How I Use Mind Mapping to Help De-Clutter My Brain
What is Mind Mapping?
I define it as a tool for decluttering your brain. Some people would describe its function as more of a brainstorming or organizing tool. Really though, it’s both. It’s a highly effective method for getting thoughts onto paper in a way that makes sense for you.
Because the fine details of your mind mapping process and results are always unique, it’s pretty much universally helpful, whatever your personality type.
The amazing thing about mind mapping is that it uses both the creative and the logical sides of your brain, and brings them into harmony!
Source: https://redandhoney.com/use-mind-mapping-help-declutter-brain/
How I Use Mind Mapping to Help De-Clutter My Brain
What is Mind Mapping?
I define it as a tool for decluttering your brain. Some people would describe its function as more of a brainstorming or organizing tool. Really though, it’s both. It’s a highly effective method for getting thoughts onto paper in a way that makes sense for you.
Because the fine details of your mind mapping process and results are always unique, it’s pretty much universally helpful, whatever your personality type.
The amazing thing about mind mapping is that it uses both the creative and the logical sides of your brain, and brings them into harmony!
Source: https://redandhoney.com/use-mind-mapping-help-declutter-brain/
50 Thinking prompts Mind Map by Paul Foreman
Blog Post: http://www.mindmapinspiration.com/50-thinking-prompts/
You can subscribe to the Mind Map Inspiration Blog to receive new Mind Maps at http://www.mindmapinspiration.com/ and follow me on Twitter @mindmapdrawer http://twitter.com/mindmapdrawer
Also available: E-Books designed to help you create stylish and artistic mind maps of your own - visit the Mind Map Inspiration Website for more details: http://www.mindmapinspiration.co.uk/
UPDATE: A friend commented that this presentation needed more information... He hadn't read the speaker's notes. Please click the tab "notes" next to the "comments" tab... the notes appear on slide 5 forward.
The first few slides are just bullet points mostly... there's a reason for that. Slide 5 starts to pick up the pace. This is a short primer on how to mind map and why they can be so effective. I've given this presentation to CEO Peer Groups and it is always successful with lots of questions and interaction. As a normal course I use Mind Maps to solve problems and build strategies for the Market Development work that I consult on for clients. If you like the presentation, will you "tweet" it for me?
Mind Mapping:how to maximize your brain’s potential
Let your creative energy radiate from both sides of your brain, from the kernel of your Mind Map
By presenting ideas in a radial, graphical, nonlinear manner, mind maps encourage a brainstorming approach to planning and organizing tasks.
* Millions of people are using mind maps for brainstorming, note taking, document drafting, project planning and other tasks that require hierarchical structuring of information.
A Mind Map is a powerful graphic technique which harnesses the full range of cortical skills in a single, powerful manner skills manner
Drawing A Mind Map From Start To FinishPaul Foreman
Drawing A Mind Map From Start To Finish
Blog Post: http://www.mindmapinspiration.com/drawing-a-mind-map-from-start-to-finish/
You can subscribe to the Mind Map Inspiration Blog to receive new Mind Maps at http://www.mindmapinspiration.com/ and follow me on Twitter @mindmapdrawer http://twitter.com/mindmapdrawer
Also available: E-Books designed to help you create stylish and artistic mind maps of your own - visit the Mind Map Inspiration Website for more details: http://www.mindmapinspiration.co.uk/
A8: Mind Mapping for Effective Content ManagementGareth Saunders
Workshop at IWMW2008 on Mind Mapping for Effective Content Management by Dr Stephen Evans and The Revd Gareth J M Saunders from the University of St Andrews.
An Introduction to Design ThinkingPROCESS GUIDEWHAT is t.docxgalerussel59292
An Introduction to Design Thinking
PROCESS GUIDE
WHAT is the Empathize mode
Empathy is the centerpiece of a human-centered design process. The Empathize mode is
the work you do to understand people, within the context of your design challenge. It is your
effort to understand the way they do things and why, their physical and emotional needs, how
they think about world, and what is meaningful to them.
WHY empathize
As a design thinker, the problems you are trying to solve are rarely your own—they are those of
a particular group of people; in order to design for them, you must gain empathy for who they
are and what is important to them.
Observing what people do and how they interact with their environment gives you clues about
what they think and feel. It also helps you learn about what they need. By watching people,
you can capture physical manifestations of their experiences – what they do and say. This will
allow you to infer the intangible meaning of those experiences in order to uncover insights.
