A doodle is a drawing made while a person's attention is otherwise occupied. Doodles are simple drawings that can have concrete representational meaning or may just be composed of random and abstract lines or shapes, generally without ever lifting the drawing device from the paper, in which case it is usually called a scribble.

Popular kinds of doodles include cartoon versions of teachers or companions in a school, famous TV or comic characters, invented fictional beings, landscapes, geometric shapes, patterns, textures, or phallic scenes. Most people who doodle often remake the same shape or type of doodle throughout their lifetime.[2]


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The word doodle first appeared in the early 17th century to mean a fool or simpleton.[3] It may derive from the German Dudeltopf or Dudeldop, meaning simpleton or noodle (literally "nightcap").[3] It is the origin of the early eighteenth-century verb to doodle, meaning "to swindle or to make a fool of". The modern meaning emerged as a term for a politician who was doing nothing in office at the expense of his constituents.[4] That led to the more generalized verb "to doodle", which means to do nothing.[4]

In the final courtroom scene of the 1936 film Mr. Deeds Goes to Town, the main character explains the concept of "doodling" to a judge unfamiliar with the word, saying that "People draw the most idiotic pictures when they're thinking."[5][6][7] The character, who has travelled from a fictional town in Vermont, describes the word doodler as being "a name we made up back home" for people who make "foolish designs" on paper when their mind is on something else.[7]

According to a study published in the scientific journal Applied Cognitive Psychology, doodling can aid a person's memory by expending just enough energy to keep one from daydreaming, which demands a lot of the brain's processing power, as well as from not paying attention. Thus, it acts as a mediator between the spectrum of thinking too much or thinking too little and helps focus on the current situation. The study was done by Professor Jackie Andrade, of the School of Psychology at the University of Plymouth, who reported that doodlers in her experiment recalled 7.5 pieces of information (out of 16 total) on average, 29% more than the average of 5.8 recalled by the control group made of non-doodlers.[9]

Alexander Pushkin's notebooks are celebrated for their superabundance of marginal doodles, which include sketches of friends' profiles, hands, and feet. These notebooks are regarded as a work of art in their own right. Full editions of Pushkin's doodles have been undertaken on several occasions.[14] Some of Pushkin's doodles were animated by Andrei Khrzhanovsky and Yuriy Norshteyn in the 1987 film My Favorite Time.[15][16]

Other notable literary doodlers have included: Samuel Beckett;[17] the poet and physician John Keats, who doodled in the margins of his medical notes; Sylvia Plath;[17] and the Nobel laureate (in literature, 1913) poet Rabindranath Tagore, who made numerous doodles in his manuscript.[18]

In 2009, psychologist Jackie Andrade asked 40 people to monitor a 2- minute dull and rambling voice mail message. Half of the group doodled while they did this (they shaded in a shape), and the other half did not. They were not aware that their memories would be tested after the call. Surprisingly, when both groups were asked to recall details from the call, those that doodled were better at paying attention to the message and recalling the details. They recalled 29% more information!

In addition, paying continuous attention places a strain on the brain, and doodling may be just the break your brain needs to keep attending without losing total interest. A report on the learning styles of medical students (who generally have to absorb large amounts of information) indicated that even they may find doodling helpful, as long as they limit the time they do it. A simple 30-minute doodle helps them remember information, fills in gaps in their thinking, and provides a much-needed reprieve from the loads of information they must wade through.

Although doodles may look like a scribble, random words that make no sense, or a partial face that suddenly becomes something extraterrestrial, they are not quite as random as we might think. Dr. Robert Burns, the former director of the Institute for Human Development at the University of Seattle, uses doodles to diagnose the emotional problems of his patients. He believes that doodles can reveal what is going on in the unconscious. He asserts that, in the same way that EEG leads transmit brain activity to a piece of paper, your hand also does the same. Many other doodle researchers would agree.

It seems then that if you're struggling to concentrate, find yourself stuck or feeling "incomplete," a time-limited doodle expedition could be just the thing you are looking for. It will likely activate your brain's "unfocus" circuits, give your "focus" circuits a break, and allow you to more creatively and tirelessly solve a problem at hand.

Our regular Drop-In Doodle Hours: Tuesdays 1-4:30 pm and Wednesday thru Friday 1-5 pm. If you have pottery to pick-up and need evening or weekend hours, just give us a call. We will be happy to accommodate you outside of the 1-5 pick-up times. Want to schedule a night or weekend for drop-in doodle time? It only takes 6 people to have a reservation for evenings or weekends. Email us at [email protected].

It's highly recommended to write the rules this way if you want to use css-doodle in production websites. So it won't break when the network is slow or when the browser does not support Web Component.

const doodle = document.querySelector('css-doodle'); /* Note that the grid value inside the :doodle selector has higher priority than the attribute value on the element. So this setter operation may not have an affect on the final grid value. */ doodle.grid = "5"; console.log(doodle.grid); /* { x: 5, y: 5, size: 25 } */

Finn loves his new harness! The material is amazing, I was blown away by the quality of the material! I absolutely love the way it fits my doodle. The leash and bag holder is awesome. We now walk in confort and style ?

Communicating medical breakthroughs to a wide audience can be challenging - but the right presentation template makes it easier! With a medical breakthrough revolved presentation template for Google Slides & PowerPoint, showcasing your project to the world just became a breeze. This template uses creative doodles to illustrate complex medical concepts in an engaging way. And it's not just medical experts who will appreciate this; even those with no medical knowledge can understand and enjoy the presentation due to its attractive visual design. In short, presentations don't get much better than this!

It could be similar to the image posted above--a comic strip with a reflection and an action list of how the main character is going to move forward. You could give students time to "smash doodle" in a journal after reading each chapter--creating a diary as though they were the main character--and/or you could dedicate one day a week to putting together more elaborate smash books (generating news articles using the page linked above, finding images to print, taping and pasting in things that they've brought in from home). This could be done for homework, too, if your classes have homework.

What if you could experience freshly baked, cinnamony snickerdoodle cookies in a sip of eye-opening coffee bliss? No wonder our Scooter Doodle Roast is one of our most popular flavored coffees! We lightly roast our best coffee beans with a toasty blend of smooth hazelnut, spicy-sweet cinnamon, and a touch of clove, for our own spin on all-time favorite tastes. And nary a carb nor barely a calorie to be had. ff782bc1db

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