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Loneliness isn’t ‘just a feeling’—it can feel like a bodily alarm. Social exclusion can activate brain regions overlapping with physical pain, so it can sting even in a crowd.
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Kısaca
Loneliness isn’t ‘just a feeling’—it can feel like a bodily alarm. Social exclusion can activate brain regions overlapping with physical pain, so it can sting even in a crowd.
We see the world smoothly because the brain keeps predicting with incomplete data. Your eyes leave tiny gaps; the brain fills them with the ‘most likely’ picture. Reality is partly a construction.
Saying “I won’t do it again” and still repeating it is often habit, not bad intent. The brain treats the most familiar path as the cheapest. Change is the cost of building a new route.
That sudden shiver during a song isn’t just emotion—it’s your reward circuitry lighting up. Music can trigger “frisson” when it bends expectation and resolves at the right moment.
Finding a face ‘trustworthy’ at first glance is often unconscious. The brain makes fast calls using symmetry, softness of expression, and familiarity cues. It’s quick—and fallible.
In an argument, one person stays angry for minutes while another recovers fast. The difference is often emotion regulation: the brain learns how to cool a rising fire.
Recognizing someone but blanking on their name isn’t laziness: the brain encodes faces as rich visual identity files, while names stay as fragile labels. So the face pops up, the name doesn’t.
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