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My notes taken from reading science blogs at ResearchBlogging.

Older stuff

3. 9. 2012

  • Everybody wants the same financial equality in the USvery 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

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.

2. 11. 2012

6. 11. 2012

  • Your brain on psilocybin (aka mushrooms) – a) the „mind-expanding“ effect of psilocybin actually comes from supressing brain activity in centres related to self b) there seems to be some data supporting the theory that a big amount of brain activity goes to reducing our inputs, so we only consciously handle signals deemed important by our brain; if you shut those filters down, you get hallucinations. I agree with the author: „ I do think the idea that psilocybin permits an “unconstrained style of cognition” is an intriguing one.“
  • How flavor and texture alter how full we expect a food to make us feel – increasing creamy flavor made people expect to be more filled, but only increasing thickness (texture, not flavor) actually did the job.
  • The changing face of british suicide – in 1979/83 many of the suicides were in white-collar professions; in 2005 the top 30 were blue-collar professions only, with coal miners rising from #29 to #1. Quote: „What's more, the correlation between socioeconomic status and suicide rates increased sharply over time. Suicide is now much more of a class issue than it was in the past.“
  • Peer reviewed research predicted NYC subway flooding by Sandy„The combined effects of storm climatology change and a 1 m sea level rise may cause the present NYC 100-yr surge flooding to occur every 3–20 yr and the present 500-yr flooding to occur every 25–240 yr by the end of the century.“ AKA watch out for global warming.
  • Outdated pain theories, part 2 -- posture and body structure. It's dubious whether bad posture means chronic pain (the research doesn't support any such claim), and even if a correlation existed, it doesn't mean causation – the bad posture could be a result of pain. But good posture is still good.
  • Outdated pain theories, part 3 -- muscle imbalances & the "core". Again, the awkward exercises done to strenghten allegedly weak muscles could be helping simply because any exercise helps. The evidence isn't there. Plus, „core“ seems like a bullshit concept entirely.
  • Defining music – an article about a paper on music & language. The definition of music is surprisingly difficult for these reasons: 1) Music varies across cultures, 2) musical practice varies over time, even within the same culture, 3) how music feels is very ambiguous, even on an emotional level, 4) any sound can be treated musically. I agree with the blogger that the best definition would probably be something like „creative play with sound with the conscious intention of producing music“.
  • Language as a form of music – the same paper as before; the claim that language is just a subset of music is dubious, but there is a very interesting and tight correlation in times of developing related music & language skills (see this timeline).

13. 11. 2012

  • Evidence against low-sugar depleted will-power theory – there was a theory that will-power depletion is caused by low levels of sugar. It seems maybe the real effect wasn't in raising glucose levels in blood but in the mouth, from which it goes to the brain and stimulates a region that gets tired, or causes a reward effect, thus making the current task seem more rewarding than before.
  • Political animals – a recap of some well-known self-organization ant (and bee) experiments, and a useful list (for us to learn from) – Tom Seeley’s Five Habits of Highly Effective Hives: 1) Group members share a goal, 2) Group members search broadly to find possible solutions to the problem, 3) Group members contribute their information freely and honestly, 4) Group members evaluate the options independently and they vote independently, 5) Group members aggregate their votes fairly.
  • When ants get together to make a decision. Another article about ants and self-organization. The zinger? “Cognitive overload is a growing issue for human decision making, as unprecedented access to data poses new challenges to individual processing abilities,” Pratt and Sasaki wrote in their journal article. “Human groups also solve difficult problems better when each group member has only limited access to information.”
  • Election norms. – a great article talking about descriptive („People do this“) and prescriptive („Do this“) norms and which works when. Quote: „The researchers conclude that when it comes to getting people not to do something (e.g. “Don’t take the wood!”), prescriptive norms work best. However, when you are trying to get people to act, it’s actually more effective to send out an “Everybody’s doing it!” descriptive norm, which will encourage people to fit themselves into the norm.“
  • Why the Obama campaign is telling you about people who share your name. (similar article) – a specific example of descriptive norms (see the previous article): tell a person that other people with the same name voted for Obama and they're more likely to do so too.
  • Mathematics learning disorders.In summary, this research review found that mathematics learning disorder affects about 7% of all children, but that functional innumeracy may be found in up to 25% of the adult population. Contains definitions of relevant disorders. Interesting read, though I still blame how education is set up in general.
  • Outdated pain theories -- conclusion. The problem with doctors giving wrong explanations for pain is that most of them lead to people fear movement, especially exercise, but exercise typically helps.
  • Agrivida publishes details of engineered maize for biofuel. A great example of helpful genetic modification. There's a way to modify corn (specifically corn stover, not the food part) so it contains enzymes which, when heated up, do the work that needed to be done (expensively) to turn it into a fuel. Quote: I think this is a really great advance – innovative use of biotechnology to solve a real world problem!

