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Core Topics => Drugs => Hallucinogens/Psychedelics => Topic started by: Chip on May 02, 2018, 03:38:53 PM

Title: Scientists have found how to make people HALLUCINATE whilst gathering metrics
Post by: Chip on May 02, 2018, 03:38:53 PM
it might be highly possible that in the future we won't need to take drugs to get high but merely adjust the ion flows in our bodies with technology (Chip, circa 2018)

for hypertext links, visit the source: http://theconversation.com/scientists-have-found-how-to-make-people-hallucinate-and-how-to-measure-what-they-see-66842

(https://images.theconversation.com/files/141368/original/image-20161012-8411-1m7e3g.jpg)

Quote
How can we measure the mind? When you ask someone what they’re thinking about, what they tell you is not necessarily the truth. This doesn’t mean they’re lying. It means many environmental, social and personal influences can change what someone tells us.

If I put on a white lab coat, suit or t-shirt and ask you a bunch of questions, what I wear will change what you say. This was demonstrated in the famous Milgrim experiments in the 1960s, which showed the power of perceived authority to control others’ behaviours. People want to be liked, or give a certain impression. This is commonly referred to as impression management and is one of the hardest obstacles to overcome in scientific research.

Neuroscientists have made notable advances in measuring the anatomy of the brain and its regions at different scales. But they’ve made few big advances in measuring the mind, which is what people think, feel and experience. The mind is notoriously difficult to measure; but it needs to be done as it will aid development of new treatments for mental and neurological disorders.

Out-of-control mental imagery and hallucinations are good examples of mental health symptoms that are difficult to measure accurately in science and medicine. Our study published this week shows a new method to induce and measure visual hallucinations in anyone at any time.

These findings open the door to a new avenue of research. We can now study visual hallucinations in the lab using anyone as a subject.

the full article can be read at the link above
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