martes, 20 de noviembre de 2018

URGENT! Team of doctors reveal the simple weight loss solution that actually works


 

Hi,

Imagine not having to stand on the scales with disgust, be embarrassed going to the beach, or watch what you eat anymore...

This can be your reality. After hundreds of thousands of people used a few remarkably simple techniques pioneered by the doctors at the International Truth in Medicine Council, we want to share them with you right now!

Patients are able to lose even 16 pounds the first week, normalize blood sugar, blood pressure, strengthen their heart and organs, and be taken off all medication in just weeks.



Dr. Hana Kahleova, Director of Clinical Research at the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine wrote: "Twice as effective in reducing body weight"

After testing these natural treatment methods on their own patients, they now want to share this secret with the world.

>>Learn about their amazing weight loss methods now and the 3 foods probably sitting in your kitchen which are touted as "healthy" but in fact making you gain weight faster!

Click here to learn about this groundbreaking new research<< Read More

Take care,

David Beam

Click here to learn more...

 













The storage in sensory memory and short-term memory generally has a strictly limited capacity and duration, which means that information is not retained indefinitely. By contrast, long-term memory can store much larger quantities of information for potentially unlimited duration (sometimes a whole life span). Its capacity is immeasurable. For example, given a random seven-digit number we may remember it for only a few seconds before forgetting, suggesting it was stored in our short-term memory. On the other hand, we can remember telephone numbers for many years through repetition; this information is said to be stored in long-term memory. While short-term memory encodes information acoustically, long-term memory encodes it semantically: Baddeley (1966) discovered that, after 20 minutes, test subjects had the most difficulty recalling a collection of words that had similar meanings (e.g. big, large, great, huge) long-term. Another part of long-term memory is episodic memory, "which attempts to capture information such as 'what', 'when' and 'where'". With episodic memory, individuals are able to recall specific events such as birthday parties and weddings. Short-term memory is supported by transient patterns of neuronal communication, dependent on regions of the frontal lobe (especially dorsolateral prefrontal cortex) and the parietal lobe. Long-term memory, on the other hand, is maintained by more stable and permanent changes in neural connections widely spread throughout the brain. The hippocampus is essential (for learning new information) to the consolidation of information from short-term to long-term memory, although it does not seem to store information itself. It was thought that without the hippocampus new memories were unable to be stored into long-term memory and that there would be a very short attention span, as first gleaned from patient Henry Molaison after what was thought to be the full removal of both his hippocampi. More recent examination of his brain, post-mortem, shows that the hippocampus was more intact than first thought, throwing theories drawn from the initial data into question. The hippocampus may be involved in changing neural connections for a period of three months or more after the initial learning.

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