12-29-2024, 07:55 PM
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Even after drug users kick the habit, there still the risk of relapse. And a big reason for this is fact that the person can still remember the pleasurable side of drug use. The solution might be vaso stanley to actually change the nature of those memories. Top image: Shutterstock That the idea behind new research coming out of China 8 stanley thermos 217 Peking University. While we ;re not quite at the point where we can wholesale implant 鈥?or, in the parlance of our times, incept 鈥?new memories that would make a person not want to do drugs, the researchers have come up with a subtler way to help drug users avoid a relapse in the very situation where they are most likely to be threatened: when they are surrounded by drug paraphernalia like needles, cigarettes, or whatever else. The key idea is that drug users will have formed a positive association between the paraphernalia and the drug abuse, making them cues for drug use. Ideally, you ;d want to completely flip what the stanley cup drug cue means to the addict in question, so that seeing the cue would make them actively not want to use drugs 鈥?sort of like the therapy in Clockwork Orange only, you know, less horrific. But inducing such total memory extinction is tricky, since it involves placing two contradictory, well-established memories in direct competition with each other. Instead, the researchers have figured out a rather elegant way to undermine the original memory. The technique relies on the fact that our brains have to Mxty Gorgeous video explains why there s no such thing as a jellyfish
If you thought plasticuffs were th stanley us e future of restraints, well, you might still be right. But handcuff technology is also preparing to fork in a much more high-tech direction. According to some recent patents, the future of handcuffs may be shocking. Literally. Shocking you. With electricity. Dug up by Patent Bolt, the recent patent application from Scottsdale Inventions LLC shows what seems to be a pretty well developed prototype of handcuffs that will shock the wearer into submission. The patent also allows for a blinking light or auditory warning that triggers as the shock is prepared, presumably to warn the wearer to CALM DOWN. The shocks could come for any number of reasons鈥攖oo much movement, movement outside a radius, or under order of the cuff owner鈥攁nd the cuffs would also contain EKG/ECG sensors to keep from shocking detainees a little too silly i.e. to death . That not even where it ends though, because there stanley thermos additional language describing how the cuffs could actually administer a stanley flask substance to achieve any desired result via needles or gas. It could be anything from medication to sedatives to irritants, to who knows what else. One thing for sure, you won ;t want to find yourself in a pair of these suckers if they hit the streets. [Patent Bolt] patentsPolice
Even after drug users kick the habit, there still the risk of relapse. And a big reason for this is fact that the person can still remember the pleasurable side of drug use. The solution might be vaso stanley to actually change the nature of those memories. Top image: Shutterstock That the idea behind new research coming out of China 8 stanley thermos 217 Peking University. While we ;re not quite at the point where we can wholesale implant 鈥?or, in the parlance of our times, incept 鈥?new memories that would make a person not want to do drugs, the researchers have come up with a subtler way to help drug users avoid a relapse in the very situation where they are most likely to be threatened: when they are surrounded by drug paraphernalia like needles, cigarettes, or whatever else. The key idea is that drug users will have formed a positive association between the paraphernalia and the drug abuse, making them cues for drug use. Ideally, you ;d want to completely flip what the stanley cup drug cue means to the addict in question, so that seeing the cue would make them actively not want to use drugs 鈥?sort of like the therapy in Clockwork Orange only, you know, less horrific. But inducing such total memory extinction is tricky, since it involves placing two contradictory, well-established memories in direct competition with each other. Instead, the researchers have figured out a rather elegant way to undermine the original memory. The technique relies on the fact that our brains have to Mxty Gorgeous video explains why there s no such thing as a jellyfish
If you thought plasticuffs were th stanley us e future of restraints, well, you might still be right. But handcuff technology is also preparing to fork in a much more high-tech direction. According to some recent patents, the future of handcuffs may be shocking. Literally. Shocking you. With electricity. Dug up by Patent Bolt, the recent patent application from Scottsdale Inventions LLC shows what seems to be a pretty well developed prototype of handcuffs that will shock the wearer into submission. The patent also allows for a blinking light or auditory warning that triggers as the shock is prepared, presumably to warn the wearer to CALM DOWN. The shocks could come for any number of reasons鈥攖oo much movement, movement outside a radius, or under order of the cuff owner鈥攁nd the cuffs would also contain EKG/ECG sensors to keep from shocking detainees a little too silly i.e. to death . That not even where it ends though, because there stanley thermos additional language describing how the cuffs could actually administer a stanley flask substance to achieve any desired result via needles or gas. It could be anything from medication to sedatives to irritants, to who knows what else. One thing for sure, you won ;t want to find yourself in a pair of these suckers if they hit the streets. [Patent Bolt] patentsPolice