Friday, October 15, 2010

Chicken Pox Virus Life Span In Air

Intelligence, botox and emotions


Move the facial muscles, even surreptitiously, when we think can better understand what we think!
Unknowingly, people who are injecting Botox allow researchers to establish the falsifiability This theory, ie to test its veracity, taking his opposite view.

Botulinum toxin is produced by a bacterium called Clostridium botulinum . This bacterium paralyzes the facial muscles where it is injected. The muscle becomes sluggish and wrinkles that might appear lost time during which paralysis. Researchers at the University of Wisconsin (*) injected the toxin at the center of the forehead, a group of young women. They then proposed to read simple texts which gave rise to negative emotions, for which the corrugator muscle is activated when the front sadness fear or anger are experienced. These researchers noted that they put more time to understand the meaning of sentences read and they were losing between 5 and 10% of the meaning of the text.
We know well that if wrinkles appear because we think! In these moments we seek unconsciously to feel that we talk to understand. In the absence of felt, what we hear, read, think, and that our brain registers no sense. We do not really understand.

The body is much more involved than we previously thought in any effort of thought. In synergology skeptics sometimes say, referring microdémangeaisons the (translations of emotional disagreements): "I'm scratching even when I'm alone!" Yet we are never alone. As soon as we think, even alone, we have to emulate an inner world of imaginary dialogues and makes our body helps us feel what we feel to give meaning to these dialogues. Although we are only moved and our features are moving.

Is it necessary to add that special moment or wrinkles disappear is the time of the shroud, the face totally relaxed by the death ... A face where wrinkles are visible and move through is a face of emotions a face crossed by life ...


(*) D. Havas et al., In Psychol. Sc, vol. 21, p. 895, 201

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