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He wrote that the ¡®human mind is capable of excitement without the application of gross and violent stimulants¡¯. And it appears that simply reading those words by William Wordsworth prove his point.Ó¢¹úÊ«ÈËÍþÁ®¡¤»ª×È»ªË¹ÔøÐ´µÀ£º¡°È˵ÄÐÄÁ飬²»Óþ޴óÃÍÁҵĴ̼¤£¬Ò²Äܹ»ÐË·ÜÆðÀ´¡±¡£ÒªËµÃ÷ÕâÒ»µã£¬¿´ÉÏÈ¥ËÆºõµ¥ÊǶÁÒ»ÏÂÕâ¾ä»°¾Í¹»ÁË¡£
Researchers at the University of Liverpool found the prose of Shakespeare and Wordsworth and the like had a beneficial effect on the mind, providing a 'rocket-boost' to morale by catching the reader's attention and triggering moments of self-reflection.ÀûÎïÆÖ´óѧµÄÑо¿ÈËÔ±·¢ÏÖ£¬É¯Ê¿±ÈÑǺͻª×È»ªË¹ÒÔ¼°ÆäËûÀàËÆ×÷¼ÒµÄ×÷Æ·¶Ô˼ά¾ßÓÐñÔÒæ£¬Äܹ»ÎüÒý¶ÁÕßµÄ×¢ÒâÁ¦£¬ÈöÁÕß×ÔÎÒ·´Ê¡£¬Ïñ¡°»ð¼ýÖúÍÆÆ÷¡±Ò»ÑùÌáÉýÈ˵ľ«Éñ״̬¡£
Using scanners, they monitored the brain activity of volunteers as they read pieces of classical English literature both in their original form and in a more dumbed-down, modern translation.Ñо¿Ô±ÃÇʹÓÃɨÃèÒÇ£¬¼à²âÖ¾Ô¸ÕßÃÇÔĶÁ¾µäÓ¢¹úÎÄѧ×÷ƷʱµÄ´óÄԻ¡£ËûÃÇÔĶÁµÄ¼ÈÓÐÔ×÷£¬ÓÖÓмò»¯µÄÏÖ´ú°æÒëÎÄ¡£
And, according to the Sunday Telegraph, the experiment showed the more 'challenging' prose and poetry set off far more electrical activity in the brain than the pedestrian versions.¸ù¾Ý¡¶ÐÇÆÚÈÕµçѶ±¨¡·µÄ±¨µ¼£¬Õâ¸öʵÑ黹±íÃ÷£º±ÈÆðÄÇЩƽµµÄ°æ±¾£¬É¢ÎĺÍÊ«×÷¸ü¾ßÓÐÌôÕ½ÐÔ£¬ÄÔµç»î¶¯Ò²»îÔ¾µÃ¶à¡£
The research also found poetry, in particular, increased activity in the right hemisphere of the brain, an area concerned with 'autobiographical memory', which helped the reader to reflect on and reappraise their own experiences in light of what they had read. The academics said this meant the classics were more useful than self-help books.Ñо¿Ò²·¢ÏÖ£¬Ê«×÷ÓÈÆäÄܹ»Ôö¼ÓÈËÓÒÄԵĻ£¬¶øÓÒÄԺ͡°×Ô´«Ê½¼ÇÒ䡱Óйأ¬Äܹ»ÈöÁÕ߸ù¾Ý¶Áµ½µÄÄÚÈÝ»ØÏëµ½ËûÃÇ×Ô¼ºµÄ¾Àú£¬²¢ÇÒ¶ÔÖ®ÖØÐÂÆÀ¼Û¡£Ñ§Õß˵Õâ¾ÍÒâζמµä×÷Æ·±ÈÀøÖ¾Í¼Êé¸üÓÐÓá£

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The brain responses of 30 volunteers was monitored in the first part of the research as they read Shakespeare in its original and 'modern' form.ʵÑéµÄµÚÒ»²¿·ÖÖУ¬30ÃûÖ¾Ô¸ÕßÔĶÁÁËɯ±ÈÊ¿ÑÇ×÷Æ·µÄÔ°æºÍ¡°ÏÖ´ú°æ¡±£¬Óë´ËͬʱÑо¿ÕßÃǼà²âÁËËûÃÇ´óÄԵķ´Ó¦¡£
