A Doubt On Working on Heart And Brain System

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The discussion centers on the electromagnetic fields generated by the brain and heart, questioning whether these signals are strong enough to be detected or processed in a way that relates to telepathy. It is clarified that while both the brain and heart produce measurable electromagnetic fields, these signals are insufficient for decoding thoughts, feelings, or memories. Functional MRI (fMRI) is explained as a method that tracks brain activity through blood flow changes, providing a dynamic view of brain function. Historical context is provided with reference to Hans Berger, a pioneer in EEG, who initially sought to explore brain signals for potential psychic phenomena but found them inadequate for such purposes. However, techniques like electroencephalography (EEG), magnetoencephalography (MEG), electromyography (EMG), and electrocardiography (ECG) are highlighted as effective methods for measuring these electrical fields in clinical and research settings.
Akshay_Anti
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Hello!

The other day, i was referring to some comic book and it said something about telepathy which made me wonder if the heart and brain really emit signals thaat are powerful enough to be able to be caught or processed? if yes, how... Elaborate help shall be acknowledged...

Thanks
 
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The brain and heart, like any electrical system, generate an electromagnetic field that can be detected but that doesn't mean that thoughts, feelings and memories can be decoded from this. There's a lot of work going on with fMRI machines that can give some indication of what someone is thinking but that's an active scan rather than detecting something being given off normally.
 
fMRI means? i know about MRI but what's fMRI?
 
fMRI = functional MRI.

Basically a time-series of MRI's with a BOLD (blood oyxgen level dependent) analysis tacked on that associates brain activity with blood flow. It turns MRI pictures into a movie while sensing changes in time to show the dynamical story of the movie.
 
Interestingly, a pioneer of EEG (Hans Berger) was originally motivated into studying electric fields from the brain to see if they could explain apparent psychic phenomena. The answer is no, the signal is not strong enough for brains to interact like that, but crucially they ARE strong enough to be measured, as in electroencephalography (EEG, measuring brain generated electric fields on the scalp) or magnetoencephalography (MEG, measuring brain-generated magnetic fields on the scalp). The heart and muscles createstronger electric fields, captured by electromyography (EMG - muscles) and electrocardiography (ECG - heart). These techniques are all used clinically and for research.
 
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