researchblogging
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- How to survive the health care system (About the corruption of the system)
3. 9. 2012
- Everybody wants the same financial equality in the US – very interesting article (and statistic).
- Truthiness – how presentation of facts/claims matters. What to learn from this: a) Accompany information with pictures, b) think about the processing the viewer is doing in his/her head. That'll help you get through to them better.
- ‘t Hooft and quantum computation – our path to quantum computation might be longer than expected. Math shows why.
- Why I hope this is the last paralympics – „I'm a swimmer, not a disabled person.“ It is true that I think of Stephen Hawking as a brilliant physicist first and as a disabled person second. The paralympics should join the olympics as suggested in the article.
18. 9. 2012
- Epigenetics gives Darwin the finger – a really well written article on epigenetics propagating through genes. (Sweden: if a grandfather lived through a famine, the grandchild has a lower risk of cardiovascular and similar disease. If a grandfather lived through a good harvest year, the grandchild has a higher chance of diabetes. an environmental condition was imprinted on the genes and passed on to the next generation)
- What infants teach us about preventing obesity – the differences in NEAT (Non-exercises activity thermogenesis) among people are huge and could explain why some tend to be obese more than others, and why they stay that way even if they change their diet somewhat substantially.
- Why we are slaves of food obsession – maybe the key to fighting obesity is in hacking hormones which drive us to food / make us overeat.
- Humanities aren't a science, stop treating them like one – an encouraging article about humanities and maybe even their relationship with „hard“ sciences.
- Reclaiming the sacred gift – a post-scriptum to the previous article.
- What makes beauty subjective? – a Self-determination theory look at beauty, how it came about, how it's not serving us the best in the age of billboard models and how to hack it so we love what we want to love.
- What makes us accept unacceptable acts – if we agree with an event in its benign beginnings, we're more likely to find excuses for when it turns evil (think 9/11 → torture).
- Kids who sleep later do better in school – 'nough said.
- Robbers cave experiment – intergroup conflict genesis and resolution.
21. 10. 2012
- Later sexual initiation predicts relationship satisfaction in adulthood – so you're saying there might be something to „no sex before marriage“ after all?
- Doplhins pull endless all nighters – turns out that dolphins can „half-sleep“ by shutting down one half of the brain, yet retain full conciousness, and alternate this for (possibly) months. Whoa.
- Sometimes health-care policy has nothing to do with health – a different perspective on the US healt-care debate: people actually have a problem with perceiving any form of „socialized medicine“ as benefiting the „freeloaders“; thus the public opinion may be shifted by focusing on this aspect (and/or making people cut the „freeloaders“ some slack…?). Generally speaking though, an encouragement to dig deeper into people's motivations in any discussion, really.
- When do people whistle-blow? – people need to feel a responsibility, not fear co-worker invalidation and have as much evidence and leverage as possible. Possible application: focus on encouraging whistle-blowing more; all we do now is talk about protection after the act (if anything). Practical scenario: schools.
- Does violence successfully deter more violence? – not really, though it is complicated. Quoting the paper itself: „It seems that, ironically, defeat does not lower an adversary’s motivation for violence but may increase it and draw into the conflict third parties toward which aggression was displaced.“
- Mindfullness – everybody keeps writing about mindfullness, yet I still don't really know what it is. More research needed.
- Can we build a more efficient airplane? – not really, but the demonstration is awesomely intuitive and well written; also the discussion contains some interesting ideas (Waverider design).
- Myth busting ain't easy (original article) – accessible article, cool illustrations and stories.
- The Biological Internet – the scientists created a virus which doesn't harm it's host, but waits for a DNA strand to float by and if it does, it gets assimilated, replicated many times and released. They go on to claim this gives a way for precisely targeted delivery of information that can be then processed in all sorts of ways. Orchestrating the cooperation of cells to form artificial tissues, or even artificial organisms is just one possibility.. Keep an eye on this.
- Seralini GM fed rats – great debunking of the „GM fed rats die faster“ paper – the statistics just don't hold. A great example of the scientific community holding each other responsible.
- Mirror, mirror on the wall, am I healthy after all? – Mirrors doing health analysis during the typical morning routine. Could be creepy (if it decides to tweet a warning to everyone that today you'll be grumpy), but also very useful (for changes that span over longer periods of time – e.g. I wouldn't notice my skin changing color signifying a deficiency of some vitamin, but my mirror could.)
- The psychology of inefficient markets – When traders are shown the top results, they're reckless and nobody benefits; when shown the results of the last person, they're more conservative, which benefits society. Our incentives for traders are wrong.
- What types of feedback should students receive? – give students positive feedback, especially in areas they're uncertain (they have some idea, but need verification and positive reinforcement). Also, individual computer tutors are probably the future, for some areas at least.
researchblogging.1351868011.txt.gz · Poslední úprava: 2012/11/02 15:53 autor: Martin Koutecky