I've shared this before but only in reblogs, and figured it deserved releasing into the wild all by itself ☺️
seen from United Arab Emirates
seen from Malaysia

seen from Italy

seen from Tajikistan

seen from Russia

seen from South Africa

seen from Slovakia
seen from China

seen from Russia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from China

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Russia
seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from China
seen from France
seen from China
seen from Türkiye

seen from Canada
I've shared this before but only in reblogs, and figured it deserved releasing into the wild all by itself ☺️
Whosthatsilmcharacter Raw Data
It's finally done! Only took all winter break, but hey, I can put it on my resume now 🤣
Seriously though, if you notice anything wrong on the sheet (misspellings, duplicates, miscounts, etc) please let me know. I was very meticulous, but I am just one person. Beyond that, enjoy! Feel free to comment or send me asks if you have any questions or comments you'd like to share!
Notes on the data: It's organized into 10 columns (Name of character, species, house/family, date the art was originally posted, artist, whether or not it had been posted before the poll, total votes on the poll, percentage of correct votes, incorrect options/percentage of votes each of those got, and indicative iconography + number of mentions).
My hope is to make it very intuitive and as searchable as possible. For instance, if you want to see how your blorbos did in other polls, you can ctrl+f and type their name in the search box to see every appearance of their name. Furthermore, if you wanted to draw your own conclusions about, say, how important hair is to iconography, you could ctrl+f "hair" and find every instance of that word in the datasheet. (Although, in that particular case, I would recommend adding a space to the end of the word because there were a few characters whose hairstyle was important to their character, as opposed to hair color).
AND ANOTHER THING (sorry, I've got a bunch of random notes lol) I noticed when going through the comments and reblogs of each of the posts and tallying them up; people didn't tend to list out all of the possible iconography shown in the art piece. Instead, they usually pointed out the most prominent or the most unique. For instance, with Beleg Georg, most people didn't even mention his hair, bow, or species -- they just pointed out the bright red boots because... what more do you need?
Finally, I noticed an interesting thing about bias while tallying (I just finished a ridiculously long course on research ethics (including, of course, researcher bias) for another research project I'm doing at school, so it was on my mind). Oftentimes, when I was making the little summaries after each poll, I noted the most commonly cited signs from memory, based on the vibes I had immediately after reading all the notes. Well, turns out, there were a few times that something was bigger in my mind than it was in the comments, and a few times that something minor was mentioned consistently but totally slipped my notice... And that's why we have peer review!
The Battle of Blythe Road (ultimate nerd slap fight of the year).
The Sausage Factory of the Mind: Hypnosis, Illusionism, and the Consciousness Myth
Looking at hypnosis and hypnotic suggestion is trying to make sense of a perceptual system that can replace "outside" perception with "inside" perception. There are several theories on how hypnosis can do this. Regardless of how the theories work, they have a common problem – they have to draw a line from the hypnotic suggestion all the way down to the brain's interpretation and the cognitive neuroscience that makes up the brain, all the way down to the suggested perception and its representation in the executive centers of the brain in the prefrontal cortex.
Cold Control Theory (and the follow up paper Phenomenological Control as Cold Control) is probably the best top level description of what's happening, as it explains involuntary action and changes in cognitive processing much better than Lynn's Integrative Sociocognitive Theory. However, I have struggled with Cold Control Theory, because it connects hypnosis with an model of consciousness called Higher Order Thought (HOT).
HOT is an abstract model of consciousness: it doesn't have a connection to the physical reality of the brain, whereas Integrative Theory maps down to predictive processing and active inference in the brain. I didn't trust a theory that appeared to rely on a free floating philosophical concept tied to something as fuzzy as consciousness.
But! There is a way out. It turns out that HOT is detailed enough that it can be mapped to an implementation, i.e. it can be connected to one of the neuronal models of consciousness like Global Cognitive Workspace Model. I really like a lot of the work that's happening in these neuron models -- in particular, there's some great research discussing how these models explain p-consciousness and access consciousness and seeing how these models could be implemented in practice using recurrent neural networks. Likewise, these models can be mapped to biologically plausible recurrent neural networks, providing an analogue of the brain that reflects cognitive neuroscience.
This stepwise approach from top down Phenomenological Control to the substrate of predictive processing is much more cohesive than the Integrative Model, which dives straight from response set to the low level implementation of predictive processing and active inference.
Here's a rough diagram showing the hierarchy from high level concept to low level processes.
Even with an end-to-end model of consciousness, I still felt uncomfortable. I don't think this is a problem with Cold Control, but more about the general concept of consciousness. The way we describe consciousness makes me itch.
