Humans can ‘feel’ hidden objects under sand from 2.76 inches away, revealing the surprising power of remote touch.
According to recent research, humans may have a new touch-related sense that allows us to detect buried objects without ...
Researchers at Queen Mary University of London and University College London have found that humans can detect objects buried in sand without directly touching them. The discovery challenges the ...
Researchers have possibly found the "seventh sense" in the human body, which even helps them detect life in places like Mars. Findings regarding this have been published in the journal IEEE ...
Research has found that humans can detect objects buried in sand without directly touching them. The discovery challenges the long-held belief that touch is limited to physical contact. Touch has ...
This is the first time this sense has been observed in humans. Human touch is typically understood as a proximal sense, limited to what we physically touch. However, recent findings in animal sensory ...
A simple finger drag through sand does not seem like much, yet a new set of studies from researchers at Queen Mary University of London and University College London shows that this quiet motion ...
The five established senses are sight, hearing, smell, taste, and touch. Each of these has specialist organs that send information to the brain about our environment. But over the years, many ...
TEMPO.CO, Jakarta - Researchers at Queen Mary University of London have uncovered evidence that humans may possess a “hidden” sense—one that allows us to detect objects without directly touching them.