These insights give you direction to create innovative solutions. The best solutions come out
of the best insights into human behavior. But learning to recognize those insights is harder
than you might think. Why? Because our minds automatically filter out a lot of information
without our even realizing it. We need to learn to see things “with a fresh set of eyes,” and
empathizing is what gives us those new eyes.
Engaging with people directly reveals a tremendous amount about the way they think and
the values they hold. Sometimes these thoughts and values are not obvious to the people
who hold them, and a good conversation can surprise both the designer and the subject by
the unanticipated insights that are revealed. The stories that people tell and the things that
people say they do—even if they are different from what they actually do—are strong indicators
of their deeply held beliefs about the way the world is. Good designs are built on a solid
understanding of these beliefs and values.
HOW to empathize
To empathize, you:
- Observe. View users and their behavior in the context of their lives. As much as possible
do observations in relevant contexts in addition to interviews. Some of the most powerful
realizations come from noticing a disconnect between what someone says and what he does.
Others come from a work-around someone has created which may be very surprising to you as
the designer, but she may not even think to mention in conversation.
- Engage. Sometimes we call this technique ‘interviewing’ but it should really feel more like
a conversation. Prepare some questions you’d like to ask, but expect to let the conversation
deviate from them. Keep the conversation only loosely bounded. Elicit stories from the
people you talk to, and always ask “Why?” to uncover deeper meaning. Engagement can come
through both short ‘intercept’ encounters and longer scheduled conversations.
- W.
An Introduction to Design ThinkingPROCESS GUIDEWHAT .docxdaniahendric
An Introduction to Design Thinking
PROCESS GUIDE
WHAT is the Empathize mode
Empathy is the centerpiece of a human-centered design process. The Empathize mode is
the work you do to understand people, within the context of your design challenge. It is your
effort to understand the way they do things and why, their physical and emotional needs, how
they think about world, and what is meaningful to them.
WHY empathize
As a design thinker, the problems you are trying to solve are rarely your own—they are those of
a particular group of people; in order to design for them, you must gain empathy for who they
are and what is important to them.
Observing what people do and how they interact with their environment gives you clues about
what they think and feel. It also helps you learn about what they need. By watching people,
you can capture physical manifestations of their experiences – what they do and say. This will
allow you to infer the intangible meaning of those experiences in order to uncover insights.
These insights give you direction to create innovative solutions. The best solutions come out
of the best insights into human behavior. But learning to recognize those insights is harder
than you might think. Why? Because our minds automatically filter out a lot of information
without our even realizing it. We need to learn to see things “with a fresh set of eyes,” and
empathizing is what gives us those new eyes.
Engaging with people directly reveals a tremendous amount about the way they think and
the values they hold. Sometimes these thoughts and values are not obvious to the people
who hold them, and a good conversation can surprise both the designer and the subject by
the unanticipated insights that are revealed. The stories that people tell and the things that
people say they do—even if they are different from what they actually do—are strong indicators
of their deeply held beliefs about the way the world is. Good designs are built on a solid
understanding of these beliefs and values.
HOW to empathize
To empathize, you:
- Observe. View users and their behavior in the context of their lives. As much as possible
do observations in relevant contexts in addition to interviews. Some of the most powerful
realizations come from noticing a disconnect between what someone says and what he does.
Others come from a work-around someone has created which may be very surprising to you as
the designer, but she may not even think to mention in conversation.
- Engage. Sometimes we call this technique ‘interviewing’ but it should really feel more like
a conversation. Prepare some questions you’d like to ask, but expect to let the conversation
deviate from them. Keep the conversation only loosely bounded. Elicit stories from the
people you talk to, and always ask “Why?” to uncover deeper meaning. Engagement can come
through both short ‘intercept’ encounters and longer scheduled conversations.
- ...
50 Thinking prompts Mind Map by Paul Foreman
Blog Post: http://www.mindmapinspiration.com/50-thinking-prompts/
You can subscribe to the Mind Map Inspiration Blog to receive new Mind Maps at http://www.mindmapinspiration.com/ and follow me on Twitter @mindmapdrawer http://twitter.com/mindmapdrawer
Also available: E-Books designed to help you create stylish and artistic mind maps of your own - visit the Mind Map Inspiration Website for more details: http://www.mindmapinspiration.co.uk/
UPDATE: A friend commented that this presentation needed more information... He hadn't read the speaker's notes. Please click the tab "notes" next to the "comments" tab... the notes appear on slide 5 forward.
