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#doctor coyle
pridewishes · 2 years
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♔ || DR. COYLE ICONS
250x250 || villaingender || bordered circle
like / rb + credit + read dni if using
requested by @valorsystem !!
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mercworm · 11 months
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I imagine Doctor Futterman and Coyle would get along.
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summerlyewe · 5 months
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The only reason they don't have a trial together is
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reagemph · 3 months
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I had to make the paint meme with them
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deadpuppetboi · 4 months
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You think Toymaker goes into different dimensions of the video games he plays just to mess with the characters there?
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slemhosta · 11 months
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@mercworm is giving me proximity brainrot.
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peterkothe · 2 years
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INKtober Day 23- DR COYLE
In the world of the Nintendo game ARMS, a world where humans live alongside meta humans with organic spring-like arms, Dr. Coyle seeks to dominate all! Head scientist of ARMS Laboratories she has created dangerous robotic minions and unpredictable genetically engineered lifeforms and self-modifications, nothing is seemingly impossible for Dr. Coyle and she’ll let nothing stand in her way to become the ultimate ARMS Fighter!
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luvisia · 11 months
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hey, quick question, where did you find the dialogue for the "totemic representation" of coyle and gooseberry that easterman is on about in outlast trials? is it some unused stuff in the files? been playing for 50 hours and never heard any of it!
no worries, you're totally correct! some dedicated fans combed through the closed beta files after it dropped and found quite a bit of dialogue that we've now heard in early access. however, some of the VO lines don't yet seem to be used. you can view that data and other goodies on reddit here.
(also bear in mind that not everything found here may make an appearance in the game and datamining is not endorsed by the devs.)
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tisdae · 11 months
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i’m watching the good doctor for the first time and yikes that coyle person who got “too friendly” to claire in 1x10 was just disgusting i hope something backfires to him specifically bcus this is so not okay n it happens irl…😤😤😤
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quotesfrommyreading · 11 months
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In the early 1960s, weeks before his assassination, President John F. Kennedy signed a mental-health bill into law and declared that “under present conditions of scientific achievement, it will be possible for a nation as rich in human and material resources as ours to make the remote reaches of the mind accessible.” American science, he pledged, would not just land a man on the moon but would triumph over mental illness.
This confidence stemmed from psychiatry’s first pharmaceutical breakthrough a decade earlier, the discovery of chlorpromazine (marketed in the United States as Thorazine), the original antipsychotic. The drug brought on debilitating side effects — a shuffling gait, facial rigidity, persistent tics, stupor — but it becalmed difficult behavior and seemed to curtail aberrant beliefs. The Times hailed the drug’s “humanitarian and social significance,” and Time magazine compared Thorazine to the “germ-killing sulfas,” groundbreaking drugs developed in the 1930s and 1940s to fight off bacterial infections. But patients didn’t seem persuaded that the benefits outweighed the harm; they frequently abandoned their medication.
Thorazine was followed by Haldol, a more potent antipsychotic whose side effects were no kinder. Yet each drug contributed to a sweeping release of residents from psychiatric asylums, and by the 1970s, crude concepts emerged about how these medications work. Overactive systems of dopamine, a neurotransmitter, were thought to be the culprit in psychosis, and antipsychotics inhibited these systems. The problem was that they impaired dopamine networks all over the brain, including in ways that led to movement disorders and torpor.
By the 1980s, though, biological psychiatrists believed that they would solve this flaw by creating more finely tuned antipsychotics. Joseph Coyle, then a professor of psychiatry and neuroscience at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, was quoted in a 1984 Pulitzer Prize-winning Baltimore Sun series that heralded new brain research and deftly targeted antipsychotics and other psychotropics on the horizon: “We’ve gone from ignorance to almost a surfeit of knowledge in only 10 years.” A protégé of Coyle’s, Donald Goff, now a psychiatry professor at New York University’s Grossman School of Medicine and for decades one of the country’s pre-eminent researchers into psychosis, told me, about the end of the 1980s, “Those were heady years.” Every day, as he neared a Boston clinic he directed, he saw the marks of Haldol in some of the people he passed on the sidewalk: “As you approached, there were the patients from the clinic with their strange movements, their bent-over bodies, their tremors. Not only was the illness debilitating; the medications were leaving them physically so miserable.” Yet he sensed, he said, “the possibility of limitless progress.”
What were christened the “second-generation antipsychotics” — among them Risperdal, Seroquel and Zyprexa — came on the market mostly in the 1990s. In addition to their assault on dopamine, they seemed to act, in lesser ways, on other neurotransmitters, and they appeared to have fewer side effects. “There was so much optimism,” Goff remembered. “We were sure we were improving people’s lives.” But quickly worries arose, and eventually Eli Lilly and Johnson & Johnson, makers of Zyprexa and Risperdal, would pay out several billions of dollars — a fraction of the drugs’ profits — in lawsuits over illegal marketing and the drugs’ effects on users’ metabolisms. Zyprexa caused a greatly heightened risk of diabetes and severe weight gain (Eli Lilly concealed internal data showing that 16 percent of patients gained over 66 pounds on Zyprexa). Some boys and young men who took Risperdal were affected by gynecomastia; they grew pendulous breasts. In 2005, the N.I.M.H. published a study with 1,460 subjects looking at whether the new antipsychotics were in fact better, in efficacy or safety, than one of the first-generation drugs. The answer was no. “It was a resounding disappointment,” Goff said, though he advocates long-term and probably lifelong medication as, on balance, the best way to guard against psychiatric devastation.