In one example, volunteers read a line from King Lear, 'A father and a gracious aged man: him have you madded', before reading the simpler. 'A father and a gracious aged man: him you have enraged'.ÆäÖÐÒ»¸öÀý×ÓÊÇÖ¾Ô¸ÕßÔĶÁ¡¶Àî¶ûÍõ¡·ÖеÄÒ»¾ą̈´Ê£¬¡°A father and a gracious aged man: him have you madded¡±½ÓÏÂÀ´ËûÃÇÓÖÔĶÁÁËÒ»¾ä¼òµ¥Ò»µãµÄ°æ±¾£¬¡°A father and a gracious aged man: him you have enraged¡±¡££¨Ð¡±à×¢£º´Ë¾äÒëÎÄΪ£ºÕâÑùһλ¸¸Ç×£¬ÕâÑùһλÈʴȵÄÀÏÈ˼ң¬ÄãÃÇÈ´°ÑËû¼¤³ÉÁË·è¿ñ£¡£©
Shakespeare's use of the adjective 'mad' as a verb caused a higher level of brain activity than the straightforward prose.±ÈÆðÖ±°×µÄÏÖ´ú°æÊ«¾ä£¬É¯Ê¿±ÈÑǰÑÐÎÈÝ´Ê¡°mad¡±ÓÃ×÷¶¯´ÊÐÎʽ£¬ÕâÈôóÄԵĻîÔ¾¶È¸ü¸ß¡£
The next phase of the research is looking at the extent to which poetry can affect psychology and provide therapeutic benefit. Volunteers' brains were scanned while reading four lines by Wordsworth, and four 'translated' lines were also provided.µÚ¶þ¸ö½×¶ÎÊÇÑо¿Ê«×÷¿ÉÒÔÓ°ÏìÐÄÀí״̬µ½Ê²Ã´³Ì¶È£¬¸ø½¡¿µ´øÀ´¶àÉÙÒæ´¦¡£Ñо¿ÕßÔÚÖ¾Ô¸ÕßÔĶÁ»ª×È»ªË¹µÄËľäÊ«×÷ÔÎĺ͡°ÒëÎÄ¡±Ê±É¨ÃèÁËËüÃǵĴóÄÔ¡£
The first version caused a greater degree of brain activity, lighting up not only the left part of the brain concerned with language, but also the right hemisphere that relates to autobiographical memory and emotion.ǰÕßÄܹ»ÈôóÄԵĻîÔ¾³Ì¶È¸ü¸ß£¬²»½öÈÿØÖÆÓïÑÔµÄ×óÄÔ±äµÃ¸ü»îÔ¾£¬Í¬Ê±Ò²ÄÜÈÿØÖÆ×Ô´«Ê½¼ÇÒäÒÔ¼°Çé¸ÐµÄÓÒÄÔ¸ü»îÔ¾¡£
'Poetry is not just a matter of style. It is a matter of deep versions of experience that add the emotional and biographical to the cognitive,' said Prof Davis, who will present the findings at the North of England education conference in Sheffield this week.¡°Ê«¸è²»µ¥µ¥ÊÇÒ»ÖÖÎÄÌ塣ʫ¸èÊÇÒ»ÖÖÉî²ã´ÎµÄ¾Ñ飬ÕâÖÖ¾ÑéÊÇÔÚÈÏÖª¾ÑéµÄ»ù´¡ÉϼÓÉÏÇé¸Ð¾ÑéºÍÉúƽ¾Àú¶øÐγɵ쬡±´÷ά˹½ÌÊÚÈçÊÇ˵¡£´÷ά˹½ÌÊÚ½«ÔÚ±¾ÖÜÔÚл·Æ¶ûµÂ¾ÙÐеı±Ó¢¸ñÀ¼½ÌÓý´ó»áÉϽéÉÜËûµÄÑо¿³É¹û¡£
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