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@ct_bergstrom Not sure what's this rant about. Nobody ever said decoder models are perfect or will have an actual understanding of the world. (Ok, maybe except for that one Google guy) OpenAI released a beta product which is incredibly helpful if used correctly but people like you just focus on its mistakes. It's like hating on cars because they can't take the stairs.

@ct_bergstrom The LLM isn't bullshitting, because it's just a machine. It has no intentionality and no mind.

The engineers and execs at tech companies who are leveraging LLMs: they are bullshitting. It's an act of malice and should be treated as such.

@ct_bergstrom Disagree. They're designed to mimic what a human would write. If they end up bullshitting it's because the models aren't good enough, not because that's what they're designed to do.

@giladfeldman Do you know ? pubpeer.com/

It's not quite what you are talking about but I think it goes in the right direction. There is also a handy Chrome plugin to link to comments on PubPeer on pages that cite papers.

= Sharing peer review publicly? =

In a discussion with non-academics there was a consensus that us not sharing our peer review process publicly violates what they perceive as our scientific integrity & our commitment to them as key stakeholders and indirect funders.

My reply: yes, I agree.

Question 👇

@giladfeldman I think we should, indeed. I find that reading reviews (in those journals that share them) often gives you a different view on the article.

@brewsterkahle Not just avoiding paywalls, but also avoiding the encumbrance of getting access via all those different publisher interfaces, I reckon.

@villavelius @brewsterkahle yes! as far as I know, sci-hub is the only way to get PDFs by DOI via a proper API that you can use on the command line or in Python scripts (e.g. pypi.org/project/scidownl/ ). obviously this is really practical or even a necessity for larger-scale systematic literature research. so even if the publication is open-access or you have official access in some other way, sci-hub can just be much more practical to use.

@lakens This is an excellent point, and one that is seldom made. It actually makes power analysis easier, if anything. I don't know what effect I'll see, otherwise I wouldn't need to do the experiment...

“I dashed out to grab some drugstore makeup to paint our faces with insignia from Cars and Star Wars. The random blocks of bright white, iridescent gold, and thick blues and reds reminded me of the Zinc sunscreen my own mother painted on my face for our Disney trips in the 1980s. She was protecting us from sunburn, I was warding off facial recognition systems.” — @cyberlyra

publicbooks.org/data-free-disn

#surveillance #capitalism #peopleFarming #disney

Here's an analysis I have done on editorial processing times in Hindawi special issues; psyarxiv.com/6mbgv. I think there's v circumstantial evidence for paper mill infestation.

Hello world! 📢

The #Bioconductor EuroBioc 2023 conference will be in Ghent, Belgium 🇧🇪 on the 20, 21, 22 September 2023. More details, including keynote speakers and calendar at eurobioc2023.bioconductor.org/

Oh, and abstract submissions are already open!

𝚖𝚊𝚛𝚐𝚒𝚗𝚊𝚕𝚎𝚏𝚏𝚎𝚌𝚝𝚜 0.9.0 is a BIG📦release! Simple yet powerful tools to help you interpret the results of over 70 classes of models in #RStats (GLM, GAM, discrete choice, mixed-effects, bayesian, etc.) 🧵 on some cool new stuff. vincentarelbundock.github.io/m

I know is evil and all that jazz... but it can actually tell me how to write code :ablobmeltsoblove: . That's a time saving of 3 days per line of code (well, it took only 3 attempts...).

One feature that can be annoying or extremely useful, depending on your workflow, is that when you click on a file in your project, it is open in "preview mode". The file won't stay open and the tab will be reused to open any other file you click on unless you modify it.

I just discovered that you can either:

- double click on the file to open it persistently
- change the workbench.editor.enablePreview
parameter in the settings to disable preview altogether! (there are specific settings workbench.editor.enablePreviewFromQuickOpen and workbench.editor.enablePreviewFromCodeNavigation if you want to control preview mode only in specific cases)

Just learned you can vertically split the in which is extremely useful to have a second terminal to do some on-the-fly tests while running a Shiny app!

Lots to like in the new #dplyr 1.1.0 release (which just hit CRAN). Obviously the new data.table-inspired `.by` and non-equi joins are highlights. But I just re-ran some standard benchmarks on my machine and its definitely faster too. E.g. A big grouped collapse on some NYC taxi data is about twice as fast as it used to be. #rstats

@HydrePrever @peter_mcmahan I generally suggest using VSCode, since you can use it for any other language as well. However I don't like telling students they should use a specific environment. I'll let them decide. I've used RStudio for a long time and I believe that, politics aside, they did an amazing job at improving the R community and increase the popularity of R.

While I see some reasons to use base R in some situations I profoundly dislike certain 'holier than thou' attitudes towards using tidyverse or ggplot.
It was that type of attitude that kept me away from using Linux for a long time.

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