Focus: The Hidden Driver of ExcellenceHarper Collins, 8 thg 10, 2013 - 320 trang In Focus, Psychologist and journalist Daniel Goleman, author of the #1 international bestseller Emotional Intelligence, offers a groundbreaking look at today’s scarcest resource and the secret to high performance and fulfillment: attention. Combining cutting-edge research with practical findings, Focus delves into the science of attention in all its varieties, presenting a long overdue discussion of this little-noticed and under-rated mental asset. In an era of unstoppable distractions, Goleman persuasively argues that now more than ever we must learn to sharpen focus if we are to survive in a complex world. Goleman boils down attention research into a threesome: inner, other, and outer focus. Drawing on rich case studies from fields as diverse as competitive sports, education, the arts, and business, he shows why high-achievers need all three kinds of focus, and explains how those who rely on Smart Practices—mindfulness meditation, focused preparation and recovery, positive emotions and connections, and mental “prosthetics” that help them improve habits, add new skills, and sustain greatness—excel while others do not. |
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... lower layers. “Bottom-up” has become the phrase of choice in cognitive science for such workings of this lower-brain neural machinery.2 By the same token, “top-down” refers to mental activity, mainly within the neocortex, that can ...
... bottom-up (as is the attention captured by a stylish outfit or a nifty ad). When we choose to tune in to the beauty of a sunset, concentrate on what we're reading, or have a deep talk with someone, it's a top-down shift. Our mind's eye ...
... bottom-up systems. Much (some say all) of what the top-down mind believes it has chosen to focus on, think about, and do is actually plans dictated bottom-up. If this were a movie, psychologist Daniel Kahneman wryly notes, the top-down ...
... bottom-up whims and drives. A surprising factor constantly tips the balance toward bottomup: the brain economizes on energy. Cognitive efforts like learning to use your latest tech upgrade demand active attention, at an energy cost. But ...
... bottom-up moves, the more you free your mind to be nimble. Take, for example, star football quarterbacks who have what sports analysts call “great ability to see the field”: they can read the other team's defensive formations to sense ...
Nội dung
2 | |
5 | |
SelfAwareness | |
Seeing Ourselves as Others See | |
A Recipe for SelfControl | |
The Woman Who Knew Too Much | |
Social Sensitivity | |
Brains on Games | |
Breathing Buddies | |
The WellFocused Leader | |
The Leaders Triple Focus | |
What Makes a Leader? | |
Leading for the Long Future | |
Acknowledgments | |
Notes | |
Patterns Systems and Messes | |
System Blindness | |
Distant Threats | |
The Myth of 10000 Hours | |
Index | |
About the Author | |
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Focus (HBR Emotional Intelligence Series) Harvard Business Review,Daniel Goleman,Heidi Grant,Amy Jen Su,Rasmus Hougaard,Maura Nevel Thomas Xem trước bị giới hạn - 2018 |