The first few slides are just bullet points mostly... there's a reason for that. Slide 5 starts to pick up the pace. This is a short primer on how to mind map and why they can be so effective. I've given this presentation to CEO Peer Groups and it is always successful with lots of questions and interaction. As a normal course I use Mind Maps to solve problems and build strategies for the Market Development work that I consult on for clients. If you like the presentation, will you "tweet" it for me?
Mind Mapping:how to maximize your brain’s potential
Let your creative energy radiate from both sides of your brain, from the kernel of your Mind Map
By presenting ideas in a radial, graphical, nonlinear manner, mind maps encourage a brainstorming approach to planning and organizing tasks.
* Millions of people are using mind maps for brainstorming, note taking, document drafting, project planning and other tasks that require hierarchical structuring of information.
A Mind Map is a powerful graphic technique which harnesses the full range of cortical skills in a single, powerful manner skills manner
Drawing A Mind Map From Start To FinishPaul Foreman
Drawing A Mind Map From Start To Finish
Blog Post: http://www.mindmapinspiration.com/drawing-a-mind-map-from-start-to-finish/
You can subscribe to the Mind Map Inspiration Blog to receive new Mind Maps at http://www.mindmapinspiration.com/ and follow me on Twitter @mindmapdrawer http://twitter.com/mindmapdrawer
Also available: E-Books designed to help you create stylish and artistic mind maps of your own - visit the Mind Map Inspiration Website for more details: http://www.mindmapinspiration.co.uk/
A8: Mind Mapping for Effective Content ManagementGareth Saunders
Workshop at IWMW2008 on Mind Mapping for Effective Content Management by Dr Stephen Evans and The Revd Gareth J M Saunders from the University of St Andrews.
An Introduction to Design ThinkingPROCESS GUIDEWHAT is t.docxgalerussel59292
An Introduction to Design Thinking
PROCESS GUIDE
WHAT is the Empathize mode
Empathy is the centerpiece of a human-centered design process. The Empathize mode is
the work you do to understand people, within the context of your design challenge. It is your
effort to understand the way they do things and why, their physical and emotional needs, how
they think about world, and what is meaningful to them.
WHY empathize
As a design thinker, the problems you are trying to solve are rarely your own—they are those of
a particular group of people; in order to design for them, you must gain empathy for who they
are and what is important to them.
Observing what people do and how they interact with their environment gives you clues about
what they think and feel. It also helps you learn about what they need. By watching people,
you can capture physical manifestations of their experiences – what they do and say. This will
allow you to infer the intangible meaning of those experiences in order to uncover insights.
These insights give you direction to create innovative solutions. The best solutions come out
of the best insights into human behavior. But learning to recognize those insights is harder
than you might think. Why? Because our minds automatically filter out a lot of information
without our even realizing it. We need to learn to see things “with a fresh set of eyes,” and
empathizing is what gives us those new eyes.
Engaging with people directly reveals a tremendous amount about the way they think and
the values they hold. Sometimes these thoughts and values are not obvious to the people
who hold them, and a good conversation can surprise both the designer and the subject by
the unanticipated insights that are revealed. The stories that people tell and the things that
people say they do—even if they are different from what they actually do—are strong indicators
of their deeply held beliefs about the way the world is. Good designs are built on a solid
understanding of these beliefs and values.
HOW to empathize
To empathize, you:
- Observe. View users and their behavior in the context of their lives. As much as possible
do observations in relevant contexts in addition to interviews. Some of the most powerful
realizations come from noticing a disconnect between what someone says and what he does.
Others come from a work-around someone has created which may be very surprising to you as
the designer, but she may not even think to mention in conversation.
- Engage. Sometimes we call this technique ‘interviewing’ but it should really feel more like
a conversation. Prepare some questions you’d like to ask, but expect to let the conversation
deviate from them. Keep the conversation only loosely bounded. Elicit stories from the
people you talk to, and always ask “Why?” to uncover deeper meaning. Engagement can come
through both short ‘intercept’ encounters and longer scheduled conversations.
- W.
