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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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Kısaca
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.
Remembering isn’t taking a memory off the shelf and returning it unchanged—the brain updates it slightly each time. That’s why details you’re ‘sure’ about can drift. Memory is alive, not fixed.
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.
Feeling uneasy when a room goes silent is normal. The brain hates uncertainty; with fewer cues in silence, threat-scanning mode can ramp up.
If seeing someone yawn makes you yawn too, you’re not alone: contagious yawning is an automatic social-brain response. The twist is that the effect can get stronger with closeness and empathy.
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.
If you hear sentences in your head, it’s not weird: the brain can run the speech system in silent mode. The twist: when the inner voice speeds up, stress can rise too.
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