• DoubleSpace@lemm.ee
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    7 个月前

    I figure the feeling of being in your head is simply due to your eyeballs being located there. Now I want to put a 3d camera on my hips, and steam it to VR goggles.

    • meyotch@slrpnk.net
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      7 个月前

      The hips do not lie. Ipso facto, you would be seeing ultimate truth.

      It turns out that the meaning of life is at crotch level.

        • meyotch@slrpnk.net
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          7 个月前

          So now I actually think this idea is on to something brilliant. I have been diving into neuroscience lately and this sounds like an amazing experimental method.

          It’s like non-surgically transplanting your eyes into your hips. Why do that? To further refine brain-body mapping.

          We turn our head instinctively to aid vision. Once our brain realizes that visual input improves only when we move our hips, body awareness will shift significantly.

          @DoubleSpace@lemm.ee the best ideas start as jokes

      • meyotch@slrpnk.net
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        7 个月前

        Awesome resource, thank you for posting it.

        Here’s one reason why a hip level perspective would be so helpful as a neuroscience tool. It is an ethical and reversible experimental intervention that could add real experimental power to functional brain-body mapping.

        Combine the perspective shift induced by the virtual rearrangement of sensory input with fNIRS for cortical imaging, perhaps before, during and after the hip-view experience. A company focused on near infrared cortical imaging products

        I am certain a proper neuroscientist could come up with even better and more detailed questions to ask using the method.

        Something like this could even be used as a therapy tool for trauma, perhaps, once the impact of the perspective shifts were understood well. A common trauma response is dissociation and common therapy methods include ways to help people reconnect with their whole bodies again.