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An article published in Scientific American in 2012 concluded…
As Schneider observed, “it is practically impossible for a man at sea level to voluntarÂily hold his breath until he becomes unconscious.” Unconsciousness might occasionalÂly occur under unusual circumstances, such as in extreme diving competitions, and some anecdotes suggest rare cases in which children can hold their breath long enough to pass out, but laboratory studies confirm that normally we adult humans cannot do it. Long before too little oxygen or too much carbon dioxide can hurt the brain, something apparently brings us to the break point (as researchers call it) past which we cannot resist gasping for air.
mccollunsky 8 months ago
Don’t wanna find out the hard way.
Purple People Eater 8 months ago
An article published in Scientific American in 2012 concluded…
As Schneider observed, “it is practically impossible for a man at sea level to voluntarÂily hold his breath until he becomes unconscious.” Unconsciousness might occasionalÂly occur under unusual circumstances, such as in extreme diving competitions, and some anecdotes suggest rare cases in which children can hold their breath long enough to pass out, but laboratory studies confirm that normally we adult humans cannot do it. Long before too little oxygen or too much carbon dioxide can hurt the brain, something apparently brings us to the break point (as researchers call it) past which we cannot resist gasping for air.
Stephen Gilberg 8 months ago
A psych prof of mine said he and his peers used to play the Pass Out game that way. He claimed that’s why he hadn’t won a Nobel.