Does that happen when you have a phone in your pocket?

9 out of 10% of people suffer from “fantzma” of vibring when they wrongly think their mobile phone is coming in, it says, according to a recent publication. Dr. Robert Rosenberger, a philosopher and associate professor at the Gerogia Institute of Technology, said the phenomenon is caused by the “body-instruction”. Research, [...]
9 out of 10% of people suffer from “fantzma” of vibring when they wrongly think their mobile phone is coming in, it says, according to a recent publication.
Dr. Robert Rosenberger, a philosopher and assistant professor at the Gerogia Institute of Technology, said the phenomenon is caused by the “body-instructed size”.
The research, published in the magazine “Computer in Human Conduct”, suggests that when a person leaves his cell phone in his pocket, then he becomes “part of the body” the same way that when we put our glasses, which we easily forget we have them where we have them, the Express broadcasts.
People then experience such a sense of movement or pulse of muscles similar to mobile video, but it's just hallucination.