An Introduction to Design ThinkingPROCESS GUIDEWHAT .docxdaniahendric
An Introduction to Design Thinking
PROCESS GUIDE
WHAT is the Empathize mode
Empathy is the centerpiece of a human-centered design process. The Empathize mode is
the work you do to understand people, within the context of your design challenge. It is your
effort to understand the way they do things and why, their physical and emotional needs, how
they think about world, and what is meaningful to them.
WHY empathize
As a design thinker, the problems you are trying to solve are rarely your own—they are those of
a particular group of people; in order to design for them, you must gain empathy for who they
are and what is important to them.
Observing what people do and how they interact with their environment gives you clues about
what they think and feel. It also helps you learn about what they need. By watching people,
you can capture physical manifestations of their experiences – what they do and say. This will
allow you to infer the intangible meaning of those experiences in order to uncover insights.
These insights give you direction to create innovative solutions. The best solutions come out
of the best insights into human behavior. But learning to recognize those insights is harder
than you might think. Why? Because our minds automatically filter out a lot of information
without our even realizing it. We need to learn to see things “with a fresh set of eyes,” and
empathizing is what gives us those new eyes.
Engaging with people directly reveals a tremendous amount about the way they think and
the values they hold. Sometimes these thoughts and values are not obvious to the people
who hold them, and a good conversation can surprise both the designer and the subject by
the unanticipated insights that are revealed. The stories that people tell and the things that
people say they do—even if they are different from what they actually do—are strong indicators
of their deeply held beliefs about the way the world is. Good designs are built on a solid
understanding of these beliefs and values.
HOW to empathize
To empathize, you:
- Observe. View users and their behavior in the context of their lives. As much as possible
do observations in relevant contexts in addition to interviews. Some of the most powerful
realizations come from noticing a disconnect between what someone says and what he does.
Others come from a work-around someone has created which may be very surprising to you as
the designer, but she may not even think to mention in conversation.
- Engage. Sometimes we call this technique ‘interviewing’ but it should really feel more like
a conversation. Prepare some questions you’d like to ask, but expect to let the conversation
deviate from them. Keep the conversation only loosely bounded. Elicit stories from the
people you talk to, and always ask “Why?” to uncover deeper meaning. Engagement can come
through both short ‘intercept’ encounters and longer scheduled conversations.
- ...
Handout for "Proven Presentation Techniques", an InfoComm approved workshop b...Thomas Zangerle
This workshop will show you how you can transform your ideas into convincing interactive presentations. The most important elements of successful presentations, training sessions and meetings are straightforward to name, but not always quite so easy to implement. It's essential for the presenter to capture and maintain the attention of the audience, to present effectively, create interest, encourage excitement and to captivate the participants. In this training session we will explore how you can increase understanding and retention in a presentation. You will receive background information based on scientific research, about improving communication techniques and about the workings of the brain. You will also see examples of best practices, effective communication, and presentation designs, all of which contribute to the creation of long-lasting impressions.
Augmented Reality Mind Map
Your brain is organized by relationships and thinks in 3D. That's why it's easy to remember details of places and structures. Unfortunately, your brain’s knack for relationships and space is underused.
Unleash the power of your brain’s hippocampus by mind mapping in 3D with Augmented Reality.
Create ideas and dive into concepts that mirror how your brain processes information. Mind Map AR by ScapeHop offers you a new world of thought generation and exploration.
Design Thinking: Finding Problems Worth Solving In HealthAdam Connor
Ideas for new devices and services can come from anywhere. But great ideas come from aligning solutions with real value and desirability for people. Design thinking provides a set of principles and structure that can act as scaffolding for teams to find and understand challenges and opportunities to focus on fan find solutions for.
Simply Connecting Dots - Inspiring lessons from the expert on how to train yo...Saiful Islam
Creativity is a skill and it can be trained and developed with certain method and exercise.
Creativity is not special gift and it is already inside us.
"I have no special gift. I am only passionately curious."
– Einstein, quoted in Thorpe, Scott, How to Think Like Einstein, Barnes & Noble Books, Inc., 2000, p. 115.
Curio-creative workout is one method that will train your imagination to be more passionately curious and thirsty about knowledge.
Hope you like it
Design the future of the Australian Web Industry with Design ThinkingWilliam Donovan
Design the future of the Australian Web Industry.
This was a workshop for people to discover the experience of thinking strategical about your challenges or problem.
As part of the 2013 #EOTW (Edge of the Web) conference, AWIA, Brett Treasure, myself and the support of Saasu (who recently had breakthrough results with a design thinking innovation approach) took the opportunity to start a conversation with an audience of the web community to and collaborate on a mass scale about a key question:
"How can we best showcase the activities, skills and talents of web professionals?"
