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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.
Some psychology findings suggest we prefer things that resemble ourselves. That’s why name letters can subtly nudge preferences—even cities or careers—by a tiny push.
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.
In a noisy crowd, you can ignore chatter—until you hear your name. The brain keeps scanning the background for “important words,” and your own name is a top trigger.
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.
Memory isn’t a camera file—it’s a story rewritten each time. If a detail is missing, the brain can fill it with plausible pieces, and you may later trust the fill-in as real.
That “I had a feeling” moment can be real: the body produces micro-signals during decisions. Pulse and sweat measures can shift before conscious awareness—like the body is whispering first.
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