Tuesday, September 8, 2015

SCIENTISTS CAN TRICK YOU INTO THINKING YOU’RE INVISIBLE



THE ILLUSION COULD ONE DAY HELP PEOPLE CONQUER THEIR FEARS


Bringing Hogwarts to Life
Staffan Larsson
Ph.D. student Zakaryah Abdulkarim, M.D., shows how to create the illusion of invisibility in the lab.
It looks like Muggles have finally caught up with the wizarding world. Neuroscientists from Sweden’s Karolinska Institutet gave 125 study participants the illusion of being invisible.
The researchers described the invisibility illusion in the journal Scientific ReportsFor the experiment, a participant stands and wears a head-mounted display, which plays a real-time video feed from a camera pointed down at an empty space nearby. So when the participant looks down, she sees an empty space instead of her body. The scientist touches various locations on the participant’s body with a large paintbrush. At the same time, with a paintbrush in his opposite hand, he imitates these motions in mid-air beneath the camera. The participant simultaneously feels the brush poke and sees the brush poking into empty space. The trick leads to a Harry Potter-like sensation of invisibility. Off to Hagrid’s!
Arvid Guterstam, the lead author of the study, explains in a press release, “Within less than a minute, the majority of the participants started to transfer the sensation of touch to the portion of empty space where they saw the paintbrush move and experienced an invisible body in that position.”
To test how well the illusion worked, the researchers made stabbing motions with a knife toward the empty space that represented the invisible body. When participants were under the spell of the illusion, they perceived these jabs as threats to their invisible bodies, and their sweat and heart rates were elevated. But when the illusion was broken--for instance, when the brushstrokes they felt and those they saw weren't in sync--they weren't unnerved by the knife.
Interestingly, the illusion of being invisible changed participants' responses during stressful situations. The researchers positioned the participants in front of a virtual audience of strangers, measuring their heart rate and self-reported stress levels. Unsurprisingly, participants were less stressed when they thought they were invisible.
So basically, pretending you’re invisible seems to be a more effective way to handle stage fright than imagining everyone in their underwear.
Looking ahead, the researchers hope to find out what else an illusion of invisibility might affect. This study might be useful for social anxiety disorder therapies or to examine decision-making. The study’s principal investigator Henrik Ehrsson says, “Follow-up studies should also investigate whether the feeling of invisibility affects moral decision-making, to ensure that future invisibility cloaking does not make us lose our sense of right and wrong, which Plato asserted over two millennia ago.”

20 comments:

  1. I definitely would like to be tested myself to see how I would react. I think this is a great idea since so many people are afraid of public speaking. How did the creator of this idea come up with it? Do they have a hard time with public speaking? What did they plan to use this for?

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  2. My question to this is, are they going to go further and beyond? As in, are they going to decide to find a way to create the same illusion to help people become less afraid of heights, or spiders, or anything for that matter? These inventions now 'n days, absolutely kill me.

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  3. I think this is really cool, considering I like the idea of having an invisibility cloak. I think that it is interesting how people were less stressed when they were invisible. I think the test on the illusion with the knife sounds scary and no matter what, I would totally freak out. I too would also like to know what they plan to do with this invisibility illusion and how far they will go with it.

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  4. I think this is very interesting. I would like to test out this expirement. Would I have the same results as the other people now that I know the trick?

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  5. This is very interesting. I would like to be tested for this experiment. I wonder if thinking i am invisible would help me with stage freight. And replying to Jamsine's statement about the people being less stressed when they were invisible; its almost like they audience couldn't see them, so if they looked or did something stupid they wouldn't know it was them.

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  6. I think this is very cool. I would like to be tested for this to see if it would change how I feel during certain situations. I think this could help a lot of people, since many people are afraid of looking stupid around others. I wonder if the person who created this has personal issues & fears about looking stupid to others in some situations. I would like to see this tested.

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  7. I think this is a very good idea. A lot of people today have anxiety or stage fright; so this would be perfect for them to face their fear and maybe get over it. I would like to be a test subject for this because I always have problems presenting in front of people and I feel this would help me not be as nervous. I really wonder how the head mounted display makes people believe and actually see they are invisible. These types of advances in the world really make me think how fast the world has changed. It also makes me think about how the future will be.

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  8. Woah! That's wickedly awesome! I wanna try it! It would help me with talking in front of the whole class. Will it be a popular technology in the future? I wish we have it now for every classroom. But I wish there can be an invisible cloak like the one in Harry Potter. I would use it all the time.

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  9. I think it's cool that the illusion could possibly help people with anxiety and stuff or people with the fear of public speaking. Maybe in the future students will be able to make it look like they are invisible when giving a presentation in class lol! That would be kind of weird though. People could get away with a lot more if they could make it look like they were invisible. So it definitely has its pros and cons.

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  10. I would love to experience this type of illusion. i wonder is each person has different experiences?? it seems pretty amazing though, science is making it much more easier for us & i like that. some times i think that we will one day live like the movie Wall-E

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  11. I feel like I would want to get tested but at the same time I wouldn't want to have the simulation of getting stabbed without actually getting stabbed. Yes, I understand it can be useful for anxiety problems or concerns, but for me personally, it adds even more anxiety and stressful thoughts. But who knows, it might not be as bad as I think it would be. I guess we'll all have to try it eventually if they offer it. Interesting article, invisibility. ��������

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  12. I feel like this could be rather interesting and could have some appliances in the world. Those could be like high pressure situations and such. I think the being stabbed without being stabbed part would be rather cool. This would definitely be something i would try.

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  13. I believe that this new technology would be a great help for many that have anxiety and social disorder. This kind of technology is the thing of many science fiction and its pretty cool that today's technology capable enough to do this. I would try it if it were offered to me.

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  14. This is quite interesting to think about, I have seen a youtube video based around the same concept that involved on persons right hand being stoked with a brush while they look a fake hand that is having the same done to it. After 30 seconds somone would stab the fake hand making the participant jolt back in their seat and realize that their hand was fine.

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  15. I think this is a great idea. A lot of of people have stage fright and get anxiety when speaking in front of large groups. The illusion of being invisible would give people a lot more confidence and self reassurance. Maybe farther in the future they could make the glasse smaller and so theyre more convinent. But I would definitely like to try it.

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  16. I think that this is a cool idea. It is weird. I think this is a good thing because it helps people when getting nervous in front of large crowds. so this is not only cool but useful too!

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  17. This is actually a really cool idea. So many people suffer from anxiety and stage fright and this could help them. I used to have stage fright and i would have loved this. I can see this becoming widely used.

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  18. I am the type of person who would have to see to believe. At least this type of stuff. I don't want to seem stupid but I don't understand how this could reduce anxiety or stage fright. I would love to try this out because of what it says. It's an awesome idea. This all seems crazy to me but I am "old fashioned" with technology and do not understand how this could possibly work. After all I rather know what is happening.

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  19. So this seems cool and all but it feels less like someone is invisible to me and more like a trick to be honest. I could see how it could maybe change a persons fear but at the same time it seems like more of a simulation than an actual thing. I feel lile if developed it could be a very successful way to get rid of fears.

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  20. This is pretty cool. Tell me when they literally make people invisible. That's when I'll be impressed! I need to feel invisible for presentations in AP world history.

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