I have just uploaded a new preprint: "Concerns about Replicability, Theorizing, Applicability, Generalizability, and Methodology across Two Crises in Social Psychology". I was amazed at how much history is repeating. https://psyarxiv.com/dtvs7/ It is full of extremely cool quotes from the previous crisis that could just as easily have been written in 2015. I don't know why I didn't know about all these papers, but I hope to spread some historical awareness among my fellow meta-scientists.
Do you know where the term “liberal arts” comes from? I long assumed it meant “liberal” as in “all-inclusive” or something…but no. The original Latin phrase, _artes liberalis_, means roughly “skills or practiced principles worthy of a free person.” Free as in taking a fully privileged part in civic life. Free as in self-determining. Free as in not a servant or a slave.
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This thread is now available as a blog post:
https://innig.net/teaching/liberal-arts-manifesto
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In college, I took a class called The Letters of Paul. I took it for two very good reasons:
1. I was (and am) named Paul.
2. The prof, Cal Roetzel, was (and is) cool.
I didn’t figure it was an especially practical course. It was for fun, for the challenge, for the cultural knowledge, for the pleasure of doing it.
WHAT LIBERAL ARTS EDUCATION IS FOR: A THREAD
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For the 28% who don't know pipx yet, I really like it: it's a tool for installing Python CLI utilities that gives them their own hidden virtual environment for their dependencies and then adds the tool itself to your PATH - so you can install stuff without worrying about it breaking anything else
pipx install sqlite-utils
pipx install datasette
pipx install llm
Given that "the era of exponential growth in academic research is over", Casey Bergman had (2012) some advice for senior academics:
"3) For established academics: you came up during the halcyon days of growth in science, so bear in mind that you had it easy relative to those trying to make it today. So when you set your expectations for your students or junior colleagues in terms of performance, recruitment or tenure, be sure to take on board that they have it much harder now than you did at the corresponding point in your career [see points 1) and 2)]. A corollary of this point is that anyone actually succeeding in science now and in the future is (on average) probably better trained and works harder than you (at the corresponding point in your career), so on the whole you are probably dealing with someone who is more qualified for their job than you would be. So don’t judge your junior colleagues with out-of-date views (that you might not be able to achieve yourself in the current climate) and promote values from a bygone era of incessant growth. Instead, adjust your views of success for the 21st century and seek to promote a sustainable model of scientific career development that will fuel innovation for the next hundred years."
HT @quantixed
#academia #science #ECR #EarlyCareerScientists #TenureTrack #PhD
Who is your favorite illustrator for journal covers?
Glasgow Psychology/Neuroscience is hiring! Four tenured lectureships in Behavioural Neuroscience (animal x 3 and human x 1) Closing Date: 20th July 2023 Please boost https://www.nature.com/naturecareers/job/12800829/senior-lecturer-lecturer-research-and-teaching-track-4-posts-/
Cool paper from Shadlen lab: simulataneous recordings from LIP and SC reveal that SC terminated the decision process in random dot tasks.
https://chng.it/CwqshSFdPV support security staff at UCL
A short argument for why the big publishers cannot be part of a publishing reform effort
Science is stuck in a vicious cycle it is hard to escape from. The decision to publish a scientific paper is made based on an evaluation of its likely importance and technical correctness. Scientists are evaluated based on these publication decisions, and resources (jobs, grants and promotions) are distributed accordingly.
The current system distorts scientific priorities. Science is incredibly competitive, resources are allocated on a short term basis, and the primary metric used to evaluate scientists is their publication record. As a consequence, there is an unavoidable pressure to select problems and design studies that can lead to results that are likely to be favourably evaluated and published in the short term. This is in opposition to the long term scientific value, a fact that appears to be widely acknowledged by working scientists (https://www.vox.com/2016/7/14/12016710/science-challeges-research-funding-peer-review-process).
The current system is a vicious cycle and stable equilibrium. In principle, we could choose to evaluate scientists and their work in a better way. However, no individual or small group can do this alone. If an institution chooses to hire scientists who do work that they believe will be of enduring scientific value despite being unlikely to win short term grant funding, they will take a huge financial hit. Public research is under such severe resource constraints that this is simply not feasible for most institutions even if they wished to do so. Similarly, a public funding body that makes decisions based on long term scientific value and not short term publishability is likely to be able to count fewer high profile papers in their output, and compared to other funding bodies will appear to be underperforming when they are reviewed at the government level. Individual scientists have even less flexibility than these institutions.
