import 4.code.about;

class Header {

public void title() {

String fullTitle = '/r9k/';
}

public void menu();

public void board();

public void goToBottom();

}
class Thread extends Board {
public void undefined(OP Anonymous) {

String fullTitle = 'undefined';
int postNumber = 77247653;
String image = '1713930088722614.jpg';
String date = '04/23/24(Tue)23:41:28';
String comment = 'r9k writes erotica';

}
public void comments() {
if(Anonymous && title=='undefined' && postNumber==77247663 && dateTime=='04/23/24(Tue)23:42:51') {

'She was only 9...';

}

if(Anonymous && title=='undefined' && postNumber==77247683 && dateTime=='04/23/24(Tue)23:45:14') {

'>>77247663
she unzips her dick'
;

}

if(Anonymous && title=='undefined' && postNumber==77247716 && dateTime=='04/23/24(Tue)23:48:59'  && image=='1713640862289038.png') {

'>>77247653
excuse me western orgasm but wtf r u doin'
;

}

if(Anonymous && title=='undefined' && postNumber==77247777 && dateTime=='04/23/24(Tue)23:55:41') {

'oppai loli futanari reveals big fat penis';

}

if(Anonymous && title=='undefined' && postNumber==77247788 && dateTime=='04/23/24(Tue)23:56:55') {

'>>77247716
you should create a comic with these characters'
;

}

if(Anonymous && title=='undefined' && postNumber==77247815 && dateTime=='04/24/24(Wed)00:00:09') {

'>>77247683
also a 9 flaccid'
;

}

if(Anonymous && title=='undefined' && postNumber==77247833 && dateTime=='04/24/24(Wed)00:02:53') {

'>>77247653
wtf is this shit
scientists are useless'
;

}

if(Anonymous && title=='undefined' && postNumber==77247850 && dateTime=='04/24/24(Wed)00:04:55') {

'>>77247833
They try to make it as indecipherable to the average guy as possible so that you have to go through an interpreter.'
;

}

if(Anonymous && title=='undefined' && postNumber==77248243 && dateTime=='04/24/24(Wed)00:54:29'  && image=='pnas.1807862115fig03.jpg') {

'>>77247833
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)'
;

}

if(Anonymous && title=='undefined' && postNumber==77248276 && dateTime=='04/24/24(Wed)00:58:54') {

'>>77247663
>>77247683
>>77247815
I came and started farting when suddenly'
;

}

if(Anonymous && title=='undefined' && postNumber==77248413 && dateTime=='04/24/24(Wed)01:18:36'  && image=='Screenshot_20240423_220425_Chrome.jpg') {

'The cheap knockoff ahegao';

}

if(Anonymous && title=='undefined' && postNumber==77248421 && dateTime=='04/24/24(Wed)01:19:32'  && image=='Screenshot_20240423_221744_Chrome.jpg') {

'And the OG ahegao
XD'
;

}

if(Anonymous && title=='undefined' && postNumber==77248432 && dateTime=='04/24/24(Wed)01:20:33') {

'>>77248413
>>77248421
This is unhinged anon lmao, thank you for brightening up my night'
;

}

if(Anonymous && title=='undefined' && postNumber==77249857 && dateTime=='04/24/24(Wed)04:27:50'  && image=='ea wc gaze direction. Internal Representations of Facial Expressions Reveal Cultural Diversity Rachael E Jack.png') {

'> Internal Representations of Facial Expressions Reveal Cultural Diversity
>Abstract

>Facial expressions have long been considered the "universal language of emotion." Yet consistent cultural differences in the recognition of facial expressions contradict such notions (e.g., R. E. Jack, C. Blais, C. Scheepers, P. G. Schyns, & R. Caldara, 2009). Rather, culture--as an intricate system of social concepts and beliefs--could generate different expectations (i.e., internal representations) of facial expression signals. To investigate, they used a powerful psychophysical technique (reverse correlation) to estimate the observer-specific internal representations of the 6 basic facial expressions of emotion (i.e., happy, surprise, fear, disgust, anger, and sad) in two culturally distinct groups (i.e., Western Caucasian [WC] and East Asian [EA]). Using complementary statistical image analyses, cultural specificity was directly revealed in these representations. Specifically, whereas WC internal representations predominantly featured the eyebrows and mouth, EA internal representations showed a preference for expressive information in the eye region. Closer inspection of the EA observer preference revealed a surprising feature: changes of gaze direction, shown primarily among the EA group. For the first time, it is revealed directly that culture can finely shape the internal representations of common facial expressions of emotion, challenging notions of a biologically hardwired "universal language of emotion."'
;

}

if(Anonymous && title=='undefined' && postNumber==77249874 && dateTime=='04/24/24(Wed)04:30:08') {

'>>77248276
She farted back'
;

}

}
}