Cognitive neuroscience often uses vision to demonstrate the disconnect between the product and the engine. Regardless of how the human brain perceives vision as a seamless whole, the actual engine that produces that perception is utterly unlike our perceived experience. To compare our experience of vision with the actual mechanisms that create vision is to confuse a sausage with a sausage factory.
In the same way, cognitive consciousness – our perception of our own thoughts and cognition – is not a privileged representation of how cognition is constructed. Dennett posited the desktop metaphor, in which a simple graphical user interface can look simple while being a complex interaction of billions of concurrent instructions in a CPU interacting with a graphic processor unit. This philosophical stance is Illusionism. Keith Frankish does a great job of explaining illusionism as a theory of consciousness and I broadly agree with the argument. I would say that rather than saying "I am conscious" it's more accurate to say "I perceive consciousness" – and even that perception is necessarily the end result of many unconscious perceptual engineering layers.
In short, when we talk about neuronal models of consciousness or the cognitive neurosicence behind it, we are not really talking about the the end product -- the perception of consciousness -- but about the possible workings of the consciousness factory.
More than that, I would have to argue that the idea of consciousness is a cultural hallucination. In hypnosis, the idea of trance as a "hypnotic state" is so ingrained since Trilby that it has been called the mother of all myths by some academics. Despite the certainty that a hypnotic state exists, there is no set definition of what this hypnotic state is, or how it can be identified – believers have their own definitions and their own certainty despite the lack of commonality. In the same way, consciousness (and ancillary concepts such as stream of consciousness) is a label that gets slapped on anything that looks potentially relevant to the subject at hand.
As an example, selfawarepatterns reviews this debate on consciousness and concludes "the differences between these theories largely amount to varying definitions of consciousness." There are papers that point this out and suggest that all of them could be valid.
My favorite explanation is from Attention Schema Theory, which is a cognitive schema of the brain's own attention at a high level. Because this is an abstracted representation of the brain itself, the brain conflates the model with the reality. The author, Graziano, has already implemented a neural network with an attention schema and demonstrated that reflection can dramatically improve model performance.
Graziano also has a number of things to say about bridging the gap between the "physically incoherent consciousness we think we have and the complex, rich, but mechanistic consciousness we may actually have." Graziano defines two different kinds of consciousness:
i-consciousness (informational): How information is selected, enhanced, and processed in the brain - explained by Global Workspace Theory
m-consciousness (mysterious): The experiential essence people claim to have - the "hard problem"
And describes different theories as different perspectives on the problem.
Global Workspace (GW): Explains i-consciousness - attentionally enhanced information reaching brain-wide networks
Higher-Order Thought (HOT): We contain meta-information about how we process information
AST: Provides the social-cognitive model explaining why we claim to have subjective experience
Illusionism: Consciousness as the brain thinking it has something it doesn't actually have.
Cold Control Theory and HOT are perfectly valid high level theories, and there's no argument that consciousness is a lot easier to say than "metacognition" or "reflective executive processing" but I do quietly hope that the terminology becomes more concrete and we move away from the idea of consciousness altogether.
Trying to settle a debate with @harmlessgoblincrimes here
Which is nerdier?
Star Wars
Dungeons & Dragons
No subtlety, no see results. you vote or you die.
Something I like about Captain Kirk over Captain Picard is that Kirk is just as much of a literature nerd as Picard, but as with most things, he isn't as stuffy about it.
Picard has this rather haughty, professorial air to him. He has the vibe of someone who unironically included "intellectual" in his social media bio when he was in college. Jean-Luc Picard quotes Shakespeare because that's what Sophisticated People™ do.
Kirk, by contrast, is more of a romantic. As dedicated as he is to excelling in intellectual and physical pursuits, his knowledge and appreciation of literature and art isn't something he uses as a marker of "look, I'm smart and cultured." For Kirk, art and literature and science are all amazing, exciting parts of the Human Adventure. They enhance and give meaning to his life, but his life is more than that, and he doesn't define himself by it. James T. Kirk quotes Shakespeare because it's beautiful and speaks to him, so the words just come out of his mouth sometimes.
Both are valid ways for a character to be written and performed, of course. If I was snarky about Picard here, it's just because I personally prefer the Kirk depiction of this kind of thing. I resonate with it more, and it's more the kind of nerd I would like to be.
NEW LOTR-VERSE STUFF ANNOUNCEMENTS IN THE BIG 2026?
Just eviscerate me, okay? We win, nerdlings. WATCHA TOLKIEN ABOUT? 🧙🏻♂️ (I stole this line)
Also, happy #TolkienReadingDay
I just learned Beheeyem cannot legally learn Hypnosis. All that "idiots are hard to hypnotize" BS was wrong- you're just fakers. And you got outdone by Melvin Dipshit and a single Exeggcute...who succeeded in hypnotizing one of said idiots.
I know the White dex entry says they can hypnotize people but they gave that move in-game to Watchog instead for some reason. I just feel like being a hater.
Also I was always haunted by any case of Ash being mind controlled and I want to punch Melvin Dipshit in his stupid smug face. Fighting is weak to Psychic unless you're pissed enough. Or since I'm not a Pokemon, would that just be a Normal-type move? Like Mega Punch. Hm...either way, super punchable.