


Jae-hee’s made certain of keeping his little murderous secret well under wraps, so Mu-gak wanders away and she slumps in dismay. She screams and bangs on the wall hoping to get his attention, but just on the other side of the wall, he hears nothing. When Mu-gak enters the library o’ death, Yeom sees him on the camera that’s mounted in her cell. Yes, but what about that part where friends don’t let friends kill their friends? At her accusation of abducting Yeom, all he says is that he thought they were friends. Jae-hee keeps an even keel and speaks pleasantly to Cho-rim, as though she weren’t glaring daggers at him. Mu-gak informs them about Yeom’s kidnapping, then heads off to look for her on the premises. He presses his gun to Jae-hee’s head and demands to know where Lieutenant Yeom is, his finger tightening on the trigger…īut his teammates burst in and drag him off, having heard the commotion while staking out the house. Mu-gak shoots his way into Jae-hee’s house, then lays Jae-hee flat with a punch. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser. Loco, Yuju – “우연히 봄” from the Girl Who Sees Smells OST Īudio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. The question is, can this victim hold out long enough to find a safe way out?
#Various artist the girl who sees smell pro
And while I would never argue that there aren’t flaws in the show, I find enough to keep me entertained.Įpisode 14 closes in on our killer even more, and it’s quid pro quo time: He may get inside his victims’ heads, but that doesn’t mean a victim can’t get inside his, too. Hello, folks! I’m just popping in to pinch-hit this episode, which I’m happy to do since I’ve been enjoying the show with its cute chemistry and (as funny as it sounds) lightweight murder mystery. The research will go toward further understanding the phenomenon, and its causes.132 JanuGirl Who Sees Smells: Episode 14 by javabeans "Some synaesthetes report that they can use their experiences advantageously to remember stimuli better." "Perhaps they see unusual connections between things that might be a little bit more obscure to the rest of us. "It's not something like a hallucination, where it would have generally a negative impact on someone's life," Dr Goodhew said. It could in fact have a positive impact, she said. "It might be due to these extra connections that potentially a lot of people have early on in life, but perhaps they sort of die out in most people." Some 'synaesthetes' can use condition to their advantageīut Dr Goodhew emphasised it was not seen as a condition that people "suffered". "For example, if they've got word-colour synaesthesia they would tend to have stronger connections between what we think of as the language and the colour areas of the brain. "And then there's particular other synaesthetes that really report it as more like a perceptual experience, something they would actually see in front of them. "Some particular synaesthetes say it's more of an association, something they might see in their mind's eye. Some synaesthetes report that they can use their experiences advantageously to remember stimuli better. For example the smell of fresh air is rectangular, coffee is a bubbly cloud shape and people could smell round or square," she said. "One person reported that smells have certain shapes. 'The smell of fresh air is rectangular'ĭr Goodhew said synaesthesia affected different people in different ways. There are many schools of thought as to why some people hear or smell colours, while others do not.Īnd while this study does not give any definitive answers, Dr Goodhew said it did give new weight to the idea synaesthetes were creative individuals. "We found exactly the opposite," Dr Goodhew said.

The ANU research attempted to measure the extent to which people with synaesthesia draw meaning between words.ĭr Goodhew said going into the research, the team predicted that synaesthetes might have a more concrete style of thinking that does not emphasise conceptual-level relations between stimuli, given that they have very rigid parings between sensory experiences. She said those connections can lead to a triggering effect, where a stimulus in one part of the brain causes activity in another. ( Supplied: ANU)ĭr Goodhew said synaesthetes have stronger than average connections between different brain areas, particularly the language part of the brain and the colour part of the brain. Dr Stephanie Goodhew says synaesthetes have stronger connections between certain brain areas.
