<p>Mine is a little less personal, about my numberform. The only thing I really liked about it was the fact that the shape turned out almost exactly right... but of course, that's completely meaningless for admissions purposes! Oh well.</p>
<p>I didn't have anything creative. Part of the picture involved some punch cards, and I said that they were part of the program that I wrote for my summer research project. Of course, I was kidding, but the program <em>was</em> written in FORTRAN (the semi-old-school, non-free-form variety). I think it was a miracle that I got in. I also had a few slide rules (maybe 12?) and a (Caltech) pocket protector, which was my inspiration for essay #1.</p>
<p>Haha, yeah, I'm going through high school in three years (and I was pretty close to the cutoff to start school when I did in the first place.)</p>
<p>Frank: A numberform is basically a nonlinear mental numberline. Some people always see specific numbers in specific positions on a 2- or 3-dimensional curve; colors may be involved as well. (I also have a mental year-form, week-form, and timeline... and I swear I'm not just on drugs or making stuff up! A Google search should get you some of the research that's been done.)</p>
<p>Okay, that's what iI thought it was. My numberform thing is strangely similar to yours. Only it's pretty straight between 0 and 20. Then it looks pretty similar.</p>
<p>Oooh! that's really cool. I have some learning disability ( I don't really think it's a disability though ) where I can't picture three dimensional shapes in my head. I guess that would make it kind of hard for me to have a numberform... I am not generally a visual person anyway, I'm auditory. I "hear" the numberline hehehehe.</p>
<p>Nifty... I wish I understood stuff by hearing it, but I basically have closed-captioning going in my head all the time instead. Helps with spelling, I guess :)</p>