Kısaca
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.
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Kısaca
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.
Eye contact is higher-bandwidth communication than we think. That’s why some read long gazes as threat, others as closeness. The same look can tell different stories.
Goosebumps during music, a scene, or a sentence aren’t just about cold. The brain can switch the body into an alert mode under meaning, surprise, or intense emotion. Chills can be emotion’s fingerprint.
Snacking more when you’re sleep-deprived isn’t just weak willpower—it can be biology. With less sleep, appetite signals can shift and the brain chases quick rewards. The fridge call is nightly.
The mind doesn’t compute everything from scratch; it uses shortcuts. They’re fast but can be trapped: a trustworthy-looking face or familiar phrasing creates a ‘true’ feeling. Speed trades off with accuracy.
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.
Blushing isn’t just embarrassment—it’s a “I’ve been seen” signal. Blood vessels widen, heat rises, and the involuntary reaction can carry a social message like an apology.
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