Posted by
charles-4 on
URL: https://www.es-forum.com/neuropsych-testing-tp1544713p1544716.html
Let me rephrase something.
Electrosensibles do have problems with their short-term memory.
F.i. I remeber very well what happened in my youth (and that is a very, very
long time ago).
I am sitting at my desk and I want to get something from the kitchen.
When standing up, and underway to the kitchen, I am at a lost, because I
cannot remember what I wanted te get.
Or, you are on a webpage, and want to look for something on another page.
When changing into your browser, you are completely forgotten what to look
for.
You know exactly what you had for dinner, but this short-term memory is
going down the drain.
I am not a brain expert, but this phenomenon does bother many people.
Greetings,
Charles Claessens
member Verband Baubiologie
www.milieuziektes.nl
www.milieuziektes.be
www.hetbitje.nl
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----- Original Message -----
From: "Bill Bruno" <
[hidden email]>
To: <
[hidden email]>
Sent: Tuesday, August 07, 2007 21:09
Subject: [eSens] neuropsych testing
>I just got the results of neuropsych testing, and wondered if anyone
> else has had these kind of tests and what were the results.
>
> The main result was that while I excelled in most areas, I was
> rather poor and slow in terms of "working memory".
>
> I'm not sure if they considered that found the testing quite
> fatiguing by the end. Conceivably my glial cells are not up
> to that much activity. I know the math test was first. I'm not
> sure when the "working memory" tests were. I think it was the
> one that involved hearing numbers and saying them back, sometimes
> backwards. I think it's something I could have done very well
> a few years ago (I memorized 50 digits of pi in high school, and
> could memorize phone numbers very easily). By the end of
> that test I remember thinking "this is torture".
>
> They also did personality testing and said I'm the type who does
> not accept that my problem could be psychological. Well, I did
> consider that it could be psychological for a couple months, but
> now that I'm convinced it's not, they're right.
>
> Any brain experts out there care to comment on any of this?
>
> Bill
>