BaZmO* wrote: » This post is the 10,000th post
Gloomtastic! wrote: » No mention of cortisone?
Wibbs wrote: » Another mad thing about them was the structure was so thin that it required pressurisation by fuel(or nitrogen) to stay rigid. If the tanks lost pressure the rocket would collapse like a deflated balloon.
New Home wrote: » Proportions probably not to scale, but interesting nevertheless.
worded wrote: » The endangered Siberian snow leopard can whistle but chooses not to ....
Candie wrote: » There is a whole fleet of aircraft at the disposal of the POTUS, but only the one in use by the President at any given time is referred to as Air Force One. It's not the name of the aircraft, it's it's call sign.
Nueroscientists Gabriel Radvansky, Sabine Krawietz and Andrea Tamplin had participants play a video game in front of a computer screen in which they could move around using the arrow keys. In the game, they would walk up to a table with a colored geometric solid sitting on it. Their task was to pick up the object and take it to another table, where they would put the object down and pick up a new one. Whichever object they were currently carrying was invisible to them, as if it were in a virtual backpack. Sometimes, to get to the next object the participant simply walked across the room. Other times, they had to walk the same distance, but through a door into a new room. From time to time, the researchers gave them a pop quiz, asking which object was currently in their backpack. The quiz was timed so that when they walked through a doorway, they were tested right afterwards. As the title said, walking through doorways caused forgetting: Their responses were both slower and less accurate when they'd walked through a doorway into a new room than when they'd walked the same distance within the same room. Link: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/why-walking-through-doorway-makes-you-forget/?fbclid=IwAR14FtAob8W9Yicw3HPnNMdBuJeEEWy-ohMM7lLPR-Dozr4v9E5R_hAFkoQ
mzungu wrote: » Have you ever walked into a room and forgot the reason why you were doing it? This is known as the "Doorway Effect" and it is believed that walking through an open door and entering a new room creates a "mental block" in our brains and resets the memory to make room for the creation of new memories. It was previously suggested that these mental blocks came from not paying enough attention, but there now seems to be more at play. The used video games to test the participants in the study: After the computer based test, they replicated the test in the lab and when participants walked through the door similar results were recorded. It would appear that the "doorway effect" occurs in both the real and the virtual world.
Candie wrote: » This was explained to me as an assessment of each newly entered or re-entered environment, as the brain runs a checklist to make sure nothing has changed for the worse/that it's safe to venture further, causing the momentary blip that results in the distraction.Looking in the fridge was an example used. You open the door of the fridge to asses it's contents or look for something, and your mind expects the doorway to open to a much larger arena and gets distracted looking for 'landmarks'. So you wind up closing the fridge without having really noted any of it's actual contents. I guess it's the same thing; each assessment updates the information and removes the need to store the outdated version.
Candie wrote: » Entering any room to look for my specs. At least 20% of the time I'll wander back out having lost the train of thought completely!
Sleepy wrote: » I've heard it repeated many times that the main reason that the desert people who founded the Jewish and Islamic faiths forbade the consumption of pork is down to the fact that it's apparently indistinguishable from human flesh in terms of taste and texture...
Gloomtastic! wrote: » On pigs/pork..... I remember my mum telling me that, in her day, you could never eat pork unless there was an ‘r’ in the month. Bit like oysters.
Nevaeh Shaggy Destroyer wrote: » Plenty still say so. It seems to stem from an era before refrigeration, when pork would spoil in the summer months.
Ipso wrote: » I thought it had to do with tape worm, if you undercook pork you can have a nice long visitor in your intestine. Doesn’t the word pork share a root with orc (linking tonwhat was said about evil spirits)? I think this is also where Orca for Killer Whales comes from.