This phenomenon suggests that the brain's early reliance on non-visual stability creates a cognitive architecture inherently resistant to the sensory fragmentation typical of schizophrenia. It is a profound testament to how sensory constraints can inadvertently serve as a biological safeguard for mental coherence.
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People Born Blind (Congenital Blind) Don’t Develop Schizophrenia追加:
Hi, this is Sherry Veronica. Did you know that people who are congenitally blind, that means you're blind from birth, that you probably would never be diagnosed with schizophrenia?
It seems as though the light not entering into your brain is it protects you from seeing things.
Okay? So, while people who lose their sight in life can still develop schizophrenia, you you're losing your sight, but you had it.
While people [clears throat] who lose their sight later in life can still develop schizophrenia, scientists have found that people who are born blind, they don't seem to develop the condition. And the key findings on blindness and schizophrenia, what would that be? Why does it happen? They're saying that without visual input, the brain develops stronger non-visual skills like enhanced hearing, you know, you've heard that, touch, and memory, and different neural pathways. That's what they say.
This alteration in how the brain processes sensory information may prevent the specific brain malfunctions that lead to schizophrenia. Now, they're saying brain malfunctions, and I think you need to watch what you read online. And who is to say it's a malfunction? Who is to say that when light is the visual input, who is to say that you cannot access different timelines? Who's Who is to say that? And who is to say that the ones who are born blind and they can hear better. Who can say that they are not hearing something that people who can see cannot hear?
Maybe the wind touching their skins because they're it's they're more other parts of them with the other senses would develop more because they cannot see. Who is to say that the wind does not feel different against their skin when, you know, when it's when it's windy as opposed to someone who can see and they're seeing the tree bend, you know, the the limbs bend and they're seeing things blowing in the wind. If you have clothes on the line, you're that's all visual. Who is to say that the person who is not noticing that may not feel the wind in a different way. Okay, so you have to be Although you're taking this in, still be careful on how you resonate with information, okay? It needs to make sense, okay? So the difference with late-onset blindness, this is what they're saying.
If a person loses their sight later in life, they are not protected against schizophrenia because their brain has already developed using visual inputs, okay? So I guess that's it. Don't need to go any further. I think you're understanding that if someone is born blind, they would try to couch it as a well, rare, but no one has seen it, but they try to cover themselves so that they cannot be sued and you know already that I'm not a medical doctor, so I'm just giving you my opinion, but they're saying that without that visual input you are not diagnosed with schizophrenia. You could be diagnosed with other mental illnesses, but not that particular one because this that particular one is when you're seeing things, other people, and talking to other people, and interacting with other people. So, because there's no visual input, you're blind from birth, congenital blindness, you don't have that to worry about. But, like I said, are there other things that blind people detect detect that a sight-seeing person does not?
Okay? Keep your minds open.
Okay? Explore. Explore and roll things around your mind. Do not just accept something because it's written in a book, okay? This is Sherry Veronica.
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