The phenomenon I think you’re referring to is semantic satiation (thanks Ted Lasso!). It has to do with semantic memory and I think the effect can happen to anyone in the right setting. But if you’re noticing a difference or having trouble you may want to speak to your primary care physician about semantic memory disorders.
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maik@infosec.pubto
Technology@lemmy.world•Disney is about to own all of Hulu | Disney’s paying more than $8 billion for Comcast’s stake in Hulu.English
15·2 years agoHave you looked at Hulu’s add-ons? You can get sports packages, movie packages, random-ass-bunch-of-channels packages. Sound familiar?
maik@infosec.pubto
Science@lemmy.ml•Has the James Webb Space Telescope found signs of life on Europa?
13·2 years agoThis “law” doesn’t really hold up, according to that article’s studies section. I wholeheartedly agree that it’s a dirty and gross way to head something; but it was more interesting that the answer appears to more often be “yes”. Problem is there are so few examples of it (comparatively).
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betteridge's_law_of_headlines#Studies
maik@infosec.pubto
World News@lemmy.world•Russia pulls out of Ukraine grain deal, in potential blow to global food suppliesEnglish
18·3 years agoI have arms and I feel attacked. ARTICLE 5

To fuck with the training data. But don’t worry, most of the time it accepts it anyways.