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  1. Murph

    Use of EEfRT in the NIH study: Deep phenotyping of PI-ME/CFS, 2024, Walitt et al

    I did email Treadway, back on the 22nd of February before I'd even dug in much. Hi Michael This new Nature Communications paper from a big NIH working group uses your effort metric and it ends up being a part of their conclusions. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-024-45107-3#Abs1 Does...
  2. Murph

    Use of EEfRT in the NIH study: Deep phenotyping of PI-ME/CFS, 2024, Walitt et al

    Above I posted a chart of Healthy volunteer F and their button presses. Below is an equivalent chart for all participants, which shows two important things. 1. Several participants lose easy tasks at various points, possibly deliberately (look for short red bars). Healthy Volunteer B and...
  3. Murph

    Use of EEfRT in the NIH study: Deep phenotyping of PI-ME/CFS, 2024, Walitt et al

    Healthy control F matters a lot. They chucked his data, but what his data shows is that EEfRT is a joke. To understand why I'm going to ask you to Imagine a lottery... 1. ... you will win two prizes drawn from a barrel. This is a pretty great lottery, because you choose the prizes that go in a...
  4. Murph

    Use of EEfRT in the NIH study: Deep phenotyping of PI-ME/CFS, 2024, Walitt et al

    I've been looking at this data for a few days now and thought I'd make an account here to post some of the things I've found. First, each participants choices on a chart. I placed a dot high to show a hard choice (Hard on y-axis), low to show an easy choice (Easy on left axis). The top left...
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