einbar

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Joined:4-16-2008
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23
POPS
Déjà vu: Where fact meets fantasy
einbar
by einbar  3-28-2009    3
 "Déjà vu can happen to anyone, and anyone who has had it will recognise the description immediately. It is more than just a sense that you have seen or done something before; it is a startling, inappropriate and often disturbing sense that history is repeating, and impossibly so. You can't place where the earlier encounter happened, and it can feel like a premonition or a dream. Subjective, strange and fleeting, not to mention tainted by paranormal explanations, the phenomenon has been a difficult and unpopular one to study. Now that is changing...."
14
POPS
Tips for Thinking from an Extraordinary Thinker
einbar
by einbar  1-10-2009    2
 Daniel Tammet is the author of two books, Born on a Blue Day and Embracing the Wide Sky, which comes out this month. He’s also a linguist and holds the European record for reciting the first 22,514 decimal points of the mathematical constant Pi. Mind Matters editor Jonah Lehrer chats with Tammet about how his memory works, why the IQ test is overrated, and a possible explanation for extraordinary feats of creativity.
12
POPS
Myths and Facts About Having More Than One Head :-)
einbar
by einbar  12-14-2008    1
 guide to the polycephalitic from fiction — and from reality! :-)
12
POPS
Extraordinary People -The boy who sees without eyes
einbar
by einbar  12-11-2008    2
 This is a documentary about a boy (Ben Underwood) who has taught himself to use echo location to navigate around the world. Ben Underwood is blind, but has managed to do some truly extraordinary feats
15
POPS
No more than a blink - Man without a memory - oddly inspiring..
einbar
by einbar  12-6-2008    2
 "Lost in time - In March of 1985, Clive Wearing, an eminent English musician and musicologist in his mid-forties, was struck by a brain infection—a herpes encephalitis—affecting especially the parts of his brain concerned with memory. He was left with a memory span of only seconds—the most devastating case of amnesia ever recorded. New events and experiences were effaced almost instantly. As his wife, Deborah, wrote in her 2005 memoir, “Forever Today”:
30
POPS
'Non-genital Orgasms" - Orgasms that have nothing to do with the genitalia
einbar
by einbar  11-30-2008    2
 Perhaps more unusual-sounding than orgasmia is the concept of orgasms that have nothing to do with the genitalia at all.
22
POPS
An Infinite Loop in the Brain - Experiencing everything over and over again
einbar
by einbar  11-29-2008    3
 "McGaugh and his colleagues concluded that Price's episodic memory, her recollection of personal experiences and the emotions associated with them, is virtually perfect. A case like this has never been described in the history of memory research, according to McGaugh. He explains that Price differs substantially from other people with special powers of recall, such as autistic savants, because she uses no strategies to help her remember and even does a surprisingly poor job on some memory tests. It's difficult for her to memorize poems or series of numbers -- which helps explain why she never stood out in school. Her semantic memory, the ability to remember facts not directly related to everyday life, is only average. Two years ago, the scientists published their first conclusions in a professional journal without revealing the identity of their subject. Since then, more than 200 people have contacted McGaugh, all claiming to have an equally perfect episodic memory. Most of them
19
POPS
Small playful creatures dancing appear as visions - Lilliputian hallucinations
einbar
by einbar  11-28-2008    7
 Perhaps one of the most surprising causes of these hallucinations is macular degeneration, sometimes diagnosed as Charles Bonnet syndrome, owing to the fact that simply damage to the retina can lead to complex hallucinations that seem to take on a life of their own
20
POPS
If I look at a photograph of myself, I don't know it's me
einbar
by einbar  11-25-2008    2
 No Remarks
29
POPS
Rare but Real: People Who Feel, Taste and Hear Color
einbar
by einbar  11-24-2008    5
 "If you ask synesthetes if they'd wish to be rid of it, they almost always say no. For them, it feels like that's what normal experience is like. To have that taken away would make them feel like they were being deprived of one sense." -- Simon Baron-Cohen, synesthesia researcher at the University of Cambridge
9
POPS
there is a relationship (genetic or otherwise) between autism and genius
einbar
by einbar  6-18-2008   
  "for success in science or art, a dash of autism is essential. The essential ingredient may be an ability to turn away from the everyday world, from the simply practical and to rethink a subject with originality so as to create in new untrodden ways with all abilities canalised into the one specialty." According to psychologist and autism specialist Dr Tony Attwood, from Griffith University
— end of the list —

einbar's Different brain phenomenon ClipCast

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