Title: Powerpoint demonstartion
1Powerpoint demonstration
After the brain figure was placed on this slide,
freeform shapes were drawn over several regions,
by clicking on the slide background (not on the
inserted brain figure), then Insert -gt Shapes -gt
Freeform, then tracing out the desired shape on
top of the image. After creating shape, right
click it, then select Format Shape, and make it
100 transparent. Make border invisible by
selecting Line Color No Line. Shape borders in
this demo are intentionally visible, but would be
made invisible in a finished product. Create a
hyperlink for a shape by left clicking to
highlight (on the shape, not the image ,which
should be behind the shape), then Insert -gt
Hyperlink -gt Place In This Document, then select
the slide you want to link to from the dropdown
list. To specify text that will appear when the
mouse is over a region when creating the
hyperlink, or when editing an existing hyperlink,
click the Screen Tip button in the Insert
Hyperlink or Edit Hyperlink window, and then
enter text to appear when mouse is over the
region. Hyperlinks and screen tips only work in
Slide Show mode.
Tip 1 When shapes are created and/or edited, and
when specifying hyperlinks, you may accidentally
click on the image the brain image in this case
and bring it to the foreground. The overlaid
shapes must be in the foreground for the links to
work. Right click part of the brain image that
does not have a shape over it, then select Send
to Back to make sure it is behind the created
shapes. Tip 2 Once you have created all the
shapes, you may find it useful to group the image
and shapes. To do this, hold down shift key
while left-clicking on the base image and then on
each shape. When all are highlighted, right
click, then select Group -gt Group to bind them
together. Now they can be dragged and/or resized
as a unit. If you later need to change one
member of the group (for example, edit one of the
hyperlinks), right click the group, then select
Group -gt Ungroup.
This demo was made in MS Powerpoint 2007. The
file is saved in Powerpoint 97-2003 format
(.ppt) to assure it only includes
backward-compatible features.
http//www.meditationeveryday.com.au/brain-power/
(Give attribution for all images you use that you
didnt create.)
2Frontal lobe info
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3Temporal lobe info
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4Parietal lobe info
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5Occipital lobe info
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6Cerebellum info
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