Isn't that why they invented "extra credit"?Merc, yes I reckon it would. We would need to find some undergrads willing to take one for the team.
Isn't that why they invented "extra credit"?Merc, yes I reckon it would. We would need to find some undergrads willing to take one for the team.
How do you measure the pain of not being able to go to TAM5?![]()
In beers, usually.
Marc
That's interesting. I also have a 0-10 scale I came up with for my arthritis.
I've never been over 5 for more than a few seconds. It's sort of logarithmic.
At 7 I would probably chew my own head off.
For myself...in logarithmic units of denial.How do you measure the pain of not being able to go to TAM5?![]()
My personal pain scale isn't alogrithmic - 1 is a pinprick, 10 is the worst pain I have ever felt in my life (an unanestathised tooth extraction).That's interesting. I also have a 0-10 scale I came up with for my arthritis.
I've never been over 5 for more than a few seconds. It's sort of logarithmic.
At 7 I would probably chew my own head off.
i'm currently at 4 on a 10 scale(logarithmic).
It is a migraine that has been building for about a week. it started at 2 last week, came and went a few times and slowly increased to 3. Today it is at 4.
Now, it hasn't be constant pain for the last week, coming and going, sometimes a day or two between the pain. But.. today i'm at 4.
*sigh*
time to pop pills.
That exemplifies the problem with nonexperimental research. How do we know whether these gender differences you cite are not due to differential treatment during infancy , childhood and young adulthood?
bpesta22's response:
It's possible, but why would they then vary with the cycle?
Could differential treatment affect pupil size changes in responses to different magnitudes of electric shock?
Jeff Corey's response:
It could through stimulus generalization as an aftereffect of pavlovian (respondent) conditioning.
"Does your dogga bite?"
For pain research, a long time ago, people used a dolorimeter-- a device for inflicting various levels of pain on a person's skin. The researchers were the own subjects (go figure) and mapped out the scale of perception for painful stimuli!.

The worst pain I ever experienced was an ear infection - you know, the one babys get. I went to the doctor, he pierced the blisters on my eardrums, and I felt better.
An hour later I was all but paralyzed with pain. My wife went and filled my prescription for codine. If I hadn't been a believer in science before that, it would have converted me - the sheer bliss of pain receding was miracle-quality.
The second worst pain I ever had was shingles - and I didn't even notice it for the first week. One day I discovered that punching myself in the head actually made me feel better. That's when I went to the doctor.
On the other hand, I got run over by a truck while riding my motorcycle. Rolled off the hood and slid down the road a ways. Wound up in the burn tank at the hospital while they picked gravel out of my back.
It was the only time in my life I have seen a medical professional warn me that I was going to hurt. The nurses actually seemed sympathetic.
But to be honest, it didn't bother me very much. I still remember how amazed the nurses were that I wasn't flinching.
/shrug