jueves, junio 14, 2007

Vibraciones - fantasma

No se si os ha pasado alguna vez, pero a mí sí, y casi a diario. A veces, siento la vibración del teléfono móvil ("Una llamada entrante", pienso), lo saco del bolsillo y no hay nada... ¿Vibración-fantasma? ¿Sugestión?¿Me estoy volviendo majara? La verdad es que la tecnología nos mete en un ritmo de vida frenético, y gracias al móvil, el blackberry, el email, etc. no descansamos, vivimos en una "piscina de ansiedad". Este interesante artículo de "USA Today", 12/6/2007, habla precisamente de esto:

Some call it "phantom vibration syndrome." Others prefer "vibranxiety" — the feeling when you answer your vibrating cellphone, only to find it never vibrated at all.
"It started happening about three years ago, when I first got a cellphone," says Canadian Steven Garrity, 28, of Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. "I'd be sitting on the couch and feel my phone start to vibrate, so I'd reach down and pull it out of my pocket. But the only thing ringing was my thigh."
Though no known studies have analyzed what may cause spontaneous buzzing, anecdotes such as Garrity's ring true with the public.
Spurred by curiosity, Garrity, a Web developer, described the recurring false alarms on his blog. The response was not imaginary: More than 30 cellphone users reported that they, too, experienced phantom vibrations.
"I ended up hearing from a lot of people who said, 'Hey, the exact same thing happens to me,' " Garrity says. "And it was somewhat comforting, because it made me think I wasn't insane, after all."Some who experienced recurring phantom vibrations wondered whether the phenomenon had physical roots: Was it caused by nerve damage or muscle memory?
But experts say the false alarms simply demonstrate how easily habits are developed.
Psychologically, the key to deciphering phantom vibrations is "hypothesis-guided search," a theory that describes the selective monitoring of physical sensations, says Jeffrey Janata, director of the behavioral medicine program at University Hospitals in Cleveland. It suggests that when cellphone users are alert to vibrations, they are likely to experience sporadic false alarms, he says.
"You come armed with this template that leads you to be attentive to sensations that represent a cellphone vibrating," Janata says. "And it leads you to over-incorporate non-vibratory sensations and attribute them to the idea that you're receiving a phone call."
Alejandro Lleras, a sensation and perception professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, adds that learning to detect rings and vibrations is part of a perceptual learning process.
"When we learn to respond to a cellphone, we're setting perceptual filters so that we can pick out that (ring or vibration), even under noisy conditions," Lleras says. "As the filter is created, it is imperfect, and false alarms will occur. Random noise is interpreted as a real signal, when in fact, it isn't."
Phantom cellphone vibrations also can be explained by neuroplasticity — the brain's ability to form new connections in response to changes in the environment.
When cellphone users regularly experience sensations, such as vibrating, their brains become wired to those sensations, Janata says.
"Neurological connections that have been used or formed by the sensation of vibrating are easily activated," he says. "They're over-solidified, and similar sensations are incorporated into that template. They become a habit of the brain."
Cellphone company spokesmen, meanwhile, say they are not aware of any consumer complaints about phantom vibrations. Cellphones cannot sporadically vibrate on their own, says Mark Siegel of AT&T, formerly Cingular Wireless.
"Perhaps in the mind of the cellphone user only," he says.
But Rob Whitehouse, vice president of communications at University Hospitals, insists the phantom vibrations he experiences each day are simply proof of how important constant communication is.
"It's some psychological expression of my need to always be connected," he says. "It's like when e-mail first came out, and we constantly checked our inboxes, because getting a new message was so exciting.
"I like that better than 'I'm crazy,' anyway."

1 comentario:

Anónimo dijo...

Totalmente de acuerdo con el artículo, las vibraciones fantasma son una realidad y nunca antes había caído en la cuenta.

A mi me pasa especialmente cuando voy en moto (no se oye) o tengo el teléfono en vibración, creo que "noto algo" y tengo la necesidad de echar un vistazo, yo diría que esto me pasa una vez cada 3 días más o menos, y que en realidad no "cazo" más de una llamada en moto o en vibración cada 18, por lo que de media de cada 6 veces que consulto mi móvil sólo está sonando y vibrando en realidad una.

Creo que principalmente me pasa porque a menudo cuando llego a un sitio con la moto o salgo de una reunión descubro que tengo un par de llamadas perdidas, con lo que también admito que hay vibraciones que inevitablemente pasan desapercibidas, quizás deberíamos hablar de "vibraciones perdidas", que son las que corresponden a las llamadas perdidas que no hemos detectado teniendo el móvil en vibración.

Me ha aliviado saber que, tal como muchos otros, por mirarlo un tanto compulsivamente no estoy enfermo ni me he vuelto loco, quizás es sólo que intento evitar que esa hipotética llamada que puedo estar recibiendo se convierta en una vibración perdida.

Y es que en este punto se abre otro posible tema, cuántas veces al día consulto el móvil o blackberry, sin exagerar me atrevería a decir que más de 100, si ponemos que de media cada consulta pueden ser entre 2 y 8 segundos me lleva a pensar que en realidad gran parte del día la dedico a consultar el móvil, a veces sólo para comprobar que todo sigue igual, sin llamadas ni mensajes. Otro día ya hablaremos de eso.

Sdos, Íñigo