Journal prestige cements this problem. It is the widespread availability of an easily calculated metric based on journal prestige that makes this cycle so hard to break. If there were no such metric, different groups could try different approaches and the effect would not be so obvious in the short term. The availability of the metric forces all institutions to follow the same strategy, and makes it hard to deviate from this strategy.
The majority of big publishers commercial value rests on their journal prestige. If there were no funding implications to publishing in one journal rather than another, scientists would be free to choose based on price or features. There are widely available solutions with better features at virtually no cost. Consequently, the entire business model of these publishers would collapse without the journal prestige signal.
Big publishers therefore cannot be part of the needed reforms. The success of these reforms would untie the evaluation of the quality of scientific work from the journal it is published in, and this would destroy the business model of these publishers. They will therefore do everything in their power to resist such reform.
Divorcing from the big publishers will not be enough. Journal prestige is the cement of the current negative stable equilibrium, but eliminating that will not guarantee a globally better system. We need systems for publishing and evaluating science that is diverse and under the control of researchers. This is what we intend to do with Neuromatch Open Publishing (https://nmop.io/).
Since announcing our new publishing model, we’ve been pleased with the engagement and questions we’ve had from the scientific community. We’ve compiled four of our most frequently asked questions and their answers here: https://elifesciences.org/inside-elife/2b765a27/elife-s-new-model-your-questions-answered?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=organic
Closing soon!
We’re seeking a postdoc to develop computational accounts of how humans and other animals make foraging decisions, in collaboration with the groups of @Brain_apps (Birmingham) and Nathan Lepora (Bristol).
Post is until 14th Feb 2025. Closing March 30th 2023.
Email me for queries
Pls Boost!
More details and application: https://jobs.nottingham.ac.uk/vacancy.aspx?ref=SCI092323
We just covered this paper at Journal Club and it is impressive:
"Tracking neural activity from the same cells during the entire adult life of mice". Nature #Neuroscience 2023
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41593-023-01267-x
Flexible implants such as this (and Neuralink's) are ideal because they move with the brain. An issue with this one is that it cuts lots of axons during implantation. But its longevity is amazing. And this study counts the gray hairs on mice!
@mattreynolds I think your article on about cruelty to insects is a bit misguided considering how important (for the future of humanity) it is to reduce our dependence on cows, pigs, etc.
Jonathan Birch's views on animal sentience are influential, but they are not necessarily mainstream.
Great paper by @anneurai & C. Kelly in @eLife : academia must change to respond to the climate crisis, by shifting from a business producing papers and graduated students to a system that works towards well being, community building and fairness ! 🌈 🤝
https://elifesciences.org/articles/84991?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=organic
I wrote this post about my experience striking for the first time as an early career researcher
https://thompsonj.github.io/strikes
Despite the stress and unpleasantness, I've found immense inspiration in the strikes.
@OxfordUCU #ucuRISING #ucustrikes #ecrchat
Heard about MyST, a nice new way of writing papers using Markdown, but overwhelmed by how to get started? You could try this GitHub template I just created. Each time you edit and commit files in the repo, GitHub automatically builds a docx and pdf.
This is a pretty simple implementation for the moment, but I'll hopefully be adding some more features to it as I experiment with MyST. Thanks to Rowan Cockett and team for building the tech and advice.
Catastrophic (and to be frank - hugely depressing)
This new research in @PNASNews suggests earth will cross the 1.5 degrees C temperature increase threshold in the next decade (within just 10 to 15 years) and is likely to exceed 2 degrees C by around 2060.
This should be THE lead story on the news today (and onwards) and the lead action point for our governments. It should trigger a massive call for real global action to combat the #climateemergency - sadly though I fear this news will barely register.
We have to stop believing the siren calls of future technology solutions and #carbonoffsets - the immediate need is a rapid end to the use of #fossilfuels and a massive rollout of #renewableenergy
cognition is neural computation that is not implement through one-hot encoding.
agree or disagree?
@NicoleCRust @markdhumphries @albertcardona