Waubonsee Community College

Seeing what others cannot see, the hidden advantages of visual thinkers and differently wired brains, Thomas G. West

Label
Seeing what others cannot see, the hidden advantages of visual thinkers and differently wired brains, Thomas G. West
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Seeing what others cannot see
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
957021533
Responsibility statement
Thomas G. West
Series statement
Developmental Disabilities Resource guide
Sub title
the hidden advantages of visual thinkers and differently wired brains
Summary
For over 25 years, Thomas G. West has been a leading advocate for the importance of visual thinking, visual technologies and the creative potential of individuals with dyslexia and other learning differences. In this new book, he investigates how different kinds of brains and different ways of thinking can help to make discoveries and solve problems in innovative and unexpected ways. West focuses on what he has learned over the years from a group of extraordinarily creative, intelligent, and interesting people -- those with dyslexia, Asperger's syndrome, and other different ways of thinking, learning, and working. He shows that such people can provide important insights missed by experts as they also can prevent institutional "group think." Based on first-person accounts, West tells stories that include a dyslexic paleontologist in Montana, a special effects tech who worked for Pink Floyd and Kiss and who is now an advocate for those with Asperger's syndrome, a group of dyslexic master code breakers in a British electronic intelligence organization, a Colorado livestock handling expert who has become a forceful advocate for those with autism and a family of dyslexics and visual thinkers in Britain that includes four winners of the Nobel Prize in Physics. He also discusses persistent controversies and the unfolding science. This is an inspiring book that not only documents the achievements of people with various learning differences, but reveals their great potential -- especially in a new digital age where traditional clerical and academic skills are less and less important while an ability to think in pictures and to understand patterns using high-level computer information visualizations is rapidly increasing in value in the global economic marketplace
Table Of Contents
Introduction -- Seeing the whole -- Visual perspectives -- Seeing along the spectrum -- The power of design -- Those who can see -- Insiders, outsiders -- Observing, listening, writing -- Those who cannot see -- Visual families and Nobel prizes -- Conclusion
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