Message from @The Great One

Discord ID: 651605568183861268


2019-12-04 02:04:16 UTC  

<:putinwink:651425616008183817>

2019-12-04 02:04:23 UTC  

based putin

2019-12-04 02:04:42 UTC  

He needs to deal with kebab problem

2019-12-04 02:04:51 UTC  

Before they overwhelm the place

2019-12-04 02:04:51 UTC  

@Aqua That does make sense. It would explain why the correlation with simple RT as determined by humanbenchmark is quite low, only -0.3 Can you infer complex reaction time from simple reaction though?

2019-12-04 02:04:55 UTC  

fixed my own name

2019-12-04 02:05:09 UTC  

@James Peterson Complex and simple reaction time being defined as?

2019-12-04 02:05:46 UTC  

pretty sure you can improve your reaction time significantly

2019-12-04 02:06:17 UTC  

"As a med student"

2019-12-04 02:06:18 UTC  

Brub

2019-12-04 02:06:34 UTC  

press F to pay respects to my sleep schedule

2019-12-04 02:06:40 UTC  

Yes f

2019-12-04 02:06:47 UTC  

it's been years in the grave

2019-12-04 02:07:02 UTC  

>sleeping at night

2019-12-04 02:07:07 UTC  

press f for my bank acc

2019-12-04 02:07:07 UTC  

night time is peak work hours

2019-12-04 02:07:19 UTC  

I mean I agree but it's objectively shit for your health

2019-12-04 02:07:26 UTC  

@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.

2019-12-04 02:07:33 UTC  

a trade worth taking

2019-12-04 02:07:52 UTC  

<:yespeak:640430032363192333>

2019-12-04 02:07:53 UTC  

my rt is shit

2019-12-04 02:07:58 UTC  

like 300ms

2019-12-04 02:08:01 UTC  

Tbh tho when I read "spinal cord" and "peripheral nervous system" I laff a bit cuz that sounds like 10th grade biology lol

2019-12-04 02:08:06 UTC  

In medical terms that distinction would be different. There are reflexes that bounce off of the spinal cord alone - pain reflexes, for example

2019-12-04 02:08:14 UTC  

And there are reflexes that run all the way up to your brain

2019-12-04 02:08:25 UTC  

There are also pain reflexes like that, actually

2019-12-04 02:08:35 UTC  

some go into your cerebellum, some go elsewhere, it's whatever

2019-12-04 02:08:44 UTC  

All in all, I don't think it's a very useful distinction to make.

2019-12-04 02:08:55 UTC  

Which country are u studying at btw?

2019-12-04 02:09:23 UTC  

james do u play chess

2019-12-04 02:09:47 UTC  

Russia

2019-12-04 02:09:56 UTC  

To give you an example, you know when the doc hits your knee with a hammer

2019-12-04 02:09:58 UTC  

and it jolts up?

2019-12-04 02:10:04 UTC  

that's an unconditional reflex

2019-12-04 02:10:05 UTC  

Ummm not really😂I was interested in it for a while but lost interest gradually and now I don't play @The Great One

2019-12-04 02:10:10 UTC  

it can't be trained away

2019-12-04 02:10:20 UTC  

oki

2019-12-04 02:10:22 UTC  

there are also conditional reflexes, which are trained in order to appear, and can fade

2019-12-04 02:10:40 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/634367565304561675/651606266749386762/EK1LwpbX0AAC9Ed.jpg

2019-12-04 02:10:44 UTC  

i need richard spencer to come into chat here so i get to play someone hes prob good at chess