10 fun psychological fact about Human Behaviour

Psychology is the scientific study of human mind and behaviour: how we think, feel, act and interact individually and in groups. An understanding of  how behaviour difficulties develop and are maintained is an essential prerequisite to providing appropriate support for pupils in our schools.





 Top 10  New Year's Eve Traditions you knew!


 If you do a little research you will come to know that be it the western or the eastern part of the world, New Year is celebrated with equal enthusiasm everywhere. Many New Year customs that we take for granted actually date from ancient times. This year, ring out the old and ring in the new with a New Year tradition—or two!



Dreams are mostly fascinating, exciting, terrifying, Mysterious, bewildering, eye-opening and sometimes a nightmarish living hell or just plain weird. dreams are all that and much more.Here are 10 amazing facts about dreams that you might have never heard about.



10. Not everyone dreams in color

While approximately 80 percent of all dreams are in color, there are a small percentage of people who claim to only dream in black and white.As much as 12% of people only dream in black and white.


9. Blind people dream too

Blind people who were not born blind see images in their dreams but people who were born blind don’t see anything at all. They still dream, and their dreams are just as intense and interesting, but they involve the other senses beside sight.


 8. You can linger in a dream after waking.

Have you ever woken up from such a beautiful, perfect dream that you wished you could go back to sleep to soak it all up (you know, the dream about George Clooney?)? You can! Just lie still—don’t move a muscle—and you can remain in a semi-dreamlike state for a few minutes. “The best way to remember your dreams is to simply stay put when you wake up,” says Loewenberg. “Remain in the position you woke up in, because that is the position you were dreaming in. When you move your body, you disconnect yourself from the dream you were just in seconds ago.”


7. You Forget Most of Your Dreams

95 percent of all dreams are quickly forgotten shortly after waking.You can have up to seven different dreams per night depending on how many REM (Rapid Eye Moment) cycles you have. We only dream during the REM period of sleep, and the average person dreams one to two hours every night.


6. Dreams tend to be negative

Surprisingly, dreams are more often negative than positive. The three most widely reported emotions felt during dreaming are anger, sadness and fear.


5. You can’t tell time or Read while Dreaming

If you are unsure whether you are dreaming or not, try reading something. The vast majority of people are incapable of reading in their dreams. The same goes for clocks: each time you look at a clock it will tell a different time and the hands on the clock won’t appear to be moving as reported by lucid dreamers.


4. You Can Control Your Dreams

There is a whole subculture of people practicing what is called lucid or conscious dreaming. Using various techniques, these people have supposedly learned to assume control of their dreams and do amazing things like flying, passing through walls, and traveling to different dimensions or even back in time.


3. In our dreams we only see faces that we already know

The human brain is responsible for many complex creations, but it can’t invent the image of people. So the “strangers” that you meet in your dreams actually have the faces of people who you’ve once seen in your real life but forgotten, like your childhood mailman or that guy bumped into on the side walk that one time.


2. Sleep paralysis

Two characteristics of sleep paralysis are the inability to move (hence paralysis) and a sense of an extremely evil presence in the room with you. It doesn't feel like a dream, but 100% real. IT amplify the emotions of fear, terror and anxiety.
Enough Said!!!


1. Dream drug

There are actually people who like dreaming and dreams so much that they never want to wake up. They want to continue on dreaming even during the day, so they take an illegal and extremely potent hallucinogenic drug called Dimethyltryptamine. It is actually only an isolated and synthetic form of the chemical our brains produce naturally during dreaming.

Human Brain, Are remarkably complex objects with a hundred billion neurons, a quadrillion connections, and we still know very little about how this organic super computer operates. But we do know the human brain is the most complicated thing we have yet discovered.It gives us the power to form language and culture, consciousness, the idea of self, the ability to learn, and understand the universe and reflect on our place within it. We even have an inbuilt “model of gravity“, which is pretty useful.




So,  Here is the top 10 amazing Facts about our Brain .


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Universe is full of mystery. We only know about the 2 % of the entire observable universe.Although we have come a long way in our understanding, with every passing day new discoveries are made. So, Here are some fun facts about universe you mat never heard about.



10. SATURN CAN FLOAT ON WATER

The density of Saturn is so low that if you were to put it in a giant glass of water it would float. The actual density of Saturn is 0.687 g/cm3 while the density of water is 0.998 g/cm3.


9. The moon is drifting away from Earth

Every year the moon moves about 3.8cm further away from the Earth.


8. If two pieces of metal touch in space, they become permanently stuck together

Two pieces of metal without any coating on them will form in to one piece in the vacuum of space.


7. There Is A Giant Booze Cloud In Space

In 2006, the MERLIN radio telescope detected a huge cloud in space consisting of gaseous methyl alcohol.


