@uxigadur Maybe. It's an interesting hypothesis, but I have no frame of reference to say if it's likely or unlikely. We also have to remember that engaging system 2 is tiring, so we humans want to avoid using it when we can.
@ConspicuouslyA One of tbe dogs here demands we rub her belly whenever we try to discuss it in more detail. Suspicious...
@Belmonte8778 Wait. There are 3 seasons of it? Didn't they hear you just need to spend society points? :)
@Enryaa @Cpt_Placeholder It's the only way to honor our hairball-producing Overlords in the right way. ::
@SanguisFarron You can do it now! You can even bring your servant syncretic human species along. :)
@uxigadur That's what the book talked about, yes. The fast and efficient system 1, vs. the slow but thorough system 2.
@_mkfg As far as I know, cognitive studies do not have the bad association with bad replicability that some behavioral studies do.
@snidestep That actually might be it! :O
@Barcod11 @A_Spec @gameimperator No plans right now, but there are pretty cool mods in the workshop. :)
@Enigmaticrose4 Battle thrall training simulator serves their purposes well!
@theLazerZ We like the idea of those infinitely our superior enjoying our products!
@Zeredek Were there any mods involved? We'd appreciate a bug report on our forums. :)
@MagisterCalvert Do it again and watch the food left untouched until you try to remove it, only to hear meows of protest. :)
@_The_True_Duke_ In all seriousness, there is a group of players that has been asking for stronger primitive interaction mechanics, so maybe it's something to consider for the future. We'll see. :)
That bad fonts boost cognitive capabilities seems counterintuitive, doesn't it? Scientifically though, it apparently does.
@AureTheHuman Is there ever a *bad* moment for purifiers attack? :)
@addamschloe Thanks! Hope you'll get a lot of gametime out of it! :)
@askylla_ How generous of them. :)
"Creativity is associative memory working exceptionally well." - Sarnoff Mednick, 1960s
The book refers to an experiment in which students who were given a test with barely legible fonts did better at answering certain questions, than those who were given clearly legible fonts.