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Overview
A map gives us a direction. Take a road map for an example. It guides us how to reach a destination. Mind map is also a visual depiction that guides us to explore.
A Mind Map is a powerful graphic technique which provides a universal key to unlock the potential of the brain. It harnesses the full range of cortical skills – word, image, number, logic, rhythm, colour and spatial awareness – in a single, uniquely powerful manner. In so doing, it gives you the freedom to roam the infinite expanses of your brain. The Mind Map can be applied to every aspect of life where improved learning and clearer thinking will enhance human performance.
In 1970 Scientific American magazine published Ralph Haber’s research showing that individuals have a recognition accuracy of images between 85 and 95%. This is very much in line with what we have heard. “A picture is worth a thousand words”. Mind map is a vivid exploration of the power of imagery.
Origins
Diagrams that visually map information using branching and radial maps trace back centuries. These pictorial methods record knowledge and model systems, and a long history in learning, brainstorming, memory, visual thinking, and problem solving by educators, engineers, psychologists, and others.
Some of the earliest examples of such graphical records were developed by Porphyry of Tyros, a noted thinker of the 3rd century, as he graphically visualised the concept categories of Aristotle. Philosopher Ramon Llull (1235-1315) also used such techniques. The semantic network was developed in the late 1950s as a theory to understand human learning and developed further by Allan M. Collins and M. Ross Quillian during the early 1960s.
Popularisation of the term “mind map”
The term “mind map” was first popularised by British popular psychology author and television personality Tony Buzan when BBC TV ran a series hosted by Buzan called ‘Use Your Head’. In this show, and companion book series, Buzan enthusiastically promoted his conception of radial tree, diagramming key words in a colourful, radiant, tree-like structure.
Buzan says the idea was inspired by Alfred Korzybski’s general semantics as popularised in science fiction novels, such as those of Robert A. Heinlein and A.E. van Vogt. Buzan argues that while “traditional” outlines force readers to scan left to right and top to bottom, readers actually tend to scan the entire page in a non-linear fashion. Buzan also uses popular assumptions about the cerebral hemispheres in order to promote the exclusive use of mind mapping over other forms of note making.
When compared with the concept map (which was developed by learning experts in the 1970s) the structure of a mind map is a similar radial, but is simplified by having one central key word.
What do you need to make a mind map? Because mind maps are so easy to do and so natural, the ingredients for your “mind map recipe” are very few: