あらすじ
Have you ever been home alone and sworn you heard someone call your name over the hum of the air conditioner or the rush of the shower? Most people brush this off as a simple trick of the ears, but this common sensory glitch is actually a profound window into the deeply social wiring of the human brain. This phenomenon, known as auditory pareidolia, occurs when our mind desperately searches for meaning within random noise. However, recent neurological studies reveal a hidden and heartbreaking correlation: the more socially isolated a person feels, the more aggressively their brain will manufacture human voices out of pure static. It is the neurological equivalent of a starvation response. This book explores the fascinating intersection of psychoacoustics and the modern loneliness epidemic. You will learn how the brain's pattern-recognition software goes into overdrive when deprived of authentic social interaction, transforming the mundane hum of household appliances into a desperate search for connection. Understand the invisible mechanisms of your own perception and what they are trying to tell you. Learn how to interpret your sensory misfires not as madness, but as a vital biological distress signal urging you to reconnect with the human tribe.