Message from @James Peterson
Discord ID: 651605827916136448
Brub
press F to pay respects to my sleep schedule
Yes f
it's been years in the grave
>sleeping at night
press f for my bank acc
night time is peak work hours
I mean I agree but it's objectively shit for your health
@Aqua simple would you be like when you see green, and click immediately. It's just reacting in a particular way to one stimulus.
Complex reaction time would be things like where there are more than one stimuli and you have to react to each in a different manner.
a trade worth taking
<:yespeak:640430032363192333>
my rt is shit
like 300ms
Tbh tho when I read "spinal cord" and "peripheral nervous system" I laff a bit cuz that sounds like 10th grade biology lol
In medical terms that distinction would be different. There are reflexes that bounce off of the spinal cord alone - pain reflexes, for example
And there are reflexes that run all the way up to your brain
There are also pain reflexes like that, actually
some go into your cerebellum, some go elsewhere, it's whatever
All in all, I don't think it's a very useful distinction to make.
james do u play chess
Russia
To give you an example, you know when the doc hits your knee with a hammer
and it jolts up?
that's an unconditional reflex
Ummm not really😂I was interested in it for a while but lost interest gradually and now I don't play @The Great One
it can't be trained away
oki
there are also conditional reflexes, which are trained in order to appear, and can fade
i need richard spencer to come into chat here so i get to play someone hes prob good at chess
Reflexes have 3 elements: the afferent segment, the central segment which is optional, and the efferent segment.
raw meat
Ye I remember doing reaction time and sensitivity experiments like that in 10th grade bio lol
does an iq of 200 menas ur 2x as smart as someone with an iq of 100??? <:retard:641879583662014504> <:retard:641879583662014504> <:retard:641879583662014504>
The afferent pathway sends the signal up to the spinal column, the central segment (which may be absent, or may be a neuron in the spinal column, or may be several neurons going from the spine all the way up to the brain, and whichever parts of it) processes the signal, and the efferent segment activates the response.
be that in a muscle or in a gland
IQ is a relative measure
no but you are approx 6-7 stdevs