December 2012

  • How to be more pessimistic. Do you have problems with being overly optimistic when planning so you underestimated the time needed? Plan in more detail!
  • Introverts use more concrete language then extraverts – introverts tend to describe situations with more factual statements (Camiel yells at Martin), whereas extraverts describe personality (Camiel is unfriendly). The important difference is that facts are situational, but personality traits are more enduring.
  • Brain may see more than the eyes – not entirely surprisingly, vision is much more about the computation/interpretation done on sensory data, than the data itself.
  • For brain tumors, origins matter – brain cancer can originate from two kinds of cells, and based on this information better treatment can be chosen. This seems trivial, but hopefuly it means a shift in the somewhat random way medical research is being conducted.
  • Psilocybin could improve quality of life in the terminally ill – psilocybin, the psychedelic compound in mushrooms, has a lasting positive effect in the terminally ill. There are two things worth mentioning: first, the change was lasting. The mystical experience left something behind which changed people's behavior for months and even years ahead. Second, the effect is caused by shifting focus from ones' self to the environment (those are the feelings of „oneness“ with the universe).
  • Mind transfer – a summary of what are the missing pieces to emulating brains. We're still miles from the target, but the idea of which obstacles need to be overcome is much clearer now.
  • Science on crack 5: The science of weed – an entertaining article about how weed works and how to get the other drugs from it. Really well written.
  • The ultimate optical surface – amazing piece nanotechnology (very neat idea) possibly leading to applications in solar panels, metal coloring, electronics and others.
  • How organizations need to forget – just like people selectively remember and forget based on the subconscious narrative they have, so do organizations (with a specific example of a French aviation company, whose employees didn't recall important foreign involvement).
  • Perception of climate change: Dice with four sides hot. A great article demonstrating on an accessible example what global warming really is about: not days being always hot, but more days being hot – if we take the data from 1951-1980 as base, so with the dice two sides mean cold, two sides neutral and two sides hot, the current dice has four sides hot.
  • The new psychology of awkward moments – besides recounting well-known awkwardness inducers, an interesting observation about what made awkwardness go away: when people were sharing common interests, when one person helped another, when one person was positive about another, and humour. It's notable that a lot of the humour was actually about social awkwardness - joking about it seemed to make it go away.
  • Why personal attacks are good politicsHere’s how the study helps explain some of the dynamics that paralyze the American political process. The backbone of good public policy is the act of screwing over a small population for the greater good. Almost no policies benefit everybody, but if you can create a relatively large benefit for a small cost you should do it, and the idea is that voters will understand what you did and like you. However, if people can acknowledge you created good policy while simultaneously thinking less of you for it, that’s an enormous disincentive to create good policy. And because almost all good policy involves screwing somebody, it’s not hard for people to come up with a reason to think less of you for it, especially when your opposition is constantly on every TV network explaining why you’re a bad person. Suddenly the 10% of people who are screwed by your policy are trumping the 90% of people your policy helps. At the end of the day it becomes better for your personal reputation to do nothing.
  • Is ambiguity dysfunctional for communicatively efficient systems?my favorite from this series. Why is there ambiguity in language? The hypothesis is: The essential asymmetry is: inference is cheap, articulation expensive, and thus the design requirements are for a system that maximizes inference. (Hence … linguistic coding is to be thought of less like definitive content and more like interpretive clue.) – and this seems to be supported by pretty strong evidence. What does it mean for us? Maybe for the types inclining to the overly rational side – have bigger faith that other understand what you're saying.

Catching up 2013 #1

  • Charging cars from the roads with the steel belts in the tires – a possible way to charge electromobiles on highways. The efficiency isn't disappointing – 75% (tested on a 1:32 model).
  • When to switch on background music – German scientists did a meta-study of the effect of background music on effectiveness and didn't find much tu surprise us, except: „[…] one positive effect stands out. [There's a] curious, positive effect of music on simple math tests. This is in line with a recent study by Avila and colleagues who found a positive effect of music on logical reasoning. Could it be that the negative effect of background music on concentration tasks is found because these tasks are nearly always language based? Music and language have been claimed to share a lot of mental resources.“ Makes sense.
  • The "memory palace" mnemonic strategy (Memory Palace at Wikipedia) – are you open to trying out a memory technique? This one seems to work fairly consistently.
  • System justification theory and the inertia of school reform – school reform is needed, so it's interesting to know what's slowing it down. System justification theory (wiki) says that we try to rationalize whatever shortcomings of a system we're a part of, but when outside of it we can evaluate it much more clearly. The idea of this article is that it's hard to push for school reform because it means that what we went through as kids was crap – we want to believe that if it was good enough for us, it has to be good enough for our kids.
  • The problem with math is that it makes people seem smart – a sociology/anthropology paper was modified to contain a nonsense math equation, which made people judge it as of higher quality. This effect wasn't seen when read by participants with degrees in mathematics, science, technology or medicine (interesting). The larger problem here is that the people who exhibit this effect obviously don't even try to understand and take a mere equation as a sign of being smart, which is a very undersirable attitude.
  • A little mind wandering can go a long way – at first sight a not-so-surprising result, but there's a kicker. First, people are set to do a creative task (e.g. write down a list of things a brick can be used for). Then they are divided into three groups: do nothing, do something where your mind wanders, focus on something else. Then, try to come up with more things. The kicker? The middle („wandering“) group performed 40% better not just than the last („focus“) group, but also the first („do nothing“) group. I would've thought the mind-wandering would happen anyway, but it seems like one has to actually do something unrelated for the subconscious to kick in.
  • Biofuel that's better than carbon neutral – a great article about carbon negative fuels. First part is about algae-based approaches which have downsides, most importantly that they are fertilizer (nitrogen, phosphorus) intense. Second part is about a different technique which seems very promising and is backed up by Google and others (and a model plant is already running and close to profitable).
  • MIT's milli-motein – a pretty out there article about the idea of programmable matter. Contains a nice video of the model they build, which is basically a chain of motors programmable to switch different shapes. It's nice, but really just a first step.
researchblogging.1358552973.txt.gz · Poslední úprava: 2013/01/19 00:49 autor: Martin Koutecky