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The Humintell Blog September 19, 2011

Don’t Show Your Emotions?

Isn’t life really a conglomerate of emotions one after the other?  So, how can one refrain from expressing how they feel?

Sometimes, especially in high excitement situations (either of sadness, confusion or joy) our emotions just “leak” out.

The outward display of emotions in many sports has become taboo.   From professional football to high school football, players are required NOT to show their emotions.  Many people would agree that showboating is not necessary and is really a reflection of poor sportsmanship.  The problem is that the definition of showboating at least in football’s rule book seems to be too ambiguous.

According to Fox’s Channel 8, showboating or what football refers to as excessive celebration is specifically prohibited.  The rulebook officially “prohibits any prolonged act that focuses attention on a player”.

What do you think?  Is the rule book clear enough or do you think it should be more clearly defined?

This controversy comes into light because of a high school football team from Ohio that was recently penalized for displaying too much emotion.  The unfortunate circumstance is that the boy who scored the touchdown, who was one of two players that “focused attention” on themselves, did so in the memory of his close friend who’s funeral he attended earlier that day.

The referee (in question on the video below) allegedly asked the players not to thrust their fingers into the air and according to him they did so before and after that request, which is when he threw the flag and penalized the team.

Even knowing the boy’s circumstances, which the referee could not have known, is thrusting a finger into the air excessive celebration?  or Are we taking this no display of emotions rule too stringently?

Check out the video below that delineates the “excessive”gesture in question.

To hear Dr. Matsumoto’s comments on the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat click here.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

The Humintell Blog September 16, 2011

Emotional Intelligence Test

Here’s an old video that if you haven’t seen, will lighten your day. Enjoy!

Click here to view the embedded video.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

The Humintell Blog September 14, 2011

Magnet Magic: “The Truth of the Matter”

A new study suggests that magnets can be used for more than just pinning your kid’s artwork to the refrigerator.

Magnetic fields have been used in science for quite a while for a plethora of things ranging from fMRI’s to the simple navigational compass.  It has long been known that magnetic fields, which are invisible to the human eye, can have effects on the tangible world.

What if magnets could effect our ability to deceive people?

Well, Smartplanet has reported on that very idea.  Researchers, Inga Karton and Talis Bachmann from Estonia, revealed that magnets, strategically placed, can affect a person’s proclivity to lie.  Scientists stimulated a part of the brain labeled DPC or dorsolateral prefrontal cortex with magnets.  This same type of scientific technique is used to study elusive qualities of human nature, such as morality and memory.

Law enforcement everywhere would love to procure an instrument as beneficial as a truth extractor.  What could be better or easier than placing an innocuous item such as a magnet on someone and being able to extract the truth?

This study, published in Behavioural Brain Research, has a long way to go to prove that magnets directly influence a person’s propensity to lie.  The sample size of this group was very small (16 participants) and there was no real motivation for the subjects to lie.

However, the preliminary findings are interesting and further studies could prove beneficial for how lie detectives try to extrapolate the “truth of the matter”.

What do you think? Could a simple magnet be used as a lie detection tool?  If lie detection were that easy, wouldn’t we have figured it out by now?

Related articles

Researchers find magnetic brain stimulation appears to make lying more difficult (medicalxpress.com)
Study Suggests Magnets Can Force You to Tell the Truth (science.slashdot.org)
After A Magnetic Pulse to the Brain, Study Subjects Cannot Tell a Lie By Rebecca Boyle (imullins89.wordpress.com)

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