“If you look at the treatments we have right now,” Coyle, Goff’s mentor, told me, “in terms of their fundamental mechanisms” — the drugs’ disruption of dopamine pathways — “they’re no different than they were almost 70 years ago with the discovery of chlorpromazine. That’s pretty scary.”
  —  Doctors Gave Her Antipsychotics. She Decided to Live With Her Voices.
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ouvragesdepenny · 4 months
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Merry Christmas to All the reagent and doctor. Another Leland Coyle fanart. An official drink recipe in the Pistachio gin.
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outlastrabbit · 2 months
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Could we have x reader HCs for Valentine's Day, please? ♡
Gooseberry and Coyle Valentine’s Day Headcanons
Mother Gooseberry💕
You didn’t even know it was Valentine’s Day until Mother Gooseberry bombarded you with her love. She pulled you roughly into her arms, nearly crushing you against her chest.
“Happy Valentine’s Day, my darling! Mother loves you.”
She hugged you tighter, bringing Doctor Futterman up to nuzzle his beak into your neck. You tried to giggle as his feathers tickled, but all that came out was a strangled wheeze.
“I love you too, but I can’t breathe…”
You felt so bad when Mother Gooseberry spoiled you with so many gifts. She somehow got you chocolates, and you nearly cried. You hadn’t had decent tasting food in so long… she also got you flowers and a stuffed dog from the carnival. You stared at her lovingly, clutching the dog to your chest as you were overcome with emotions.
“Thank you, Mother…”
Leland Coyle💕
“Oh, Landy-Bear!”
Leland let out the most exhausted sigh he could muster. He hated when you called him that, and for good reason.
“Guess what day it is.”
He had no idea that it was Valentine’s Day. How would he? He also did not care. Even if he had you to celebrate with. You wrapped your arms around his neck with a big grin, kissing his scars.
“Happy Valentine’s Day, Landy.”
Coyle tried to act annoyed and unimpressed, but you could read him like a book nowadays. You stroked his beard and nuzzled his scarred cheek. His eyes fluttered softly under his sunglasses. He hated how good it felt when you did anything to his scars. Whether you kissed them, stroked them… just the lightest touch made him weak in the knees.
Coyle wrapped an arm around your waist with a grumble, making you giggle as he pulled you closer.
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gothhabiba · 1 year
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Although the chemical imbalance model remains the dominant cultural story of depression in the United States (France, Lysaker, & Robinson, 2007), its validity has been publicly questioned with increasing frequency in recent years (e.g., Angell, 2011a, 2011b; Begley, 2010; Spiegel, 2012; Stahl, 2012). Scientists have long understood the “low serotonin” explanation of depression to be unsubstantiated (Kendler & Schaffner, 2011; Kirsch, 2010; Lacasse & Leo, 2005), and psychiatry is currently attempting to distance itself from this pseudoscientific notion. Prominent biomedical model proponents now use adjectives like “antiquated” (Insel, 2011) and “outmoded” (Coyle, cited in Spiegel, 2012) to describe the chemical imbalance story, thereby creating the misleading impression that this notion has only recently been exposed as mistaken. Pies (2011) proclaimed that the chemical imbalance theory is an “urban legend” that was never taken seriously by thoughtful psychiatrists. “In the past 30 years,” he asserts, “I don't believe I have ever heard a knowledgeable, well-trained psychiatrist make such a preposterous claim, except perhaps to mock it.” This declaration might come as a surprise to former APA president Steven Sharfstein who explicitly defended the validity of the chemical imbalance theory on NBC's Today Show (Bell, 2005b) in the wake of actor Tom Cruise's infamous remarks criticizing psychiatry (Bell, 2005a). Patients with mental disorders might also be surprised to learn that some doctors use the chemical imbalance story simply as a convenient metaphor for facilitating drug treatment and/or attempting to reduce stigma. Until recently, the American public had little reason to doubt the veracity of chemical imbalance claims promoted by the popular media, health websites, patient advocacy groups, governmental agencies, and other reputable medical authorities. Given recent high-profile revelations about the limitations of the chemical imbalance story, biomedical model advocates may face increasing pressure to disseminate accurate information about mental disorder rather than persist in the promotion of an unfounded but politically and economically useful scientific caricature.
–Brett J. Deacon, “The biomedical model of mental disorder: A critical analysis of its validity, utility, and effects on psychotherapy research.” Clinical Psychology Review 33 (2013), 846–861. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cpr.2012.09.007
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bestshipsmackdown · 1 year
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Ships 100% Going into the Bracket:
[I will be checking spellings at a later point, as well as ages and familial relations. So as long as everyone followed directions, these will be going into the bracket.]
