Last night, while I was having this neural-plasticity epiphany, I got so excited that I did something I'm always meaning to do. I turned on the light, pulled a random pen and a random notebook, and got to writing my ideas down. I gave the notebook the very pretentious title "Hypnogogic Ideas", and started recording the random little things I
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I've heard of a woman who implanted magnets into her fingers to be able to sense magnetic fields. Only word-of-mouth among fellow psych majors; I've got no reference.
There's also a blind boy who uses echolocation to navigate. I think that one was in the Washington Post; could look further if you're interested.
Clepsydra is indeed spelled right.
And FWIW, I've thought of making up a danced conlang.
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Ooh, another one to add to my list.
I've heard of a woman who implanted magnets into her fingers to be able to sense magnetic fields. Only word-of-mouth among fellow psych majors; I've got no reference.
Yeah, saizai pointed me to an article she wrote. She went to a BM "surgeon" to get it done, and had fun with it for a while, but there were complications and she had to get it removed -- IIRC the magnet fragmented in her finger, and maybe it got infected? Don't remember. Anyway, I've been trying to think of a better way to implement that.
There's also a blind boy who uses echolocation to navigate. I think that one was in the Washington Post; could look further if you're interested.Blindsight-by-echolocation is fairly well documented I think (though pretty much all the evidence is ( ... )
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