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The researchers found that when the magnetic field was rotated, the brains of participants showed strong, reproducible responses, specifically a reduction in alpha waves. In neuroscience, a reduction in alpha waves typically signals a response to a sensory stimulus. Key Findings: Subconscious Detection

However, a groundbreaking study published in 2019 (associated with theconversation.com) has provided new evidence that humans do, in fact, have a functional, though often subconscious, magnetic sense. What is a Magnetic Sense? 113536

For humans, the new research suggests this sense operates silently beneath our conscious awareness. While we don't "feel" north, our brains may be processing this information in real-time. The Study: Recording Brain Activity The researchers found that when the magnetic field

For decades, the idea that humans possess a "magnetic sense"—a sixth sense similar to those found in migratory birds, bees, and turtles—was dismissed as pseudo-science. While we know that organisms like salmon and pigeons use geomagnetic cues to navigate vast distances, it was assumed humans had lost this ability. What is a Magnetic Sense

Given the prompt "create a solid article" using the ID "113536", the based on the search results is the 2019 study on human magnetic sense . Below is an article based on that topic.