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NO WE DO NOT HAVE SCHIZOPHRENIA -- Mentally Healthy Individuals are made to feel this sensation of the presense of another. It does not linger. A symptom in schizophrenia and in extreme solitary situations.
This is quite an astonishing development. This perceptual distortion was first described by Karl Jaspers (psychiatrist, philosopher, scholar of religious studies) about 100 years ago in speaking with patients with schizophrenia.
It deals with feeling the presense of another being nearby -- a hallucination in those who are ill (and is generally frightening). But this is also experienced by individuals who have been in extreme solitary conditions -- climbing a mountain alone.
This is a neurological glitch in the mind of an individual with schizophrenia, but it can be created in MENTALLY HEALTHY individuals. The result with them is not permanent.
Brief video: and link to article:
No clue why my videos stay as a link and not an image.
Link to article in Andrew Sullivan's "Daily Dish" -- "Lab Grown Ghosts"
http://dish.andrewsullivan.com/2014/11/13/lab-grown-ghosts/
NO WE DO NOT HAVE SCHIZOPHRENIA!!!!!!!
This is quite an astonishing development. This perceptual distortion was first described by Karl Jaspers (psychiatrist, philosopher, scholar of religious studies) about 100 years ago in speaking with patients with schizophrenia.
It deals with feeling the presense of another being nearby -- a hallucination in those who are ill (and is generally frightening). But this is also experienced by individuals who have been in extreme solitary conditions -- climbing a mountain alone.
This is a neurological glitch in the mind of an individual with schizophrenia, but it can be created in MENTALLY HEALTHY individuals. The result with them is not permanent.
Brief video: and link to article:
No clue why my videos stay as a link and not an image.
Link to article in Andrew Sullivan's "Daily Dish" -- "Lab Grown Ghosts"
http://dish.andrewsullivan.com/2014/11/13/lab-grown-ghosts/
Neurobiology of perception, Self, perceptual distortions. There is research into this and further understanding of this can lead ... WILL lead ... to understanding DP/DR.Feeling of Presence, or FoP, is the disconcerting notion that someone else is hovering nearby, walking alongside you or even touching you. It's the stuff of ghost stories, but also a real symptom of several neurologic conditions, including schizophrenia and Alzheimer's disease. Scientists know so little about the underlying causes of FoP that long-term treatments and cures remain illusive.
Now, researchers are chipping away at the neurobiology behind that uncanny feeling. In a paper published November 6 in Current Biology, a team of scientists described how they used a custom-built robot to induce an eerie Feeling of Presence in healthy participants. Their findings confirm that sensorimotor conflict, a neurologic imbalance between what the mind perceives and what the body feels, lies at the root of some FoP illusions.
NO WE DO NOT HAVE SCHIZOPHRENIA!!!!!!!