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Statistics from the Henderson & Smyth Study (1948)
In total, "some three hundred major and many minor amputations" were observed in this longitudinal study. A minority of of men (~10%) could identify "well-marked" phantoms, had made original observations, and could describe their impressions clearly. The majority of men (~80%) had a typical phantom that "had been so mild and unobtrusive" and had given "little thought to it" prior to the study (dubbed the "average phantom"). The remaining men (~10%) felt vague tingling, did not perceive a phantom.
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Updated 2021-07-24
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