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What this image means (rare)

Posted: Thu Dec 15, 2011 1:51 am
by rayvon21
If anyone may know what kind or what it means,please give me an answer.

Image

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Re: What this image means (rare)

Posted: Thu Dec 15, 2011 2:28 am
by dodaive
Wow where did you find this? [shock2] I have seen bio-chemists use this kind of schematics to map out complex intra-cellular reactions. If you want to decode it, you have to identify all of the individual parts. Then try to cluster them into patterns. It would really help if you could tell me about its context or who wrote it.

Re: What this image means (rare)

Posted: Thu Dec 15, 2011 2:59 am
by rayvon21
I didn't found it,i created it. 1 hour it took,i have lots of draws like that but this is the most creative. I do not have any clue how i can draw those,tahts why i'm looking on forums for an answer.

Re: What this image means (rare)

Posted: Thu Dec 15, 2011 6:29 pm
by dodaive
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I am still working on your diagram. I am puzzled by this one and the other one that is similar, not sure why they are there. I think they must be there in order to identify the starting point. They also might be there in order to identify an important part, or central focus of all the multiple processes.Try starting there and following it out. Much of the process is going to be all about refining the
the meanings of the individual pieces. At certain points you will have to use a diagnostic statement to identify it and keep it from future morphing. I am going to have to dig up some of my schematics, give you some examples of what I mean.

Re: What this image means (rare)

Posted: Thu Dec 15, 2011 8:06 pm
by dodaive
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To help you try and make sense of your schematic, I am going to post a couple of sample "keys" that I use when i create schematics. The first is based upon the the sympathetic nervous system and the sequence of its connections off of the spinal chord. The second is "key" to the sequential steps of the nursing process. The third is a skeleton diagram of the electron transport chain. A schematic usually starts with a skeleton diagram. This will give you an idea of the starting place, before one creates a schematic such as yours. Without working the whole thing out with stringent definitions though, crucial meanings will get lost, and the schematic will become useless.

Re: What this image means (rare)

Posted: Mon Dec 19, 2011 8:44 pm
by dodaive
My suggestion at this point is try not to be so symmetrical , limit your symbols to about 30, use dots and marks to denote variations of something.

Re: What this image means (rare)

Posted: Tue Dec 27, 2011 8:02 am
by Code9
You draw these but you don't know what they mean. Hmm... interesting. Apparently you feel they're more than just doodles, right? What are you thinking while you're in the process of drawing these images? Are you in any particular state of mind? Are you in any sort of trance state? Is there a possibility that you're engaging in what is known as "automatic writing"? Many years ago, when I was married, my wife did automatic writing. Once, she came up with something somewhat similar to what you've posted here, although hers was more like some form of writing, kind of like hieroglyphs. Yours, on the other hand, have a lot of symmetry. That's interesting in itself. But I did notice that yours also resembles Sumerian cuneiform characters. Check out this example: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sumer ... c_Adab.jpg.

It seemed to me that the middle section of the image you posted might correctly be viewed vertically, like this:

Image

Just a guess. [unsure] Did you draw this in the horizontal position as you've posted it, or vertically, as in the image above?

Re: What this image means (rare)

Posted: Wed Dec 28, 2011 3:27 am
by rayvon21
I can call it : "automatic drawing" but i feel like i'm doing it since 1000 years ago. The whole image took me 1 hour,and yes,thats the right position of that picture.