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Encyclopedia > Modeling (NLP)
One of a series of articles on
Neuro-linguistic programming
(NLP)

Main articles
NLP · Principles · Topics · History
NLP and science · Bibliography Neuro-linguistic programming (NLP) is a set of techniques, axioms and beliefs, that adherents use primarily as an approach to personal development. ... Neuro-linguistic programming (NLP) is a set of techniques, axioms and beliefs, that adherents use primarily as an approach to personal development. ... This article covers the core presuppositions and principles of Neuro-linguistic programming. ... . ... Neuro-linguistic programming (NLP) was developed jointly by Richard Bandler and John Grinder under the tutelage of anthropologist, social scientist, linguist and cyberneticist Gregory Bateson, at the University of California, during the 1960s and 1970s. ... Neuro-linguistic programming (NLP) and science looks at the evidence for and against NLP being effective, and the basis for scepticism and concerns from within the scientific community. ...


Concepts and methods
Modeling · Meta model · Milton model
Perceptual positions · Rapport · Reframing
Representation systems · Submodalities
Positive intention · Well-formed outcome
Meta program · Neurological levels
Anchoring · Map-territory relation To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ... The Milton Model in Neuro-linguistic programming is an early model of Milton Ericksons hypnotic techniques. ... Perceptual positions is a neuro-linguistic programming and psychology term denoting that a complex system may look very different, and different information will be available, depending how one looks at it and ones point of view. ... Rapport is one of the most important features or characteristics of unconscious human interaction. ... This article is about reframing, a Neuro-linguistic programming method. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ... A submodality in neuro-linguistic programming is a distinction of form or structure (rather than content) within a sensory representational system. ... The term positive is often used generally to mean desirable or beneficial, and negative is usually used to mean undesirable of bad. But in neuro-linguistic programming it also has a specific technical meaning, in the phrases positive intent and stated in the positive. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ... Meta-programs are programs about programs. ... The Neurological levels were proposed by anthropologist Gregory Bateson. ... Anchoring is a neuro-linguistic programming term for the process by which memory recall, state change or other responses become associated with (anchored to) some stimulus, in such a way that perception of the stimulus (the anchor) leads by reflex to the anchored response occurring. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...


Related principles
Empiricism · Subject-object problem
Subjective character of experience
Philosophy of perception
Cognitive linguistics · Metacognition In philosophy generally, empiricism is a theory of knowledge emphasizing the role of experience. ... In philosophy, the subject-object problem arises out of the metaphysics of Hegel. ... That all subjective phenomena are associated with a single point of view is called the subjective character of experience. ... The philosophy of perception concerns how mental processes and symbols depend on the world internal and external to the perceiver. ... In linguistics and cognitive science, cognitive linguistics (CL) refers to the currently dominant school of linguistics that views the important essence of language as innately based in evolutionarily-developed and speciated faculties, and seeks explanations that advance or fit well into the current understandings of the human mind. ... Metacognition refers to thinking about cognition (memory, perception, calculation, association, etc. ...


People
Richard Bandler · John Grinder
Gregory Bateson · Robert Dilts
Judith DeLozier · Milton Erickson
Virginia Satir · Fritz Perls
Steve Andreas · Connirae Andreas
Frank Pucelik · Charles Faulkner Richard Bandler (full-name: Richard Wayne Bandler) (born February 24, 1950) is an American author and the co-inventor (with John Grinder) of Neuro-linguistic programming (NLP) and creator of Design Human Engineering (DHE) and Neuro Hypnotic Repattering (NHR), . // Bandler holds a BA (1973) in Philosophy and Psychology from the... John Grinder, Ph. ... Gregory Bateson (9 May 1904–4 July 1980) was a British anthropologist, social scientist, linguist and cyberneticist whose work intersected that of many other fields. ... Robert Dilts (born 1955) has been a developer, author, trainer and consultant in the field of Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) since its creation in 1975 by John Grinder and Richard Bandler. ... Judith DeLozier is a trainer and author in NLP. A member of Grinder and Bandler’s original group of students, she contributed extensively to the development of NLP models and processes. ... Milton Hyland Erickson, MD (1901 - 1980) was a psychiatrist specializing in medical hypnosis. ... Virginia Satir (26 June 1916 - 10 September 1988) was a noted psychotherapist, known especially for her approach to family therapy. ... Friedrich (Frederick) Salomon Perls (July 8 1893, Berlin - March 14, 1970, Chicago), better known as Fritz Perls, was a noted German-born psychiatrist and psychotherapist of Jewish descent. ... Steve Andreas is an American author in the field of Neuro-linguistic programming. ... Charles Faulkner Charles Faulkner, (born 29 February 1960, Glendora, California) is an American life coach, motivational speaker, trader and writer. ...


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NLP modeling (or modelling) is a process used in neuro-linguistic programming to discover and codify patterns of excellence as demonstrated consistently by top performers in any field, ideally via direct experience (although modeling from books, historical records of people's words, or video is not unknown). It can be thought of as the process of discovering relevant distinctions within these experiential components, as well as relevant sequencing of these components necessary to achieve a specific result. Neuro-linguistic programming (NLP) is a set of techniques, axioms and beliefs, that adherents use primarily as an approach to personal development. ... Direct experience is within and by consciousness, the only reality that is certain. ...


