A stranger variation on phantom phone rings is phantom phone vibrations, which is experienced by people who leave their phone on vibrate mode. They imagine they feel tel their phone vibrating when there is no call or text. There is the actually a disorder related to this called phantom vibration is syndrome. Phone users who have this syndrome typically carry their phone in the same place on their body regularly. It is thought ihat this leads the brain to become rained to anticipale vibration from that part of the body; co for example, the right hip. Over time, though, the brain vibrations. The result is that the starts to overanticipale person thinks calls or iexts are coming in even when they be this can be and annoying ir aren someone is watching a movie or eating dinner. The other example of sound perception-or rather, misperception-is the phenomenon of hearing phantom R words-words that no one actually said. In one study, researchers had some volunteers listen to a recording. The recording was made up of repeated words or phrases, not sentences. The people weren't lold what was on the recording. After they listened several times, they were asked to recall any words and phrases they had heard. any reporied hearing words and phrases that weren't on the recording. One explanation for where these words and phrases came from is that the human brain tries to take meaningless noises it receives and give it some sort of meaning.