26Misdiagnosing Brain Death

False diagnoses of brain death can occur due to the predominant focus on brainstem activity by physicians, overlooking the cortical function responsible for consciousness coordination.
27. Recovered Memory Therapy was a controversial psychiatric technique that often led patients to fabricate memories of satanic rituals, fueling the 1980s satanic panic. This dark period in American history revealed the susceptibility of children to suggestibility, with innocent individuals, including school teachers, falsely accused based on coerced testimonies.
28. Aphantasia describes the inability of some individuals to visualize mental images. Many people, including artists, may not realize they experience this phenomenon until questioned about it.
29. The "earworm" phenomenon is characterized by having a song stuck in one's head in a repetitive loop. It can occur as the brain attempts to fill gaps in the auditory cortex.
30. Jazz musicians deactivate their dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, responsible for self-monitoring performance, while activating their medial prefrontal cortex, which aids in storytelling. This brain pattern mirrors activity during dreaming.
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31Conversing in Lucid Dreams

Two-way communication with dreamers is feasible during REM sleep, as demonstrated in a study where lucid dreamers correctly answered questions and solved math problems via eye movement.
32. Deaf individuals can perceive music through tactile sensations using their hands and a balloon. The brain can adapt by rewiring the auditory cortex to process input from mechanoreceptors in the fingertips.
33. Shared Delusional Disorder, also known as "Folie à deux," is a mental condition where one person's delusions influence another to adopt the same belief. An example involves twin sisters named Sabina and Ursula Eriksson, who shared delusions and flung themselves into oncoming traffic. They were injured, but they continued to fight off the police.
34. Synesthesia, a neurological phenomenon, results in individuals experiencing involuntary sensory crossovers, leading to unique and vivid perceptions. For instance, seeing the letter "A" consistently as red.
35. Paradoxical insomnia is a disorder where individuals feel awake while they are actually sleeping. The exact cause is unclear, but it involves the absence of normal muscle paralysis during REM sleep, leading to potential physical harm as individuals can sometimes act out their dreams.
36Ancient Brain's Divided Functions

The Bicameral Mentality Hypothesis proposes that ancient human cognition operated with one part of the brain "speaking" instructions, while another part "listened" and obeyed commands.
37. Involuntary Emotional Expression Disorder, also known as Pseudobulbar Affect, is a neurological condition characterized by uncontrollable episodes of laughing or crying that are disproportionate to the individual's actual emotions or circumstances.
38. Selective mutism is a disorder where individuals are capable of speaking but refrain from speaking in specific situations or to specific people. Those affected by selective mutism may remain silent, even in situations where their silence results in shame, ostracism, or punishment.
39. Couvade syndrome, also known as sympathetic pregnancy, is a condition where males experience symptoms similar to pregnancy, such as weight gain, morning nausea, and labor pains.
40. White torture is a form of psychological torture that entails extreme sensory deprivation and isolation. It subjects the prisoner to a completely white, soundproof room, leading to a loss of personal identity and hallucinations.
41Panic Born from Delusion

The Oxford Circus Panic was a human stampede triggered by a mass delusion of an attack in London. Despite no actual attack occurring, news outlets, social media, and a pop star's warning led to panic, resulting in injuries to 16 people, nine of them serious.
42. Chunibyo, also known as "year-nine syndrome" in Japanese, characterizes early teens with grandiose delusions, believing they possess hidden knowledge or secret powers, often seeking attention by standing out.
43. Clinical lycanthropy is a rare psychiatric delusion where individuals believe they are transforming or have already transformed into an animal.
44. BZ, a superhallucinogen chemical weapon, induces a 5-day ordeal characterized by 12 hours of mild coma followed by 48 to 60 hours of extreme hallucinations, psychosis, and cognitive impairment. The aftereffects can last for weeks.
45. Zero stroke emerged during the German hyperinflation of the early 1920s, presenting as an alleged mental disorder where affected individuals compulsively write endless strings of zeros and may make outlandish claims, such as being ten billion years old or having forty trillion children.