How AI-Brained Are You, Actually?
ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini... can't tell if you should ask AI or just text a friend? Six levels of AI dependence — from full analog to full cyborg.
What's Your MCAT Study Personality? | 32 Types

You show up at the library pod every single day without exception, without announcement. No flashy strategy — just the understanding that daily accumulation is the actual force. Every section covered, every wrong answer logged. The tortoise who beats the hare, quietly proving it one session at a time.
You remember things your partner mentioned once and bring them up weeks later. You care in ways that aren't announced. Partners feel protected without being able to point to any single gesture — it just accumulates.
Not the flashiest person on the team, but the one who keeps everything running. Detail-checking, gap-filling, behind-the-scenes reliability — without you, the whole operation functions less well. People notice when you're not there.
Zero impulse purchases. You anticipate what you'll need, plan for it, and buy within budget when the time comes. You often get things on sale because you saw them coming. Financial security is a foundation, not a goal — you've already built it.
You take thorough notes during every Kaplan or Khan Academy session and review them the same day. Those notes become your most valuable resource heading into test week. The work you put in during each session compounds into your most powerful prep tool.
Same-day review of everything you studied that day — no exceptions. Content never piles up because it gets processed daily. The consistency of this habit means you never need a pre-exam cram session.
You don't sprint and you don't crash. A sustainable daily pace, maintained without burnout, is the defining trait of a long-distance runner — and that's exactly what pre-med requires. Slow and continuous always beats fast and inconsistent.