The human body can predict the future?

The human body is capable of predicting an imminent major event, at least according to a new study.

>>>The machine predicts the future

If the conclusions of the new study published in Frontiers of Perception are correct, it seems to have revealed something of a fundamental nature that has never been discovered before.

'Our research found that our bodies can predict events without the jaw sign. Evidence shows that the effect has a very small real effect. The question is: How is this process going on, ' Julia Mossbridge, a neurologist at Northwestern University (USA) and co-author of the study, told Live Science.

Picture 1 of The human body can predict the future?

According to previous studies, physical reactions, including heart rate, pupil dilation and brain activity change in about 1 - 10 seconds before people see a scary image (no term as a snake crawling crawling). In most of these experiments, horror photos are randomly placed next to neutral images to theoretically, participants do not have any indication of what the image will appear next. However, because discovery seems unnatural, those studies face a lot of skepticism.

To see if that effect is real, Ms. Mossbridge and her colleagues conducted more than 20 studies. In it, they removed any experiments that were thought to be flawed or biased. After all, the Mossbridge team still detected the 'omen' effect , noting the degree of physical stimulus changing a few seconds before an event.

For example, if you are an investor who bets a lot of money into a stock code then '10 seconds before everything is decided, you can predict your stock status, ' said Mossbridge.

Research by the Mossbridge group does not conclude that humans have super natural powers or mysterious psychic powers. Instead, the authors believe that 'premonition' is a real physical effect, complying with natural laws.

However, some scientists are still skeptical of research by Ms. Mossbridge and her colleagues. They cite the reason that this work is for research purposes only, based on the results of available studies, while there is no guarantee that all of these are error-free and biased.