Monday, December 19, 2011

Dizzy Seeing Labyrinth? You are too senile to drive

News Health Articles - Dizzy Seeing Labyrinth? You are too senile to drive. Game images winding alley or labyrinth usually only played by a child. But the labyrinth can be testing tools for driving feasibility. This according to psychologists. If Dizzy saw the labyrinth that is too senile to drive.

Labyrinth that can be used as a test tool is not a haphazard maze. Only a special maze developed by a psychologist and expert intelligence from Flinders Medical Centre in Adelaide, Dr Carol Snellgrove. Labyrinth that can be used for that purpose(Driving Feasibility).



At first glance, the so-called labyrinth Snellgrove Maze Task is like a maze that is played by a small child down the aisle-way aisle with a pencil. Differences of this labyrinth is the turnaround time for 60 seconds without error.

The degree of difficulty adjusted to the difficulties encountered when driving on the highway. "Thinking about and anticipate the various possibilities that occur on the highway equivalent of doing this labyrinth," said Dr Snellgrove,

Dr. Snellgrove writes in the December 2011 issue of the journal medicSA from News.com.au quoted as saying on Sunday (18/12/2011). "Cognitive disorders (such as those experienced by people senile) can be detected with this maze without having to undergo tests on the highway".

The participants were asked to complete the maze Snellgrove, then the results are compared with test driving on the highway. These experiments involved 115 people who have started to show symptoms of dementia. This is done to test equipment in the form of proving the accuracy of this labyrinth.

Participants who complete the maze of less than 60 seconds by simply doing less than 2 errors, usually passes within a test drive on the highway. Conversely, participants who failed the road test generally failed to complete the maze within 60 seconds.

Don't forget to play Labyrinth before do driving license test :D

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