Infact
Infact Get the full experience — check any claim instantly
Open
50
Mixed Worldwide

The text suggests that people feel more successful and happy when their brain is occupied and that gray matter dislikes monotonous work.

Both claims lack external evidence to substantiate or refute them. The first claim about happiness and brain activity is subjective and widely discussed in psychology but remains mostly anecdotal without robust empirical evidence. The second claim about gray matter disinterest in monotony is stated as a factual assertion but isn't backed by specific scientific studies or evidence in the provided context.

June 29, 2026 Language: en 2 claims analyzed

Individual Claims

50
Mixed Psychology
A person feels more successful and happy only when their brain is occupied with something.
No external evidence found to verify or refute this claim. The idea is popular in psychology discussions but lacks empirical evidence in this context.
Fact Check Score None
Fact Check Weight 0
Web Consensus Score None
Web Consensus Weight 0
Source Quality Score 50
Source Quality Weight 0
Llm Reasoning Score 50
Llm Reasoning Weight 100
Weighted Total 50
Evidence Summary No external evidence found.
50
Mixed Neuroscience
Gray matter is not interested in monotonous work.
No external evidence found to verify or refute this claim. It is presented as a scientific statement but lacks evidence from neuroscience research provided in the context.
Fact Check Score None
Fact Check Weight 0
Web Consensus Score None
Web Consensus Weight 0
Source Quality Score 50
Source Quality Weight 0
Llm Reasoning Score 50
Llm Reasoning Weight 100
Weighted Total 50
Evidence Summary No external evidence found.

Try Infact

Instant AI-powered fact-checking — on any platform

Chrome Extension WhatsApp Telegram Telegram Group Telegram Channel