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・ Phantom Stallion
・ Phantom Stimulance
・ Phantom stock
・ Phantom Stranger
・ Phantom Suite/The Music of Daniel Barry/Red Fish Blue Fish
・ Phantom Theater
・ Phantom Thief Jeanne
・ Phantom Thunderbolt
・ Phantom time hypothesis
・ Phantom Tollbooth (band)
・ Phantom Tollbooth (disambiguation)
・ Phantom Town
・ Phantom train
・ Phantom Train (album)
・ Phantom vehicle
Phantom vibration syndrome
・ Phantom withdrawal
・ Phantom X1
・ Phantom Zone
・ Phantom's Revenge
・ Phantom, Rocker & Slick
・ Phantom-x
・ Phantome
・ Phantomime
・ PhantomJS
・ Phantomosaurus
・ Phantoms (Acceptance album)
・ Phantoms (film)
・ Phantoms (Forrest Fang album)
・ Phantoms (novel)


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Phantom vibration syndrome : ウィキペディア英語版
Phantom vibration syndrome
Phantom vibration syndrome or phantom ringing is the perception that one's mobile phone is vibrating or ringing, when in fact the telephone is not doing so. Other terms for this concept include ringxiety (a portmanteau of ''ring'' and ''anxiety'') and fauxcellarm (a play on "false alarm"). According to Dr. Michael Rothberg, the term is not technically a syndrome, but is better characterised as a tactile hallucination since the brain perceives a sensation that is not present.
Phantom ringing may be experienced while taking a shower, watching television, or using a noisy device. Humans are particularly sensitive to auditory tones between 1,000 and 6,000 hertz, and basic mobile phone ringers often fall within this range.〔 Phantom vibrations develop after carrying a cell phone set to use vibrating alerts.〔 Researcher Michelle Drouin found that almost 9 of 10 undergraduates at her college experienced phantom vibrations.
==History==
In the comic strip ''Dilbert'', cartoonist Scott Adams referenced such a sensation in 1996 as "phantom-pager syndrome." The earliest published use of the term ''phantom vibration syndrome'' dates to 2003 in an article entitled "Phantom Vibration Syndrome" published in the New Pittsburgh Courier, written under a pen name of columnist Robert D. Jones. In the conclusion of the article, Jones wrote, "...should we be concerned about what our mind or body may be trying to tell us by the aggravating imaginary emanations from belts, pockets and even purses? Whether PVS is the result of physical nerve damage, a mental health issue, or both, this growing phenomenon seems to indicate that we may have crossed a line in this 'always on' society."
The first study of the phenomenon was conducted in 2007 by a researcher who coined the term ''ringxiety'' to describe it. In 2012, the term ''phantom vibration syndrome'' was chosen as the Australian Macquarie Dictionary's word of the year.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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