Targeting the theme areas recruitment, accreditation, training and lobbying with 100 people.
http://www.saasu.com/
http://eotw.com.au/#willdonovan
Conference workshop blurb
"Experience what it is to strategically think through a problem in a group. How do you harness rapid prototyping and collaboration to build empathy and break through the predictable?
AWIA is starting a conversation about how to design for the benefit of the web community. Find a voice for the industry that speaks to government and the general public. How can we best showcase the activities, skills and talents of web professionals?
Shake off some complacency and join us for a jam: co-create the future of our profession with design thinking."
Software instructions by IKEA? 3 ways to make your documentation more visualBen Crothers
We can't all give our customers instructions using just pictures (like IKEA), but there are still ways that we can bring better visual communication into our product documentation. Here are the 3 ways, and the first way actually helps you and your team, too.
Why Design Thinking is Important for Innovation? - Favarin Vitillo - ViewConf...Simone Favarin
Design is a way of thinking, of determining people's true, underlying needs, and then delivering products and services that help them. This is the starting about Design. The meaning of the concept.
VR is a new technology that is entering in many industrial and creative processes: nowadays many company and people are experimenting with VR, because it opens new possibilities and it allows costs and time reduction. It is important to understand what is the current status of the technology, the future projections and especially its applications.
this essay talks about the psychological and historical reasons behind mystification of art. this essay is inspired from the first chapter of John Berger's book ways of seeing. it talks about the ruling ideology learnt assumptions, reproduction, conformity, motivated perception, choice blindness and how not to mystify things.
critique on three different types of media- video, poster and sculpture and relating it to the chapters of the book ways of seeing by john berger. 1. dove real beauty commercial, 2. nike's kaepernick commercial 3. survival of the fattest by john galschiot all these cover the key points of the chapters that are mystification, genderism and publicity
Talks about the main segment of technical textiles that is protective textiles. detailed information about the types material and fibres used, uses and more
this gives a detailed information on how TukaCAD software works, its features and problem solving, its importance in the garment industry and the technology
the ppt covers detailed information on the costumes of east asia covering countries like Japan, China, Koreas, Bhutan. this talks about the history of clothing in these areas during the very first civilizations.
the ppt talks about an imaginary brand created by me and the business model to support the brand and the business idea.
this includes brand name and logo, philosophy, business environment, hypothetical competitor study, USP and competitive advantage, SWOT, STP, Marketing mix
This presentation talks about various apparel production systems and the comparison between them. It includes every process from scheduling of each and every task in the particular process to dispatch of the garment.
Brand Research on Lee. Lee's contribution in history of evolution of Denim wear. Famous and classic collections of Brand Lee and USP of each collection with detailed imagery and data collected from store Visit.
A detailed study on Sami tribe of Scandanavia. The Sami, (also commonly spelled Sámi, Saami, or Same) are the Indigenous People of Norway, Sweden, Finland, and the Russian Kola Peninsula.
Everything about the state of Odisha. Etymology, History, Language, Literature, Religion, Culture, Clothing, Architecture, Art & Craft, Music, Dance, Theatre & Cinema, Festivals, Cuisines, Biodiversity, Economy & Demographics. from a designers point of view. Includes images and videos to support the information
All the information on textile crafts of West Bengal. Segregation of crafts according to the districts of West Bengal and origins and significance in the culture. Provided with a Textile Map.
Evaluating the brand Loyalty of Fabindia (including common problems that fashion brands face) through a survey including a set of questionnaire with results in form of pie charts. Also a complete brand research for Fabindia with hypothesis and problem solving solutions.
Visual Style and Aesthetics: Basics of Visual Design
Visual Design for Enterprise Applications
Range of Visual Styles.
Mobile Interfaces:
Challenges and Opportunities of Mobile Design
Approach to Mobile Design
Patterns
Book Formatting: Quality Control Checks for DesignersConfidence Ago
This presentation was made to help designers who work in publishing houses or format books for printing ensure quality.
Quality control is vital to every industry. This is why every department in a company need create a method they use in ensuring quality. This, perhaps, will not only improve the quality of products and bring errors to the barest minimum, but take it to a near perfect finish.
