How could one possibly even begin studying unconscious energy allocation aspects of an energy limiting condition? Why spend so much effort into including something you didn't even try to study?
If you want to study “unconscious effort allocation” why would you do so by making the more rewarding task be harder than the easier task which automatically induces the confounder of “conscious pacing” and then not correcting for this? Because everybody with ME/CFS will tell you that pacing is a conscious decision.
It is almost as if the EEfRT isn't designed to measure unconsciousness (and indeed to the surprise of no one "unconsciousness" and "EEfRT" have 0 hits on Pubmed - and
one study using an extremely modified EEfRT like set-up had to introduce modifications to supposedly study "consciousness" & "unconsciousness", which in itself seems extremely speculative, even comes to the conclusion that in Schizophrenia the unconsciousness is no different and that it is the "conscious effort allocation" that differs, so it's abundantly clear that results can't just be attributed to unconciousness to ones own liking).
It is likely that people with untreated Hashimoto's and Graves run less marathons than healthy controls whilst they are ill, but would anybody sensible deduce that, that has something to do with unconsciousness? Even more so if you’d have 2 marathon runners, one already having run 2 marathons that day, the other fresh as a daisy and you let them choose a training program for the remainder of the day, which either consists of completing an easy training session or completing a hard training session, does the result not seem rather predictable and would you conclude that the result has anything to do with unconsciousness? How would this be any different from the experiment in the study?
If anything this makes it much clearer that one would most definitely have to use calibration phase as part of the EEfRT. Otherwise any discussion of unconciousness is clearly obsolete to begin with.
What does he mean by unconsciousness?
Is he talking in terms of Freud, i.e. repressed thoughts and childhood trauma? But even Freud seemingly understood that one would somehow have to “unlock the unconscious state” (whatever that may be, if it even exists), you can’t just give 2 people with different physical capabilities a choice between doing 2 differing physical tasks and then argue that their choice reflects unconsciousness without correcting for their physical abilities.
If he is talking in terms of some antigen causing changes in the CSF or immune activation, which is the central hypothesis of the study, why involve unconsciousness at all? How many studies of people with brain tumours try to understand whether changes are due to unconsciousness differing and how would you know which changes aren't precisely because of a brain tumour with the unconscious state having remained constant?
It seems with every explanation the authors conclusions seem even more dubious...
How naive of you! This machine clearly has childhood trauma manifested in its unconcious mind that can only be revealed and treated by analysing its dreams, the wrench is simply a mind-body manifestation of this trauma.