Found it! Took me long enough. I wondered for a long time: ''Why do video games + movies ''feel'' like you're really there, when your body is sitting on your butt?'' In 2005, they tested gamers and found that the ''lateral entorhinal cortex'' shows whether their CHARACTER is turning clockwise or counterclockwise... EVEN THOUGH the player's BODIES were sitting still. That's the missing piece I was looking for. This tiny little part of the brain, I think it's just behind your nose, gets input from ALL of the senses in some form - and especially the eyes and ears.. and gives you that ''artificial reality'' feeling; it pulls in memories, pulls in information from your senses.. ties it together - my guess is it helps decide ''What is real right now''. It's active when you're dreaming... and, in short, I think it's the place in the mind where fantasy+reality are compared. inside > . < outside. It contains something you rarely hear about - I found very little information on it; called ''toggle neurons''; they have circuitry inside of them that behave very similarly to a #quantum computer; but you don't need fancy-shmancy quantum stuff to do it; it's just a feedback loop that nudges an on/off switch... and LOTS of them at the same time. The little man inside of the brain; there you are! You were right behind my nose the whole time.. (I hope this is it; been looking for it for over a year now)... and not knowing neuroscience, reading them scientific papers is hard :P