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Een vertaalprobleem melden
Deer when they see a car speeding towards them at 160 km/h: *Stands still on the road and stares at the fast approaching car*
I wonder if it is really nature or nurture. Like, if they would grow up in a herd of "prey" animals that also fight back, would they still flee?
The 160 km/h thing is even more likely to happen in the night when the car headlights are on high and just make the deer temporarily blind.
Humans do the same thing when they see a 1-inch long spider in their bathtub.
Apparently, only about five percent are arachnophobic and about a third reacts feared in some way:
https://www.sciencefocus.com/the-human-body/is-arachnophobia-learned-or-an-inbuilt-instinct
But it's an interesting example. Might be similar with deer. A small percentage of the population are really scared, driving the rest crazy.
Was the tile made out of Nokia phones?
The alligator just forgot to bring the BBQ sauce.
Like you make get into a heated internet argument and feel very stressed out. Because your brain thought you were in danger. So it releases fight or flight hormones and you stay seated in your chair. And it builds up in your system.
Logically you know there is no threat, but not all parts of your brain system go by long thought out logic.