6. There’s A Very, Very Big Diamond Out There

Discovered in 2004, a collapsed star just 50 light years away from Earth was discovered, measuring 4000 km across and with a pure diamond core


5. Neutron Stars Are Very, Very Heavy
neutron star with a size of a sugar cube can weighs around 100 million tons.


4. Nuking the Moon

In the late 1950s, by way of something labeled Project A119 the United States decided it would be a good idea to launch a nuclear missile at the moon.
however, the plan was never executed.


3. The Moon smells like gunpowder

Upon leaving the moon astronauts on the Apollo missions described moon dust as smelling like gunpowder and feeling extremely soft.


2. The Universal Speed Limit

Nothing in the universe can exceed the speed of light.
( 186,000 miles per second )


1. The human brain is the most complex object in the known universe.



Our brains are remarkably complex objects with a hundred billion neurons, a quadrillion connections, and we still know very little about how this organic super computer operates. But we do know the human brain is the most complicated thing we have yet discovered.

For all the food lovers out there, traveling is essential, if you want to taste everything the world has to offer. So, here is a list of international cuisine to spice up you taste buds.






10. Lebanese
Lebanese cuisine includes an abundance of starches, whole grain, fruits, vegetables, fresh fish and seafood; animal fats are consumed sparingly. Poultry is eaten more often than red meat. When red meat is eaten it is usually lamb on the coast, and goat meat in the mountain regions. It also includes copious amounts of garlic and olive oil, often seasoned by lemon juice, olive oil, herbs, garlic and lemon are typical flavors found in the Lebanese diet.
generally accompanied by wine or arak.

9. Spanish
Spanish foods are usually light and contain a variety of vegetables, fish and meat.
Spanish cuisine consists of a variety of dishes, which stem from differences in geography, culture and climate. It is heavily influenced by seafood available from the waters that surround the country, and reflects the country's deep maritime roots. It is a Mediterranean diet.

8. Mexican
Mexican cuisine is known for its varied flavors, colorful decoration, and variety of spices and ingredients, many of which are native to the country.
Many of the foods of Mexico are complicated because of their relation to the social structure of the country. Food preparation, especially for family and social events, is considered to be an “investment” in order to maintain social relationships

7. Japanese
Japanese cuisine typically consists of rice or noodles, with a soup. Foods are made from fish, meat, vegetable, tofu and the like. Food items are typically flavored with dashi, miso, and soy sauce and are generally low in fat and high in salt.
The side dishes often consist of fish, pickled vegetables, and vegetables cooked in broth. Fish is common in the traditional cuisine. It is often grilled, but it may also be served raw as sashimi or in sushi. Seafood and vegetables are also deep-fried in a light batter as tempura.

6. American
American cuisine has become more popular due to its well chained restaurants of fast foods.
like Pizza and Burger
 One characteristic of American cooking is the fusion of multiple ethnic or regional approaches into completely new cooking styles. Hamburgers and hot dogs from German cuisine, spaghetti and pizza from Italian cuisine became popular. Since the 1960s Asian cooking has played a particularly large role in American fusion cuisine

5. French
French cuisine is as popular as their beauty products. Pastries are the most important parts of French cooking.
There are many dishes that are considered part of French national cuisine today.A meal often consists of three courses, hors d'œuvre or entrée (introductory course, sometimes soup), plat principal (main course), fromage (cheese course) and/or dessert, sometimes with a salad offered before the cheese or dessert.


4. Indian
Indian food is known for its Variety.
Most people identify Indian cuisine with typical north Indian vs South Indian Foods.
the real treats of Indian cuisine are chicken and fish tikkas, naan and sweet dishes.
Given the range of diversity in soil type, climate and occupations, these cuisines vary significantly from each other and use locally available spices, herbs, vegetables and fruits. Indian food is also heavily influenced by religious and cultural choices.

3. Thai
Most people confuse Thai Cuisine with the Chinese but it is different in essence. Thai food is balanced mix of sweet, sour and spice.
 Thai cooking places emphasis on lightly prepared dishes with strong aromatic components. The spiciness of Thai cuisine is well known. As with other Asian cuisines, balance, detail and variety are of great significance to Thai chefs. Thai food is known for its balance of three to four fundamental taste senses in each dish or the overall meal: sour, sweet, salty, and bitter.

2. Italian
Pizza and Pasta 
Only these two items are enough to tell about the popularity of Italian cuisine.
Cheese and wine are a major part of the cuisine, with many variations and Denominazione di origine controllata (regulated appellation) laws. Coffee, specifically espresso, has become important in Italian cuisine.