A "modeling project" involves spending time studying and observing in depth, discussing, and imitating and practicing many different aspects of the subject's thoughts, feelings, beliefs and behaviors (ie, acting ""as if" the modeler is the expert) until the modeler can replicate these with some consistency and precision. Once this has been achieved, the modeler then refines the target skills by removing certain features to eventually discover the essential features distinguishing average performance and top performance, thus building a learnable/transferable model, and tests it by seeing if it can be taught. Imitation is an advanced animal behaviour whereby an individual observes anothers behaviour and replicates it itself. ... A practice refers to a way that something is done. ... As if is an extremely common NLP presupposition (technically often called a frame or context reframe). ...


The NLP theory behind modeling does not state that anyone can be Einstein. Rather it says that know-how can be separated from the person, documented and transferred experientially, and that the ability to perform the skills can be transferred subject to the modelers own limits, which can change, and improves with practice. Einstein redirects here. ...

Contents


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Detail and examples

Typically a "modeling project" might cover the following sources of behavior:

  • Beliefs
  • Values
  • Internal strategies
  • Outcomes
  • Sensory perceptions and submodalities
  • Physiology (body movement and body language)
  • Language patterns
  • Fall-back strategies ("what if it isn't working")
  • Conscious and unconscious communications
  • Perceptual positions
  • Locus of consciousness (ie where ones attention is)

Each of these is individually a deep and rich field; there is no point where one knows everything, but as a process of replication, the goal is met when the modeler has enough parts of the puzzle to piece together and document how the subject seems to be doing his competent skills. Sub-modalities - the presupposition underlying this concept which arose in the field of neuro-linguistic programming (NLP), and particularly the work of its co-creator Richard Bandler, is that human beings code internal experiences -- their mental representations -- using aspects of their different senses, or modalities. See Bandlers Using Your...


Many trainers stress that fully identifying with the model ("embodied" modeling) is an essential part of the modeling process. However, when NLP practitioners do any modeling at all in practice, it is often Analytic Modeling.


Ideally, the result is that the modeler feels that the information of "how the skill is done" is sufficient, and the rest is practice or external limitation rather than understanding of the process.


Other uses include:

  • Modeling how a therapeutic client maintains and engages in their "problem behavior", with the intent of learning enough to change it for the better
  • Modeling famous or dead people to gain a sense of how they did what they did, and their views and beliefs which allowed them to do so. (Robert Dilts is a proponent of this process, having described models of notable people such as Jesus of Nazareth, Sherlock Holmes, Albert Einstein and Nikola Tesla)

she rubs his cock and puts it in her mouth and sucks it ..oooh it taste good...and then he licks and spits in her pussy Robert Dilts (born 1955) has been a developer, author, trainer and consultant in the field of Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) since its creation in 1975 by John Grinder and Richard Bandler. ... This article concerns critical reconstructions of the Historical Jesus. ... Sherlock Holmes as imagined by the seminal Holmesian artist, Sidney Paget, in The Strand magazine. ... Einstein redirects here. ... Nikola Tesla (1856-1943)[1] was a world-renowned Serbian inventor, physicist, mechanical engineer and electrical engineer. ...


Other information

  • Robert Dilts and John Grinder argue for a distinction between Analytic Modeling and "NLP modeling" that requires unconscious uptake via imitation. (announced October 17 2005-[1])

See also

Charles Faulkner Charles Faulkner Charles Faulkner, (born 29 February 1960, Glendora, California) is an American life coach, motivational speaker, trader and writer. ...


External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
NationMaster - Encyclopedia: Modeling (NLP) (1715 words)
NLP modeling (or modelling) is a process used in neuro-linguistic programming to discover and codify patterns of excellence as demonstrated consistently by top performers in any field, ideally via direct experience (although modeling from books, historical records of people's words, or video is not unknown).
A "modeling project" involves spending time studying and observing in depth, discussing, and imitating and practicing many different aspects of the subject's thoughts, feelings, beliefs and behaviors (ie, acting ""as if" the modeler is the expert) until the modeler can replicate these with some consistency and precision.
NLP was influenced by the ideas of the New Age era as well as beliefs in human potential.
Modeling (NLP) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1202 words)
NLP modeling (or modelling) is a process used in neuro-linguistic programming to discover and codify patterns of excellence as demonstrated consistently by top performers in any field, ideally via direct experience (although modeling from books, historical records of people's words, or video is not unknown).
A "modeling project" involves spending time studying and observing in depth, discussing, and imitating and practicing many different aspects of the subject's thoughts, feelings, beliefs and behaviors (ie, acting ""as if" the modeler is the expert) until the modeler can replicate these with some consistency and precision.
NLP proponents reply that in common with most forms of heuristic approximation, there is not intended to be "one correct way", but only more and less effective and transferable models.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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