Cartoon Seizures: Reality? or Fabrication of the Mind?
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Cartoon induced seizures have long been the source of scrutiny among the public. After the Pokémon scare that occurred in Japan ten years ago, where 12,000 children reported having illnesses ranging from nausea to seizures, a new controversial cartoon inducing advertisement has been under fire. According to Live Science, creators of the 2012 London and England Olympic marketing logo have been thrown headlong into controversy with Briton politicians. Adversaries of the logo say that the marketing ad offends people, and even goes as far as to suggest that the logo is dangerous to the public.
Three weeks ago, twenty four reports of seizures were blamed on the marketing logo when they watched a short animated clip of it on the Olympics London 2012 Web site. Though it is proven that bright flashing lights can cause seizures in people with photosensitive epilepsy, researchers disregard the phenomenon as mass hysteria. Simply put, those with epilepsy are at a higher risk of being influenced by the effects of the lights.
After the scare, parents and doctors concerned about the safety of British children watching the marketing logo on TV aimed to remove the clip. Creators, advertisers, and TV stations quickly complied with the public, and took off the clip with fortunately, little to no damage done. This issue though, has brought into the public eye awareness about new technologies and public safety.
The cause of this was elusive until researchers finally realized that cartoons didn't cause seizures in thousands of children as reminiscent of the Pokémon scare of 97'. Plainly put, the seizures were actually caused by the paranoiac mind set that the public adapted to. This mass sociogenic illness, also known as mass hysteria occurred when everyone thought that this illness was happening, and thus indirectly induced it upon others.

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Deborah Dera
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Posted on 07/05/2007 at 12:07:00 PM
ptosis
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Posted on 07/02/2007 at 3:07:00 PM