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Reverse Cursed Technique:
a special type of cursed technique that takes cursed energy and reverses it into positive energy. It is a very complex technique and is mainly used to heal human bodies.
"have you seen gojo's rct red?"
RCT by sirvax September 20, 2023
Related Words
rcta RCT RCTID RCT Bias RCT Biases RCT Moore RCT3 Rcta/Ecta rctard rctfy
Acronym for "Ruminating Chaotic Turmoil".
My brain is currently filled with RCT, I apologize.

Damn, I have some seriously bad RCT rn fml!
RCT by LingDanc803 September 25, 2023
It stands for Reverse Cursed Technic, which is a form of cursed energy that has been multiplied with itself to get positive.
Hakari never RCT technic, but, the overflowing infinite cursed energy in his body caused it to reflexively perform reversed cursed technic in order no not take any damage.
RCT by Darkunesu March 2, 2024

RCT Moore 

Masturbating in a public area while in an US Army uniform, particularly outside. May involve grunting and/or staring into the distance.
Dude, someone said you pull a RCT Moore on the Promenade earlier today, apparently it was loud as hell. Leadership might give you tours.
RCT Moore by Nohrianbruh March 31, 2024
The fetishization of the Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) as the "gold standard" to the point of dismissing all other forms of evidence, even in fields where RCTs are unethical, impossible, or meaningless. This bias assumes that if you can't randomize it and control it, you can't truly know it, making vast areas of social science and humanities seem illegitimate.
Example: A policymaker rejects a successful, community-developed poverty alleviation program because "there's no RCT proving it works better than a placebo intervention." The RCT bias prioritizes methodological purity over observable, real-world effectiveness, paralyzing action with impossible standards of proof.
RCT Bias by Dumu The Void February 9, 2026

RCT Biases

The plural form, encompassing the various systematic distortions that can arise in the design, conduct, analysis, and interpretation of randomized controlled trials. These include selection bias (even after randomization), attrition bias, detection bias, performance bias, publication bias (positive results favored), sponsorship bias, and the bias of unrealistic settings (artificiality bias). RCT Biases also cover cognitive biases among researchers who overconfidently interpret p‑values, ignore baseline imbalances, or dismiss null results as “failed trials.” Recognizing RCT Biases is essential for critical appraisal; it moves beyond the myth that RCTs are inherently objective and forces attention to the many ways even well‑randomized trials can mislead.
Example: “Her training in RCT Biases taught her to check not just randomization but also who dropped out, who measured outcomes, and who funded the study—because each can bias the result.”