Desis know that the seat of all emotions isn’t the heart but the belly – why else would we spend so much time catering to its needs? Based on that principle some clever desi-americans have come up with a better truth test, one almost as effective as having your mother look you in the eye and tell you that she knows what you did, so you better be honest about it. Instead of a polygraph, they used an electrogastrogram to measure changes in the digestive tract associated with stress.
Manish reluctantly posed for this photo … |
… when 16 volunteers were hooked up to heart and digestive tract monitors, the researchers were surprised to find that lying had a closer correlation with stomach changes than with heart changes.When the subjects lied, their heart rates increased, but it also did so at other times. On the other hand, lying was consistently associated with a decrease in the slow waves of the digestive tract. [Link]
Why is a stomach test more accurate? Because, as any auntie will tell you, the heart is a fickle creature, led around by hormones:
“The heart is unreliable because it’s affected by not only by your brain, but by many other factors, such as hormones,” says Pankaj Pasricha, who is leading the team. “The gut has a mind of its own – literally. It has its own well-developed nervous system that acts independently of almost everything except your unconscious brain.” [Link]
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The Pasricha Family: Where nobody dares tell a lie! |
This discovery had classically desi roots, it started with a father helping his daughter with a science project (the final version was called “Liar, Liar, Your Stomach’s on Fire”):
The study began as a high school project for Dr. Pasricha’s daughter, Trisha, who is listed as an author. (Dr. Pasricha’s wife is a former F.B.I. agent.) [Link]
Her mom’s a former F.B.I. agent and she just helped her dad come up with a better lie detector test? Boy, she’s really not planning on dating in high school, is she?
I’m glad they used a brown form!
They didn’t – I did. I went looking for an image to show the test, and this was one of the few available. If you click on it, you’ll see the source page is unrelated to the good doctor’s work …
Interesting, there was an article posted or referred to by SM some time ago which was authored by I would guess this same Trisha Pasrischa – about being a Hindu kid in an American public school and dealing with “you worship monkeys and elephants, right?”
I can’t find the post you’re referring to in our archives. However, I was intrigued to note that Trisha is not just a braniac but also a pretty face – she was a contestant in the Miss Texas Teen USA pageant.
Another article with a photograph of the Pasricha family. Trisha seems to be the perfect combination of both her parents’ looks and skills.
Path to the Truth May Lead to the Stomach
Wow, Ennis, good find 🙂
I found a copy of the essay here; I just remember being impressed with how well-written it was (I don’t mean to start a whole discussion on the essay subject 🙂 ).
Is that a real stomach? It looks like a brown ken doll.
ha ha. What? People don’t have perfectly symmetrical abs?!! I’m crushed.
nice essay for a fourteen year old. school textbooks give hinduism short shrift.
damn son, Trisha is mad fine!