It's A Shame For You Not To More Than Double Your Accuracy For Facial Details and Face Recognition — When These People Did It So EasilyMost of us believe we're good to excellent at remembering and recognizing faces. But how can we say we're good if we’ve never been tested? Can you recognize new faces at big parties? In darkened alleys? What about when entire extended families are standing next to the person? How about when they're standing next to others dressed in exactly the same business suit and tie or dress? Does age of the face matter? (Maybe you’re better at faces of people who are in our own age category.) Does race matter? Does time of exposure matter? What are the parameters of your recognition ability and recall skills for faces? After developing my facial recognition method and memory techniques, I had to go the full distance in product development and test them. The reason they're in Million Dollar Memory for Names & Faces is only because they passed my strict regulations on the results that could be easily achieved with them. My pilot studies involved a total of 41 volunteers; 29 who were police officers; 12 from other professions. All were older than 18 and younger than 70 years old. In a nutshell, here are some of the things I discovered:
To start your own rapid progress in face recognition and memory for names and faces, click here to order. To start your own rapid progress in face recognition and memory for names and faces, click here to order. |
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They Needed To Excel In Recall Hundreds of Facts and Numbers, Worked Dr. Donna's Course Into Their Schedule Two Monday Nights… And Little Did They Know That Her 4–Step Process Would Help Them Recall Important Facts And Numbers Years Later It’s a shame that every student on campus didn't take advantage of my techniques. I’m never afraid of results because if a technique I create in the development phase doesn't work, I don't want my name on it. I'll go back to the drawing board and start over. This philosophy drove my memory techniques to the pinnacle of excellence during the years when I taught graduate students how to learn difficult scientific information in record time. And it gave me a reputation that my methods worked. Students came back time after time for more new ways to learn information, ways that made learning shift from drudgery to fun. (See Bio for Dr. Donna) One of my mentors, a professor at the college, even took the time one day to tell me how rare it was for a student to get a very low grade on a midterm and then bounce back with scores in the 90s for the final. "Whatever you're doing, Donna," she said, "keep doing it." My students' testimonials inspired me even more to continue creating additional classes. Several came back to me years later and told me how they hadn't reviewed any information about x–ray positioning for a few years but now were in a position where they had to recall it. They couldn’t be wrong about x–rays. Too much radiation to a body part can spell disaster to the patient for their health and disaster to the doctor from unnecessary lawsuits. Getting through that x–ray positioning course was one of the most difficult courses in the chiropractic physician curriculum. Each student had to learn over 150 numbers related to x–rays of different body parts and have at least 12 numbers on the tip of their tongue for each x–ray during the practical exam. If they were wrong on even one of those numbers, chances were good an x–ray wouldn’'t look right. X–rays darker or lighter than the standard means increased possibility for error in diagnosis. An extra shadow or area of whiteness can fool a practitioner into thinking that the patient had a tumor or cancer that may or may not be there. But what the students told me was that after all that time away from learning all those numbers in my X–ray Positioning Made Memorable classes, they pleasantly and proudly wowed themselves when they found the information coming out of their mouth correctly without a review, exactly when they needed it. The information just flowed — it came out easily, automatically, and correctly. It was one more indication that the accelerated learning and memory techniques I created for them were an example of the excellence I had strived to accomplish. That same excellence can be seen in my patent–pending technique to remember and describe a face accurately after just a glance, found inside Million Dollar Memory for Names & Faces. |
