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In the book he has a theory, which caused him to try the ear thing in the first place. I would like to see this replicated...
Neuroscientists in my family automatically discredit anything Ramachandran says as pseudoscience. I don’t know whether they are justified in doing so.
Confabulation is a major thing. As my mother’s dementia progresses, she fills in more and more cognitive gaps with plausible-sounding but completely false stories. Once I observed this, I started to worry, and observe… and caught myself doing the same thing. Like, *often*.
I gave my wife a lengthy explanation of why I had bought a particular bottle of wine that was atypical for me. And realized only later that, in fact, she had bought it, not me. I completely believed what I was saying.
I've come across a couple of "ice water in ear" studies and stories, most of which do seem odd but not pseudoscientific, e.g. this one http://precedings.nature.com/documents/4519/version/1/files/npre20104519-1.pdf …
Very odd. Random weirdness: Is water at 24C (the temperature used in the study) “cold”? That’s 75F. Luke-warm, I’d say.
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