| bio | website | martinlarsson.net |
|---|---|---|
| location | Oslo, Norway | |
| age | 28 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 4 months |
| seen | Dec 5 '12 at 0:27 | |
| stats | profile views | 15 |
I'm a cognitive scientist, philosopher and minimalist with special interest in consciousness, computation and questions regarding scientific methodology.
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Mar 26 |
awarded | Popular Question |
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Jan 19 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Nov 17 |
awarded | Nice Question |
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Nov 11 |
comment |
Cheapest way to measure arousal levels And its recorded only with your iPhone (no extra equipment)? |
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Nov 11 |
revised |
A psychological theory that explains why people remember only the outcome? I just cleaned up the grammar and some spelling errors. |
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Nov 11 |
comment |
Cheapest way to measure arousal levels The effects I will be looking for might appear within a time frame of half, or a quarter, of a second and I will be recording for 20-30 minutes per participant. I don't think I have it in me to write down 4 results per second for half an hour :) |
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Nov 11 |
comment |
Cheapest way to measure arousal levels Seems interesting. I will check it out! However, this won't do for my experiment, since my participants will be seated and just look at a monitor. That is; there won't be very much movement to record in the first place. |
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Nov 11 |
comment |
Cheapest way to measure arousal levels Well, I need something that records straight to the computer during an experiment, and it needs to be really accurate, so recording something with pen and paper will not do (that is, that method does not satisfy requirement b above). To bad you can't connect the GSR meter you linked to to a computer via USB, because it would be perfect! |
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Nov 11 |
suggested | suggested edit on A psychological theory that explains why people remember only the outcome? |
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Nov 11 |
asked | Cheapest way to measure arousal levels |
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Oct 5 |
awarded | Quorum |
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Sep 30 |
comment |
What causes laughter? I don't have time to write up an answer right now, but you should check out the book "Inside Jokes" (amazon.com/Inside-Jokes-Using-Humor-Reverse-Engineer/dp/…). I think you will find it highly interesting given your questions. |
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Jun 23 |
revised |
For depression diagnoses, does one make a clear distinction between endogenous and exogenous causes of depression? deleted 323 characters in body |
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Jun 22 |
revised |
Method for evaluating how emotionally evocative a question is? added 2 characters in body |
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Jun 22 |
awarded | Revival |
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Jun 21 |
accepted | Why does a stuffed up nose clear up momentarily when the person having it is startled or has an orgasm? |
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Jun 21 |
comment |
Why does a stuffed up nose clear up momentarily when the person having it is startled or has an orgasm? So, you mean that norepinephrine consticts the nasal vasculature? My intuition was that they got broader, thereby leaving more room for air to pass through. |
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Jun 21 |
answered | Method for evaluating how emotionally evocative a question is? |
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Jun 21 |
asked | Why does a stuffed up nose clear up momentarily when the person having it is startled or has an orgasm? |
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May 31 |
comment |
For depression diagnoses, does one make a clear distinction between endogenous and exogenous causes of depression? Well, the distinction I'm really after is one situation where you either can treat the person with medicines and one situation where you only need to change the external circumstances for the person. |