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Yea...so what? It happens in drug trials all the time. I have a rash. One creme helps the rash, the other is a placebo. I happen to be assigned to the side that is getting the good stuff. In addition to any placebo effect, the stuff actually has some efficacy. I get better. I think "Wow, I got the good stuff. Cool!! Thank god the rash is gone." No big deal.What if the subjects can unblind themselves by the feel of the first point?
My only concern is that the second person (the kyusho guy) doesn't hear the subject saying something like "Oowww!!" in the next room. Then he'd have an unfair advantage, particularly if he wanted to differentiate between the two groups.
Actually this kind of format has been used on research of acupuncture for various illnesses. In the placebo group, the folks get needled in an "uninteresting" point. <BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote
I suspect it very well may be, or at least partially so. This would explain "nonresponders", and iron shirt training.What if the set-up effect is pain mediated?
And that addresses your question, John. <BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote
Certainly one would want to avoid hitting on any known kyusho point. Since they cover all the major exposed nerves, then a non-point area would likely not hurt so much.If the real and fake kyusho points are equally painful, then, there'd be no difference.
Dr. MK
Thanks for the references. The JACC one in particular looks interesting.
Have you noticed how much of this stuff has been coming out just in the last decade? No wonder folks couldn't figure this stuff out so well at first (other than the obvious connection between getting hit and getting knocked silly).
Mike
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Look at it this way, Mike.My thought is that I wouldn't want to train a skill that I don't have complete faith in, and only by using the techniques could one confirm their efficacy.
* All martial arts pretty much are a game of putting a hurt on someone, or otherwise controlling the bad guy with as little effort as possible. We all are practicing kyusho to some extent or another. Some of us are a little more elegant about it than others.
* I don't have complete faith in anything I do in martial arts - period. I don't have complete faith that when I take my Glock 21 and aim it at a bad guy, that I'm going to hit him. Policemen get shot with their own weapons all the time. Imagine how difficult this all is without "the great equalizer" to do away with the bad guy. It's all a game of chance. Training merely improves our odds. Good training improves your odds better and faster than training that is a general waste of time. And the improvement of odds isn't necessarily a function of how much money you gave to whatever person with whatever famous name.
We are all struggling with the whole concept of good practice and good instruction. Those of us who understand more rigorous methods of assessment are trying to quantify the relative usefulness of various training methods. With any luck, we'll know more in the next generation than we did in the last.
But in the end it's you and the bad guy, with nobody else to help you - period.
Get used to it. Get over it.

- Bill