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Description
You didn't actually hear the missing letter. Your brain simply analyzed the context of the sentence and actively hallucinated the sound to hide the interference. If you are listening to someone speak on a noisy train and a loud cough obscures the middle of a word, your brain does not register a gap in the audio. Instead, your auditory cortex instantly and flawlessly hallucinates the missing consonant so you hear the word perfectly. This is the Phonemic Restoration Effect.The human brain relies heavily on top-down processing. Because our minds possess a vast database of vocabulary and syntax, they continuously predict what word should come next. When acoustic noise masks a phoneme, the brain simply overwrites the static with fabricated audio, ensuring our semantic comprehension remains unbroken.This book breaks down the extreme efficiency of the human auditory system. We explore how audio engineers and psychoacoustics experts exploit this phenomenon to compress digital audio files, deleting massive amounts of sound data knowing the human brain will automatically fill in the blanks.Understand the illusions you hear every day. Discover how your brain constantly falsifies reality just to ensure the conversation keeps flowing.



