The Neurological Conditioning of Sound
<p>Remember that time when you were alone in that quiet house for the first time and heard <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q3cuPVaZyUY" rel="noopener ugc nofollow" target="_blank">a creepy sound?</a> Maybe it was a windy day and the floor creaked and the window bellowed. That sound you heard, was clearly the logical result of wind pushing into a creaky wooden structure, yet the auditory impact is interpreted by the hypothalamus (a small but very important part of your brain that regulates fight or flight) as a <em>threat</em>.</p>
<p>Your thoughts quickly flow into scenarios: is it a ghost? Or perhaps a robber? For the first five seconds these possibilities are<strong> all</strong> you might consider. They dominate your imagination and thought processing. Until the rational side of your brain — granted some time passed without other similarly scary sounds — convinces you that the sound is nothing to be afraid of. But part of you still believes that, during those first five seconds, you actually saw, or at least heard, a spooky ghost making that sound.</p>
<p><a href="https://medium.com/@alexpenno/the-neurological-conditioning-of-sound-c552a1b7782c"><strong>Read More</strong></a></p>