- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > ドイツ書
- > Humanities, Arts & Music
- > Psychology
- > psychological guide books
Description
Time does not actually slow down during a car crash. Your brain simply overclocks its recording speed, capturing every terrifying millisecond in high definition. Survivors of car crashes, gunfights, and catastrophic falls often report the exact same bizarre phenomenon: time seemed to physically slow down, like a scene out of a cinematic action movie. This is not a trick of memory; it is a profound, hardwired survival mechanism known as the Tachypsychia Phenomenon.When the human amygdala detects an immediate, lethal threat, it dumps a massive cocktail of adrenaline and cortisol into the bloodstream. This chemical flood forces the brain to drastically increase its sensory sampling rate. Instead of processing reality at the normal frame rate, your brain overclocks itself, capturing every terrifying millisecond in high definition. Because more memories are laid down per second, the event feels agonizingly long in retrospect.This book explores the extreme limits of the human nervous system. We delve into the combat psychology of fighter pilots and martial artists who actively train to trigger and harness this biological slow-motion to react faster than conscious thought.Step inside the bullet-time of the human brain. Discover the incredible, distortive lengths your neurology will go to in order to keep you alive.