With Nine Submissions:
Kim Dokja x Yoo Joonghuyk from Omniscient Reader’s Viewpoint
With Eight Submissions:
Percy Jackson x Annabeth Chase from The Percy Jackson Series
Gideon Nav x Harrowhark Nonagesimus from The Locked Tomb Series
Yang Xiao Long x Blake Belladonna from RWBY
With Seven Submissions:
Adora x Catra from She-Ra and the Princesses of Power
@bracket-bracket x @thecompetitionshowdowntournament x @ultimate-poll-tournament from tumblr.com
Evan Buckley x Eddie Diaz from 911
With Six Submissions:
Fred Jones x Daphne Blake x Velma Dinkley x Norville “Shaggy” Rogers from Scooby-Doo
Luz Noceda x Amity Blight from The Owl House
Lance x Keith from Voltron: Legendary Defender
With Five Submissions
Marinette Dupain-Cheng[Ladybug] x Adrien Agreste[Chat Noir] from Miraculous Tales of Ladybug and Chat Noir [Miraculous Ladybug]
Kazuki Kurusu x Rei Suwa from Buddy Daddies
With Four Submissions
Jack Harkness x Rose Tyler x The Ninth Doctor from Doctor Who
Link x Zelda from The Legend of Zelda
Eda Clawthorne x Raine Whispers from The Owl House
Phoenix Wright x Miles Edgeworth from Ace Attorney
Hiyori Suzumi x Yujiro Someya x Aizo Shibasaki from Honeyworks
Naruto Uzumaki x Sasuke Uchiha from Naruto
Nomi Marks x Amanita Caplan from Sense8
Mike Wheeler x Will Byers from Stranger Things
Nancy Wheeler x Robin Buckley from Stranger Things
With Three Submissions
Laura Moon x Mad Sweeney from American Gods
Caitlyn Kiramann x Vi from Arcane
Troy Barnes x Abed Nadir from Community
Imogen Temult x Laudna from Critical Role
Edward Nygma x Oswald Cobblepot from Gotham
Will Solace x Nico Di Angelo from Heroes of Olympus
Hikaru Indou x Yoshiki Tsukajinaka from Hikaru ga Shinda Natsu
Will Parry x Lyra Silvertongue from His Dark Materials
Rose Lalonde x Kanaya Maryam from Homestuck
Gon Freecss x Killua Zoldyck from Hunter x Hunter
Dustfinger x Resa from Inkheart
Gimli x Legolas from Lord of the Rings
Merlin x Arthur Pendragon from Merlin
Bakugou Katsuki x Todoroki Shouto from Boku No Hero Academia[My Hero Academia]
Todoroki Touya[Dabi] x Takami Keigo[Hawks] from Boku No Hero Academia[My Hero Academia]
KJ Brandman x Mac Coyle from Paper Girls
Perfuma x Scorpia from She-Ra and the Princesses of Power
Reki Kyan x Langa Hasegawa from Sk8 the Infinity
Korra x Asami from The Legend of Korra
Dream x Hob from The Sandman
Enid Sinclair x Wednesday Addams from Wednesday
Buffy Summers x Spike from Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Caleb Widowgast x Essek Thelyss from Critical Role
Eddie Kaspbrak x Richie Tozier from It
Bugs Bunny x Daffy Duck from Looney Tunes
Magnus Chase x Alex Fierro from Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard
Bakugou Katsuki x Kirishima Eijirou from Boku No Hero Academia[My Hero Academia]
Dean Winchester x Castiel from Supernatural
Thats 49 ships guaranteed for entry into the bracket.
That leaves 15 ships to be added. It’s currently Sunday, so I will leave submissions open until Tuesday, April 4th at 11:59pm EST. With the likelihood of needing more ships to qualify, a few preliminary rounds will take place using ships that only have 2 submissions each. Those will commence after submissions have closed.
The ships listed above do not need any more submissions to qualify, so send in propaganda for ships you don’t see!
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pers-books · 8 months
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Jodie Whittaker recently seen filming for her new series Toxic Town with Aimee Lou Wood.
Jodie Whittaker really said 'Gay Rights 2023'!
Toxic Town is a four-part limited series starring Jodie Whittaker that's set to bring the story of one of the UK's biggest environmental scandals to life on Netflix.
Penned by His Dark Materials and Help writer, Jack Thorne and produced by Charlie Brooker and Annabel Jones' Broke and Bones, this Netflix series follows three mothers as they take on a David and Goliath-style fight, with the show telling of the toxic waste spillages in the Northamptonshire town of Corby and the subsequent legal battle that has been dubbed by many as "the British Erin Brokovich".
So far, there are five stars currently attached to Toxic Town. They are: former Doctor, Jodie Whittaker, Sex Education season 4 star Aimee Lou Wood, Bank of Dave's Rory Kinnear, Downton Abbey's Brendan Coyle, and The Full Monty star Robert Carlyle.
(Source)
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cultofthepigeon · 2 months
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someone in the outlast tag brought up mother gooseberry and the clown and how that relationship would work and i love it
personally i need to see coyle and the doctor locked into the same room with 20 car batteries
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