Cognitive abilities 1.1 Reading comprehension 1.2 Listening comprehension 1.3 Inferring main ideas 1.4 Personal interests and biases
Lack of processing time 2.1 Lack of interest in subject matter 2.2 Mind blindness 2.3 Processing complex information
Reading sheet music 3.1 Reading formulas 3.2 Learning new words 3.3 Surprising effects and common causes
Discovering similarities 4.1 Realizing common causes 4.2 Getting caught up in uniqueness 4.3 Perpetual skepticism 4.4 Gratitude
Hierarchies, ontologies, and taxonomies 5.1 Creating own hierarchies 5.2 Ad hoc classification 5.3 Intuition and creativity 5.4 Difficulty seeing own work from others’ perspective 5.5 Accepting perspective of others.
🔊 Listen to this
« #ChatGPT understood. It seems like you are describing a number of different difficulties or challenges that you face in various areas of your life, such as reading comprehension, problem-solving, and understanding complex information. These challenges may be related to a number of different factors, including cognitive abilities, personal interests, and individual preferences. SET A: These difficulties may be related to your overall ability to comprehend and understand complex information, whether it be written or spoken. This may include issues with reading and listening comprehension, as well as difficulties with inferring the main idea or central concept of a piece of information. Additionally, you may have coherence issues without experiencing issues with cohesion. SET B: These difficulties may be related to a number of different factors, including a lack of processing time to infer main ideas, a lack of interest in the subject matter, and potential biases that may affect your ability to draw conclusions from evidence. You may also experience difficulties with set shifting and mind blindness. SET C: These difficulties may be related to your ability to process and understand complex information that involves symbols, such as sheet music or formulas. This may include difficulties with reading and understanding symbols, as well as difficulty remembering them. Additionally, you may have difficulty learning new words and using them effectively. SET D: These difficulties may be related to your tendency to be surprised by similar effects and common causes, as well as your difficulty taking things for granted and your perpetual skepticism. Additionally, you may experience gratitude or a tendency to trust self-established heuristics or rules. SET E: These difficulties may be related to your preference for creating your own hierarchies, ontologies, and taxonomies, as well as your difficulty accepting top-down systems that constrain your output. You may also have difficulties with self-editing and seeing your own work from someone else’s perspective. However, you may be able to accept the perspective of others through automated systems or authorities.