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: Recorded snippets of the subject’s own voice or previous confessions are played back to them, often distorted. This forces the subject to confront their own deteriorating mental state as if it were an external force. Ethical and Legal Implications
Researchers of the "Graias" school argued that pain is a finite resource; eventually, the body goes into shock or the mind numbs the sensation. However, psychological disorientation is infinite. By manipulating light, sound, and sleep patterns in non-linear sequences, the interrogator creates a "void" where the subject can no longer distinguish between memory, hallucination, and the present moment. Key Components of the Methodology
: The subject is kept in an environment without clocks or natural light. Meals and sleep are provided at erratic intervals, destroying the circadian rhythm. This makes a single hour feel like a day, or vice versa.
: This involves cycling rapidly between absolute silence/darkness and intense, chaotic stimuli. This "rhythmic whipping" of the senses prevents the brain from entering a resting state.
: Every aspect of the subject's existence is controlled by the interrogator. Even basic biological functions are turned into "privileges," forcing a regression to a childlike state of dependency.
The application of the Graias methodology typically involves several distinct phases: