Have you suddenly approached the edge of the cliff, and without the obvious reason, do you feel the urge to jump?
If so, you may have experienced a highland (HPP) as it is called by a research paper by a team of psychologists at Florida State University. It turned out that this phenomenon is more common, but it has only recently become the focus of scientific research.
Jennifer Hames, a psychology doctoral student, says: However, her team was unable to find a reference to this phenomenon in the scientific literature. "So, I thought" What a good research "
It is a newcomer to American psychologists, but the French call this phenomenon Lapel Duvido, or a call for Boyd - it's a cooler name
In any case, researchers can explain their research to explain Freud's idea of driving death or explain why some people seem to commit suicide
As a result, they investigated online samples of nearby 431 college students to see if they experienced a sudden unexplained urge jumping out of height. Respondents also evaluated fertility history, depressive symptoms, abnormal emotional episodes, and susceptibility to anxiety. This can be measured in fear of the physical symptoms of respondents.
(If you are not sure yet what HPP is, Christopher Walken explains him in the scene of "Anne Hall".)
The speculation of the researchers is this: when you suddenly retreat from the edge by reflection, you are hiking by the cliffs. This is an instinct and a survival response. But your conscious brain moving fast, reminds me reasonable explanation: "I have to jump." This subsequent explanation will modify your understanding of the situation and plant the intention or motivation that does not exist.
The reason why people with high anxiety susceptibility more frequently experience HPP may be because they are more likely to react physiologically to potentially dangerous situations such as falling off a cliff. Suicidal thought does not seem to explain why people want to jump suddenly
"Therefore, individuals reporting this phenomenon are not necessarily suicidal, instead the HPP experience may reflect their sensitivity to internal cues and may affirm their willingness to actually survive." I said.
The fear of our height is complicated, but the urge to jump is harder to explain. Jennifer Hames, a professor of clinical psychology focusing on suicidal behaviors at the University of Notre Dame, he suddenly wants to skip 'high phenomena'. In a groundbreaking paper in 2012, she and her colleagues discovered that half of the 431 subjects who had never thought of suicide thought about leaping from highlands 5 (past suicide Thought). 75% of people feel such urge. ) She thinks that this impulse may be derived from a misunderstanding of the signal sent from the body safety system to a conscious brain. Our fear circuitry, which includes the amygdala and other immediate subconscious brain areas, may warn the frontal cortex to explain. Your conscious processing is slower than the fear circuit, you can recognize the alarm signal, but you may not know the reason why it was sent.
A study by Florida State University student Jennifer Hames saw this reaction as an altitude phenomenon. According to National Broadcasting Corporation, "Ham and his colleagues surveyed 431 college students and asked them about ideas and suicide that came out of the altitude and those who had thought about suicide could say so 50% of people who have said that they have never thought of suicide have experienced this phenomenon. Hamas, however, these dramatic ideas are not necessarily related to depression here Prove that.
As a result, they investigated online samples of nearby 431 college students to see if they experienced a sudden unexplained urge jumping out of height. Respondents also evaluated fertility history, depressive symptoms, abnormal emotional episodes, and susceptibility to anxiety. This can be measured in fear of the physical symptoms of respondents. The speculation of the researchers is this: when you suddenly retreat from the edge by reflection, you are hiking by the cliffs. This is an instinct and a survival response. But your conscious brain moving fast, reminds me reasonable explanation: "I have to jump." This subsequent explanation will modify your understanding of the situation and plant the intention or motivation that does not exist.