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Applied Thermodynamics

The use of thermodynamic principles to design, analyze, and optimize real-world systems—engines, refrigerators, power plants, chemical processes, and even electronic devices. It's the engineering workhorse that takes the abstract laws of energy and makes them build things, calculating efficiencies, losses, and feasibility to turn heat into motion, cold, or electricity.
Example: "The applied thermodynamics exam was brutal: 'Design a Rankine cycle for a geothermal plant with these brine temps, calculate the turbine work output, and sketch the T-s diagram.' For the rest of us, it was hieroglyphics. For them, it was the blueprint for pulling power from hot rocks."
by Abzugal January 30, 2026
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Applied Game Theory

The use of game theory’s mathematical models—which analyze strategic interactions between rational decision-makers—to solve real-world problems in economics, business, politics, and biology. It moves beyond the textbook “Prisoner’s Dilemma” to design auctions, negotiate treaties, price products, or even schedule airport security checks. Practitioners don’t just predict what players will do; they design the rules of the “game” itself to incentivize better outcomes, like creating a market that naturally reduces pollution or a contract that aligns an employee’s interests with the company’s.
Example: “The city used applied game theory to fix traffic. Instead of just adding lights, they made each traffic signal an ‘agent’ in a game, rewarded for keeping cars moving on its road but penalized for creating gridlock on intersecting streets. The signals started cooperating, learning to form ‘green waves.’ They didn’t just react to traffic; they played a city-sized game of optimization and won.”
by Abzunammu February 2, 2026
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Applied Cognition Sciences

The deployment of cognitive psychology and neuroscience research to improve human performance in educational, professional, and clinical settings. It transforms theories of memory, attention, decision-making, and learning into practical techniques: how to structure a textbook for maximum retention, design a control room to minimize operator error, or rehabilitate a stroke patient's executive function. It is the science of knowing, put to work.
Applied Cognition Sciences Example: Spaced repetition software (like Anki) is a product of Applied Cognition Science. Basic research established that memory retention is optimized when review is timed just before forgetting would occur. This finding, replicated in hundreds of lab studies, is now encoded in an algorithm that helps millions learn languages and medical terminology. Cognitive theory, rendered into a daily habit.
by Dumu The Void February 11, 2026
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Applied Human Sciences

The translation of knowledge from psychology, physiology, and anthropology into interventions that improve individual human functioning, health, and well-being. This is the scientific backbone of clinical psychology, physical therapy, occupational health, sports science, and human factors. It takes what we know about how humans operate—physically and mentally—and builds protocols, therapies, and training programs to fix, enhance, or accommodate them.
Applied Human Sciences Example: A physical therapist uses Applied Human Science daily. They don't just stretch a patient's hamstring; they apply biomechanical principles to correct gait, motor learning theory to retrain movement patterns, and pain psychology to manage fear-avoidance. Their treatment plan is not guesswork; it's engineering the human musculoskeletal system based on peer-reviewed evidence about how it works and heals.
by Dumu The Void February 11, 2026
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Applied Social Sciences

The practical use of sociological, anthropological, and political science theories to solve real-world problems in communities, organizations, and governments. Unlike pure social science, which seeks knowledge for its own sake, Applied Social Sciences deploy surveys, ethnographic observation, policy analysis, and program evaluation to address concrete issues: reducing recidivism, increasing voter turnout, managing urban gentrification, or improving disaster response. It is social theory with its sleeves rolled up.
Applied Social Sciences Example: A team of applied sociologists is hired by a city to understand why a new public transit line is underutilized. They don't just count riders; they conduct interviews, observe boarding patterns, and analyze fare data. Their recommendation—relocate a bus stop 200 meters to connect with a popular market—increases ridership by 40%. This isn't academic sociology; it's Applied Social Science, diagnosing and treating the social body.
by Dumu The Void February 11, 2026
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Aplin

“Aplin” is a form of tough fecal matter left on the inside of a toilet bowl. Sometimes referring to a speck or speckal. “He’s left an Aplin in bowl and I couldn’t remove it with a brush”. Typically an Aplin can only be removed by urinating heavily in the one area to successfully release then hardened matter from the porcelain.
I don’t want to be blamed for this Aplin”
by PhilDonoghuethe3rd February 22, 2026
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Applisy

A deep,soul-binding emotions of love where a person completely surrenders themselves to someone - heart,mind and spirit. Applisy is not just affection;it is the feeling of becoming one with the person you love.A connection so intense , it define your very existence
She didn't just love him;she felt applisy - she became his in every sense
by Applisy Dipak June 20, 2025
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