It is beyond a moot point that a good book will somewhat be judged by its cover, but the content of the book remains king. No matter how beautiful the cover, if the quality of writing or presentation is off, that will be a reason for readers not to come back to the book or recommend it.
So, this presentation points designers to some important things that may be missed by an editor that they could eventually discover and call the attention of the editor.
Hello everyone! I am thrilled to present my latest portfolio on LinkedIn, marking the culmination of my architectural journey thus far. Over the span of five years, I've been fortunate to acquire a wealth of knowledge under the guidance of esteemed professors and industry mentors. From rigorous academic pursuits to practical engagements, each experience has contributed to my growth and refinement as an architecture student. This portfolio not only showcases my projects but also underscores my attention to detail and to innovative architecture as a profession.
Technoblade The Legacy of a Minecraft Legend.Techno Merch
Technoblade, born Alex on June 1, 1999, was a legendary Minecraft YouTuber known for his sharp wit and exceptional PvP skills. Starting his channel in 2013, he gained nearly 11 million subscribers. His private battle with metastatic sarcoma ended in June 2022, but his enduring legacy continues to inspire millions.
Between Filth and Fortune- Urban Cattle Foraging Realities by Devi S Nair, An...Mansi Shah
This study examines cattle rearing in urban and rural settings, focusing on milk production and consumption. By exploring a case in Ahmedabad, it highlights the challenges and processes in dairy farming across different environments, emphasising the need for sustainable practices and the essential role of milk in daily consumption.
4. WHAT IS
VISUAL THINKING:
When faced with too much information we shut down. Visual thinking is a way to organize
your thoughts and improve your ability to think and communicate. It’s a great way to convey
complex or potentially confusing information.
“A very important thing that I learned while working on this project was
that if your ideas can’t be drawn, they can’t be done.”
Visual Thinking brings the science of perception to the art of design. Visual media can support
the perception of almost everything including instantaneous scene gist, rapid explorations of
spatial structure and relationships between objects, as well as emotions and motivations.
6. Designers
increasingly
need to present
information to
their clients in
ways that aids
their thinking
process.
Visual working
memory
capacity is
something that
critically
influences how
well a design
works. Good
design
optimizes the
visual thinking
process.
7. WHAT IS
MIND MAPPING?
Mind mapping is a highly
effective way of getting
information in and out of your
brain. It’s an excellent way for
you to be able to sort through
your thoughts and ideas. Mind
mapping is a creative and
logical means of note-taking and
note-making that literally "maps
out" your ideas.
The great thing about mind
mapping is that you can put
your ideas down in any order,
as soon as they pop into your
head. You are not constrained
by thinking in order. Simply,
throw out any and all ideas,
then worry about reorganizing
them later.
8. This simple, practical tool enhances your creative thinking and
enables you to become more productive and efficient. Mind
mapping increases your creativity and productivity because it’s
an excellent tool to let you generate more ideas, identify
relationships among the different data and information, and
effectively improve your memory and retention.
The use of colours, images,
and keywords also help
make learning more
interesting and fun so you
become more motivated to
remember important
details. Mind mapping
converts a long list of
monotonous information
into a colourful, memorable
and highly organized
diagram that works in line
with your brain's natural
way of doing things.
9.
10. Inspiration is a motivational state that compels us to bring our ideas into fruition.
Our inspiration gives examples and suggests design techniques for successful
and creative thinking for us to produce new and tangible things.
The inspiration also indicates to the application of techniques from other fields
and their modification. Application of techniques has fore goal to facilitate the
process of creation and designing, it also promotes a new way of thinking and a
successful problem-solving through the process of designing.
12. WHAT IS
ASSOCIATION OF INSPIRATION?
Association of Inspiration depends
on your exposure and experience
with words in certain specific
contexts. When you hear/read a
word repeatedly in a certain setting
(like in a game, or a series of
textbooks, or a television series), it
sorts of becomes hardwired into
your brain.
Anybody can attest that when I say "throne," a lot of people are reminded of "Game of Thrones."
Of course, the same word can trigger different thoughts to different people, depending on
different contexts of exposure. These triggers are like reflex reactions of the brain, because it is
hardwired to predict situations or outcomes as a measure of saving on processing power. An
association defines a relationship between two entity objects based on common attributes.
13. Keywords define the field, subfield, topic, research issue, etc. that
are covered by the design. Keywords make your design
searchable. Thus, it is important to include the most relevant
keywords that will help you create factual and legitimate design.