@weberam2 Follow people who people you follow follow. Follow people who seem vaguely interesting.
Without the algorithm, follows should be *much* cheaper (you can always unfollow later).
If you don't build up a good base of people to follow, this place will seem barren. But once you get that good list, it's just as lively and fun as anywhere else.
Also, consider setting up Lists based on hashtags you find interesting; that'll also help you to find new people to follow.
As for servers, QOTO is a good one. The only reason I'd seriously consider switching is if I someday launch my own instance.
This substack post about how our understanding of the #cerebellum has been so wrong for so long (or at least those of us not paying attention)
I'm probably making a cardinal mistake, but my takeaway simplified understanding is that the cerebrum is more distributed/ slow learning, while the cerebellum is for super fast execution of heuristics it has learned. Kind of like CPU vs GPU?
Did you know the cerebellum has 80% of all neurons in the brain? Or that it essentially maps almost every part of the cerebrum, even down to language being localized on the left? Get out of here...
https://sarahconstantin.substack.com/p/what-does-the-cerebellum-do-anyway
Last toot about #vim (for now)
Learning the basic vim motions can seriously help in other domains.
I've installed a #Firefox plugin so that I can navigate better with my keyboard.
I'm also using a #zsh (my current shell) plugin that allows me to use vim motions to edit commands etc. That may sound strange but I find it incredibly useful.
Finally, my terminal emulator #Alacritty has some basic visual vim options for scrolling and copy/yanking text.
I almost feel like learning vim motions should become more standard... am I crazy?
I really want to stay with #mastodon
Threads and Bluesky I feel will all just eventually go the way of #enshittification
What are some tips on improving my experience?
Should I change my server from qoto.org?
Should I use a third party app? Currently I'm rocking the official app (I think)
Any other tips?
My toot about #neovim being my #IDE got some traction.
I'm curious why others are using it over something more popular like #VSCode.
Especially as VSCode has a vim plugin.
Personally I don't trust Microsoft to not eventually #enshittify it. Plus there was that whole thing with #telemetry. And I won't pretend to fully understand, but it seems like a sneaky version of #opensource.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but Neovim, and I believe most if not all the plugins, appear to be more truly open source... if that makes sebse. Again, there are complexities there I'm only beginning to figure out.
@beatzball
Actually, LazyVim is the one I've settled on as it has been the easiest to get up and running and to figure out how to config myself. I started with NVchad, then Kickstart, and Cyber... and maybe some others
But LazyVim has been the best
@PhiloNeuroScie@neuromatch.social
Sort of unrelated. But your mention of Robin Williams immediately made me remember the Love Has Won cult. https://www.hbo.com/love-has-won-the-cult-of-mother-god
Anyone else trying to use #neovim as their #IDE?
It's both fun and frustrating (steep learning curve)
I'm using the #LazyVim config after trying a lot of the other ones.
Also, obligatory shout out to #Alacritty and #Tmux
Great read. Hard to summarize.
But basically: people have been buying bigger cars/trucks. Which has creates a positive feedback of people feeling unsafe unless they also drive bigger vehicles. Which means with electric, people want big. But big EVs are super heavy and expensive. Which is bad for many reasons.
All of that is to say: the future needs us to majorly rethink transport. How can we both: improve public transport and infrastructure to make people drive less; and how can we get people to drive smaller cars when they do.
https://www.businessinsider.com/electric-car-ev-sales-prices-problem-transportation-2024-1
I love this quote about complexity
https://www.jstor.org/stable/2459579
Robert May and George Oster, circa 1976 at the time of the introduction of one of the niftiest equations, the logistic map.
(It has a single parameter (R), and tweaking it moves the system from collapse to a set point attractor to an oscillator to chaos)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logistic_map
@NicoleCRust
When I was first starting being a scientist I read Steve strogatz "Sync" as a pop science primer to nonlinear dynamics and chaos and this idea of simple systems being far more complex than they have any right to be has stuck with me as one of my main meta-interests in this world. Love this quote
"Psychologists in particular wanted a statistical skeleton key to unlock true experimental insights. It was an unrealistic burden to place on statistics, but the longing for a mathematical seal of approval burned hot."
https://www.sciencenews.org/article/statistical-significance-p-value-null-hypothesis-origins
@nadege good idea!
My MSc student Allison (graduated this summer) has had her first manuscript published as a preprint. https://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2023.12.08.570818v1
Next step is to get it peer-reviewed and published in a reputable journal (suggestions?)
We looked at the Hurst Exponent in preterm babies shortly after birth and at term age, and compared to healthy terms. We found the HE started below 0.5 and then crossed the 0.5 line sometime around 39 weeks. Sensory and motor networks developed fastest. And finally, the younger you are born, the slower HE increases
Let me know what you think!
#neuroscience #braindevelopment #criticality #braincriticality
@naomilawsonjacobs this interview is so good
"Where Did the Open Access Movement Go Wrong?" This is a really interesting interview. While I strongly support the #OA movement, it's also clear that OA has been coopted by many traditional journals to make money, entrenching barriers to academic publishing for unfunded, nontraditional and marginalised scholars. Leaving many of us unable to afford to publish. (Not forgetting the fantastic mainly-online journals that have no APCs on principle, which I know there are more and more of.)
@davidkhardman thank you for sharing! This is a great interview: essentially open access has failed as we are not addressing affordability and equity in publishing, and many OA papers still require ridiculous costs to pay to publish OA in the first place
'Where did the open access movement go wrong?'
#science #openaccess
https://scholarlykitchen.sspnet.org/2023/12/07/where-did-the-open-access-movement-go-wrong-an-interview-with-richard-poynder/
There is a new book 📚 on #DataScience for #Neuroimaging by Ariel Rokem & Tal Yarkoni, including #Pythob #programming, #DataManagement, #visualization, and #MachineLearning and their application to neuroimaging.
🌍 https://press.princeton.edu/books/ebook/9780691222745/data-science-for-neuroimaging
Assistant Professor at UBC; MRI, Medical Imaging, Neuroscience; Books and Mountains
https://github.com/WeberLab
weberlab.github.io