Incredibly sad to hear of Daniel Dennett's passing. He was an astonishing thinker whose groundbreaking ideas guided me (and numerous others) towards a much more scientific and sane world.
Thank you for your intuition pumps, memes, unwavering pursuit of truth, and service to human thinking in general.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/19/books/daniel-dennett-dead.html
A while back, I heard a comedian describe an anecdote where they asked their possibly autistic friend if they were "on the spectrum", and the friend responded "we're all on the spectrum - that's why it's a spectrum". The punchline being something like "it was completely accurate but also the most on-the-spectrum answer someone could give".
I like the idea of it and have trouble finding a more accurate or illustrative example. Is it problematic when delivered with care?
A legend has died.
This man has been very influential to me.
I look forward to reading his newest book (From Bacteria...) and his memoir.
https://dailynous.com/2024/04/19/daniel-dennett-death-1942-2024/
@neuralreckoning man this picture is perfect for describing how trees grow their branches/leaves using fractal geometry to maximize surface area in a limited volume
The next chapter about transformers is up on YouTube, digging into the attention mechanism: https://youtu.be/eMlx5fFNoYc
The model works with vectors representing tokens (think words), and this is the mechanism that allows those vectors to take in meaning from context.
Good to see the Journal of Neuroscience move on to open peer review. 6 months in, would be interesting to know the opt-out rate for authors and for reviewers.
Regarding publication costs, indeed the ~$6000 seems excessive; it’s 3x the cost of publishing in eLife, for example.
I've been following @e_urq of Assigned Media for a long time, but this article is particularly brilliant.
The Pope declaring some people "less worthy of dignity" is deeply horrifying. Evan's response is deeply orienting, the way truth is when you hear it.
"When I lectured the police on moral injury...I was drawing on whatever I had inside me to assert my worth in a situation designed to deprive me of my dignity"
#transrightsarehumanrights
#transgender #dignity
https://www.assignedmedia.org/breaking-news/transgender-dignity-responding-pope-francis
Also… Oxford Open Neuroscience💫 publishes reviews alongside the papers- check out the supplement 👀 #neuroscience
Ho lee shit.
The AP has found that the number of deaths caused by the police in the US is SIGNIFICANTLY higher than thought because they're not always reported as being "officer-involved."
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The investigation found that between 2012 and 2021, more than a thousand people died after police use physical force that was not intended to be lethal. That includes batons, stun guns, physical restraints, and chemical agents. The oldest victim was 95 and the youngest 15.
Only 28 of the officers were charged.
The Police role was only cited in about half of the cases, meaning that many more Americans have died at the hands of the police than was previously known.
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Watch the PBS segment here
https://youtu.be/5rrMUfbGVlM?feature=shared
#PoliceBrutality #PoliceDontKeepUsSafe #FuckThePolice #DefundDisarmDismantle
Wondering about the current state of affairs of data science and data management in neuroscience collaborations? Wondering where your tax dollars go? Well, wonder no more! Edgar Walker, Guoqiang Yu and myself collected some data! And opinions :-) https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.03.20.585936v1
Does anyone know of publicly available structural, diffusion, and functional data of babies to preschool age?
I know of the baby connectome project, but I can't find any data access for that
@ttpphd what's up? Family, work, other?
https://danluu.com/discontinuities/
Great examples of how sharp cutoffs can influence humans. I liked the p-values and the marathon finishing times
So about five days ago, or so, people on Bsky and Twttr started highlighting Elsevier science papers with GPT/LLM hallmark phrases riddled all throughout them. Literally thousands of peer-reviewed papers.
As I said, then, and as I discussed in my dissertation, knowledge-making and expertise are always a tricky process, but it needs deep, intentional confrontation and reform:
https://media.proquest.com/media/hms/PRVW/1/twSaS?_s=yIAhHtzhif4xd76I%2BihtcJJXTPw%3D
Anyway, now it looks like @404mediaco has dug down on this, and found *Even More of It* and I am genuinely and completely struggling against despair at what the future of being an educator, researcher, and writer will even mean over and at the end of the next 5 years.
https://www.404media.co/scientific-journals-are-publishing-papers-with-ai-generated-text/
Quite frankly, this should genuinely a) be the death of peer review as we know it (Again: AS WE KNOW IT), and b) lead a complete reformulation of the knowledge-making and expertise processes, but it won't and that terrifies and saddens me.
It's 2024 and most text editors don't have a column-select mode. How can anyone live without it.
Lightning fast, self-contained explorable explanations!
https://rowanc1.github.io/myst-lite/
This uses Thebe, a tool that connects a "static" webpage with a Jupyter Kernel to make the page "dynamic" with interactive computation. It also uses JupyterLite, which means the kernel is provided *within the browser*.
More at:
Great article about the history of scientific publishing. What a mess
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2017/jun/27/profitable-business-scientific-publishing-bad-for-science
“The Cloud now has a greater carbon footprint than the airline industry. A single data center can consume the equivalent electricity of 50,000 homes. At 200 terawatt hours annually, data centers collectively devour more energy than some nation-states.”
https://thereader.mitpress.mit.edu/the-staggering-ecological-impacts-of-computation-and-the-cloud/
Assistant Professor at UBC; MRI, Medical Imaging, Neuroscience; Books and Mountains
https://github.com/WeberLab
weberlab.github.io