Its dark out
and you're home alone. The house is quiet other than the sound of the show
you're watching on TV. You see it and hear it at the same time: The front door
is suddenly thrown against the door frame.
Your breathing speeds up. Your heart races. Your
muscles tighten.
A split second later, you know it's the wind. No
one is trying to get into your home.
For a split second, you were so afraid that you
reacted as if your life were in danger, your body initiating the
fight-or-flight response that is critical to any animal's survival. But really,
there was no danger at all. What happened to cause such an intense reaction?
What exactly is fear? In this article, we'll examine the psychological and
physical properties of fear, find out what causes a fear response and look at
some ways you can defeat it.
What is
Fear?
Fear is a
chain reaction in the brain that
starts with a stressful stimulus and ends with the release of chemicals that
cause a racing heart,
fast breathing and energized muscles,
among other things, also known as the fight-or-flight response. The stimulus
could be a spider,
a knife at your throat, an auditorium full of people waiting for you to speak
or the sudden thud of your front door against the door frame.
The brain is a profoundly complex organ. More than
100 billion nerve cells comprise
an intricate network of communications that is the starting point of everything
we sense, think and do. Some of these communications lead to conscious thought
and action, while others produce autonomic responses. The fear
response is almost entirely autonomic: We don't consciously trigger it or even
know what's going on until it has run its course.
Because cells in the brain are constantly
transferring information and triggering responses, there are dozens of areas of
the brain at least peripherally involved in fear. But research has discovered
that certain parts of the brain play central roles in the process:
·
Thalamus - decides where to send incoming sensory data
(from eyes,
ears, mouth, skin)
·
Sensory
cortex - interprets sensory data
·
Hippocampus - stores and retrieves conscious memories;
processes sets of stimuli to establish context
·
Amygdala - decodes emotions; determines possible
threat; stores fear memories
·
Hypothalamus - activates "fight or flight"
response
With this information I will understand how to truly terrify my audience, I need to use people's hidden fears to create a suspense filled realistic horror film.
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