1. Chinese
Wherever you go, Chinese foods are ready to welcome you. Chinese noodles and fried rice are one of the most sought after food items in the world. Chinese foods are rich in taste and light on pocket.
Where there are historical immigrant Chinese populations, the style of food has evolved and been adapted to local tastes and ingredients, and modified by the local cuisine, to greater or lesser extents. This has resulted in a number of forms of fusion cuisine, often very popular in the country in question, and some of these, such as ramen (Japanese Chinese) have become popular internationally.

The supposed communication of thoughts or ideas by means other than the known senses.


Scientific consensus does not view telepathy as a real phenomenon. Many studies seeking to detect, understand, and utilize telepathy have been done, but according to the prevailing view among scientists, telepathy lacks replicable results from well-controlled experiments


Origins of the concept


According to Roger Luckhurst,[8] the origin of the concept of telepathy (not telepathy itself) in the Western civilization can be tracked to the late 19th century. In his view, science did not frequently concern itself with "the mind" prior to this. As the physical sciences made significant advances, scientific concepts were applied to mental phenomena (e.g., animal magnetism), with the hope that this would help understand paranormal phenomena. The modern concept of telepathy emerged in this context.

Psychological symbiosis, on the other hand, is a less well established concept. It is an idea found in the writings of early psychoanalysts, such as Melanie Klein. It entails the belief that in the early psychological experience of the child (during earliest infancy), the child is unable to tell the difference between his or her own mind, on one hand, and his or her experience of the mother/parent, on the other hand. This state of mind is called psychological symbiosis; with development, it ends, but, purportedly, aspects of it can still be detected in the psychological functioning of the adult. Putatively, the experience of either thought insertion/removal or unconscious memories of psychological symbiosis may have led to the invention of "telepathy" as a notion and the belief that telepathy exists. Psychiatrists and clinical psychologists believe and empirical findings support the idea that people with schizotypal personality disorder are particularly likely to believe in telepathy.


Case studies



A famous experiment in telepathy was recorded by the American author Upton Sinclair in his book Mental
Radio which documents Sinclair's test of psychic abilities of Mary Craig Kimbrough, his second wife. She attempted to duplicate 290 pictures which were drawn by her husband. Sinclair claimed Mary successfully duplicated 65 of them, with 155 "partial successes" and 70 failures. However, these experiments were not conducted in a controlled scientific laboratory environment.[10]
Another example is the experiments carried out by the author Harold Sherman with the explorer Hubert Wilkins who carried out their own experiments in telepathy for five and a half months starting in October 1937. This took place when Sherman was in New York and Wilkins was in the Arctic. The experiment consisted of Sherman and Wilkins at the end of each day to relax and visualise a mental image or "thought impression" of the events or thoughts they had experienced in the day and then to record those images and thoughts on paper in a diary. The results at the end when comparing Sherman's diary to Wilkins was that "Seventy-five per cent were found to be correct". A typical example was on 21 February 1938. On that day, both Sherman and Wilkins had recorded that cold weather had delayed their jobs, they both had witnessed that someone's skin had peeled off their finger, they both recorded that they had drunk alcohol with friends and witnessed boxes of cigars being brought and both recorded that they had experienced a toothache.[11][12]
To rule out any kind of fraud, each night Sherman had sent his impressions to Gardner Murphy, a psychologist at Columbia University. Murphy had studied the Wilkins-Sherman results and claimed that some could be explained by coincidence but that some exceptions were unexplainable. One such example took place on Armistice Day, 1937. Wilkins had attended a formal ball for the Army with the locals in Canada as his plane was forced to land due to bad weather, Wilkins recorded that he was worried about a dress-suit that he had to wear as the waistcoat was short in size.[13] On the same night, Sherman recorded in his diary "You in company with men in military attire-some women-evening dress-important people present-much conversation-you appear to be in evening dress yourself."[13] Wilkins was very impressed by the results and wrote that:

"When we finally were able to compare notes, what did we find? An amazing number of impressions recorded by Sherman of expedition happenings, and personal experiences, reactions and thoughts of mine. Too many of them were approximately correct and synchronized with the very day of the occurences to have been 'guesswork'."


In popular culture


Telepathy is commonly used in fiction, with a number of superheroes and supervillains, as well as figures in many science fiction novels, etc., use telepathy. The mechanics of telepathy in fiction vary widely. Some fictional telepaths are limited to receiving only thoughts that are deliberately sent by other telepaths, or even to receiving thoughts from a specific other person. For example, inRobert A. Heinlein's 1956 novel Time for the Stars, certain pairs of twins are able to send telepathic messages to each other. In A. E. van Vogt's science fiction novel Slan, the mutant hero Jommy Cross can read the minds of ordinary humans.
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