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 don't use whatever method everyone else is following — you built your own. Setting Bio timelines to a melody you made up, drawing out Biochem pathways as visual diagrams instead of text, turning Orgo mechanisms into spatial memory maps. 'That's weird?' Maybe. 'It works?' Absolutely. The quirky library pod pre-med who proves results over convention.
You don't follow the conventional romance script. Your expressions of affection are original and personal — which makes them land differently than expected. Partners don't feel like they're experiencing a template. They feel like they're experiencing you.
You do better work when you can execute in your own way. Creative fields, design-oriented roles, work that rewards individual expression — those are where your output is genuinely distinctive. Your signature is your competitive edge.
Beautiful things, unusual things, things that feel like you — that's where your money goes. Not mass-market, not brand-driven. 'Where did you get that?' is something you hear. Your possessions reflect an actual point of view.
Fitting Biochem concepts to song lyrics, turning molecular structures into visual art, building spatial memory maps of mechanism sequences. From the outside it looks chaotic. From the inside, it's perfectly calibrated to how your brain actually works.
Maximize your strongest sections, clear the cutoff on your weakest ones. You don't have to score uniformly — you have to score high enough total. Strategic specialization is a completely valid MCAT strategy.
Competitive pressure, score comparisons, external benchmarking — these actually decrease your performance rather than help it. The silent library pod, moving at your own pace, is where your best work happens.