these links
Maze cartoon - Team Of monkeys maze
maze art - inkblot mazes



Maze portrait of Lilly Allen, by Yonatan Frimer
Maze of Lily Allen
Maze of Lily Allen


Check out more mazes at these links
Maze cartoon - Team Of monkeys maze
maze art - inkblot mazes



Freemason Monkeys -
Illuminati's building a wall
- Maze
freemason monkeys - illuminati apes
Click here to view the freemason monkeys maze larger

Check out more mazes at these links
Maze cartoon - Team Of monkeys maze
maze art - inkblot mazes



Monkeys For Justice - Team Of Monkeys Judicial Panel
Monkey judges, justic, courtroom, sternographers
Monkey Judges Maze:
"Trained to dispense justice in even the most difficult legal cases"
Click here to view the justice monkeys maze larger

Check out more mazes at these links
Maze cartoon - Team Of monkeys maze
maze art - inkblot mazes


Thursday, February 18, 2010

Maze Top Ten (according to google)

Each maze created with painstaking detail by Yonatan Frimer
Ranking based on google image search for the keyword "Maze"

Drum roll, please.....

#1
Maze Kong
Maze Kong - 2006 Mazes
King Kong of Mazes

Want to check out more mazes like this one? check out the links bellow
Team of Monkeys - Maze Comics
Ink Blot Mazes - Maze Art


#2
Maze-A-Delic 2006
Maze A Delical


#3
April showers bring MAZE flowers
http://teamofmonkeys.com/html/images/April%20Showers%20Bring%20Maze%20Flowers%20yfrimer%202006%20Ink%20on%20Paper.gif
Want to check out more mazes like this one? check out the links bellow
Team of Monkeys - Maze Comics
Ink Blot Mazes - Maze Art


#4
Maze of Gilad Shalit Wearing Uniform and Rifle
Maze of Gilad Shalit - Kidnapped Israeli Soldier by hamas Maze of Gilad Shalit wearing Uniform and Rifle
Maze of Gilad Shalit wearing Uniform and Rifle
Click here to Download these Images of Gilad Shalit in High resolution PDF


#5
Maze of Monkey Illusion - 2009
Optical illusion maze caused by conflicting horizontal and vertical lines.
maze of monkey illusion medium InkBlotMazes Ink Blot Mazes, By Yonatan Frimer, your humble maze artist

#6
Monkeys Eyes Maze
mazes picture for close up maze of eyes

Want to check out more mazes like this one? check out the links bellow
Team of Monkeys - Maze Comics
Ink Blot Mazes - Maze Art


#7
Maze Portrait of Albert Einstein.
Celebrity, artword, celebrities, portraits, famous,  Portait maze of albert einstein

#8
Olympic Pool Maze
pool maze 001

#9
Kiss and Maze up.
kiss-maze-420.png

#10
Maze Madonna
portrait-maze-madonna-ciccone-720.png

Want to check out more mazes like this one? check out the links bellow
Team of Monkeys - Maze Comics
Ink Blot Mazes - Maze Art