9. he Pinocchio Effect
You will need: 2 chairs facing the same direction
and one in front of the other, 2 people sitting in the chairs, and a
blindfold. The person blindfolded sits in the rear chair and will face
the back of the person without a blindfold. The blindfolded person will
put one hand on his own nose and at the same time be reaching around the
person in front of them and touch their nose. Then, the blindfolded
person should start gently stroking both his and the other person’s
nose. About a minute after beginning to stroke both noses, the
blindfolded person more than half of the time will report his nose being so long that it reaches the other person’s nose.
8. Confuse Your Depth Perception
We all see the world in three dimensions (3D) which is possible through our brain’s ability to properly perceive depth. Our eyes work together to correctly identify depth perception,
so closing one eye will alter the way your mind perceives visual
stimuli. Our brains are trained to judge time and space in order to
perceive depth correctly but are only able to do so with both eyes. One simple way
to test this is to stare at an object at least a foot or two away from
you and close one eye, then switch to closing the other eye and you will
notice that the object appears to be in a different location.
7. Shrink Your Pain
Suffering from severe pain from an injury or chronic pain
can have a significant negative impact on our daily living, but there
is a way to decrease your pain without harsh medications. A study done
at Oxford University recently discovered a new pain killer:
the inverted binoculars. According to the study’s results, subjects who
looked at their injuries through the wrong end of binoculars
experienced a significantly less pain and even decreased swelling. The
reason this works is because the inverted binoculars makes the affected
body part appear much smaller, and our brains get slightly confused and
thinks your body part is really that small.
6. 18000 Hz Sine Wave
You may have already heard of this, just not by this name. The 18000 Hz Sine Wave is commonly known by its modern use by teenagers as a ringtone that older people
are unable to hear (which is why it was also given the name “under
20s”). The produced sound is extremely high pitched and is audible to
people who are young and do not have a damaged inner ear or part of the
brain that deals with hearing.
5. Confuse Your Hearing
Three people are needed to do this: one subject and two observers. You will also need a headset that is connected to routine plastic pipes
on both sides. The subject begins by sitting on a chair that is in
between and equally distant from both observers. The observers then hold
onto the plastic pipes on the subject’s headset that is on the
observers’ corresponding side. One at a time, both observers should
speak into the pipes. Right now the subject should be able to correctly
identify which side the voice is coming from. Then, the observers should
switch pipes and again speak into the pipes. The subject’s brain will
become confused and cause the subject to say the voice is coming from
the opposite direction that it is.
4. Confuse Your Cognition
The spinning silhouette illusion provides the viewer
with an image that appears to be spinning clockwise or
counterclockwise. In reality, the image is in 2D and is actually simply
shifting back and forth.
Since our brains evolved in a 3D world, they can’t properly identify the
image’s true movements and therefore uses already known stimuli to fill
in the blanks and perceive the image to be spinning.
3. Confuse Your Photoreception
When you look at an image
for a certain length of time (usually 30 seconds) and then immediately
look at a white area, an effect called an afterimage occurs. This visual phenomenon is most commonly explained by how the rods and cones (photoreceptors) used become “fatigued” and don’t work as well as they should. This is caused by a temporary bleaching
of the light-sensitive pigments within the photoreceptors being used.
The result causes the photoreceptors to be imbalanced which causes a
combination of previously viewed colors and images to combine when
looking at the white field.
2. Ganzfeld Procedure
The intended effect of the Ganzfeld Procedure is to experience sensory distortions, such as seeing horses prancing in the clouds or hearing the voice
of deceased family. To do this you will need a radio, tape (use tape
that you won’t mind putting on your face and eyebrows), and a ping pong
ball that is cut in half. You begin the procedure by tuning the radio
to a station that is playing static. With the radio near your head, lie
down in a comfortable area and tape the halved ping pong balls on each
of your eyes. You should begin experiencing the sensory distortion
experiences within a few minutes. The reason that this bizarre
experience can be achieved is because our brains are addicted to the
five senses, and with all of these stimuli blocking our senses our brain
ends up making up its own.
1. Confuse Your Mindfulness
To begin, lie down flat on your back with both legs extended or simply sit on a chair cross legged.
Lift your right foot a few inches off of the ground and begin moving it
in a clockwise motion. While moving your right foot, use your right
index finger and draw the number six (6) in the air. Within moments your
foot will begin moving in a counterclockwise motion and you won’t be
able to control it without putting your foot down first. Why does this
happen? The left side of our brains controls the right side of our
bodies and is most responsible for timing and rhythm control. The left
side has incredible difficulty understanding and operating two opposite
movements at the same time, so it then combines the two motions to a
single motion.
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