Over the last year, VincentYu, gwern, myself and others have provided 132 academic papers for the LessWrong community (out of 152 requests, a 87% success rate) through the Free research, editing and articles thread. We originally intended to provide editing, research and general troubleshooting help, but article downloads are by far the most requested service.

If you're doing a LessWrong relevant project we want to help you. If you need help accessing a journal article or academic book chapter, we can get it for you. If you need some research or writing help, we can help there too.

Turnaround times for articles published in the last 20 years or so is usually less than a day. Older articles often take a couple days.

Please make new article requests in the comment section of this thread.

If you would like to help out with finding papers, please monitor this thread for requests. If you want to monitor via RSS like I do, Google Reader will give you the comment feed if you give it the URL for this thread (or use this link directly). 

If you have some special skills you want to volunteer, mention them in the comment section.

Mentioned in
New Comment
751 comments, sorted by Click to highlight new comments since: Today at 8:54 AM
Some comments are truncated due to high volume. (⌘F to expand all)Change truncation settings

I note, by the way, that /r/scholar is also an excellent place to ask for papers. I've seen (and had) requests I thought near-impossible answered within an hour.

I have a big library of about 5,000 pdf's, with books (including textbooks) and papers in philosophy, psychology, statistics, computer science and a few other areas. The library is about 18 GB in size. If folks here can think of an easy way of sharing this material, I'd be happy to make it publicly available.

7Pablo11y
I've made a number of updates over the past weeks, so I thought I should write a brief new comment summarizing the material that is now available for download. There are two separate torrent files, both of which contain the entirety of my electronic library, comprising about 4,100 items mostly in pdf format. One torrent contains all the files uncompressed. You can see the contents of the library and select specific files for downloading. Magnet URI: magnet:?xt=urn:btih:BEDDF7A5647B634C179EA68EBBBAAA80967D9D1D&dn=LessWrong&tr=udp%3a%2f%2ftracker.openbittorrent.com%3a80%2fannounce&tr=udp%3a%2f%2ftracker.publicbt.com%3a80%2fannounce The other torrent contains a single, compressed file, which is about 20% smaller in size. Choose this one if you want to download the entire library. Magnet URI: magnet:?xt=urn:btih:1D845DB543FFF3DE83B66FAA595F1A3D9F42ED42&dn=Library.zip&tr=udp%3a//tracker.openbittorrent.com%3a80/announce
2roland11y
Thanks a lot!
0fiddlemath11y
I know it's old, now, but can you seed the latter again? The swarm's missing about 9% right now.
0[anonymous]11y
I'm still seeding. If anyone is having difficulties downloading the file(s), please let me know.
0fiddlemath11y
Actually, I have the whole thing now, and seed it when I can. My, the internet's a powerful thing when used properly. :)
2roland11y
Is there a way to download individual contents without downloading the whole 15 Gb zip file?
0Pablo11y
Yes: see here.
0[anonymous]11y
BitTorrent. A bit torrent with all papers and books shared for free on LW ever would be really neat especially if we had people share private collections.
7Pablo11y
Good idea. I just created a torrent file. I̶t̶'̶s̶ ̶u̶n̶c̶o̶m̶p̶r̶e̶s̶s̶e̶d̶ ̶s̶o̶ ̶t̶h̶a̶t̶ ̶y̶o̶u̶ ̶c̶a̶n̶ ̶p̶i̶c̶k̶ ̶w̶h̶i̶c̶h̶ ̶P̶D̶F̶'̶s̶ ̶t̶o̶ ̶d̶o̶w̶n̶l̶o̶a̶d̶,̶ ̶i̶n̶ ̶c̶a̶s̶e̶ ̶y̶o̶u̶ ̶d̶o̶n̶'̶t̶ ̶t̶o̶ ̶d̶o̶w̶n̶l̶o̶a̶d̶ ̶t̶h̶e̶ ̶w̶h̶o̶l̶e̶ ̶l̶i̶b̶r̶a̶r̶y̶. (It's now a compressed zip file; see update below.) Here's the magnet URI: magnet:?xt=urn:btih:1D845DB543FFF3DE83B66FAA595F1A3D9F42ED42&dn=Library.zip&tr=udp%3a//tracker.openbittorrent.com%3a80/announce Please note that many (~40%) of the books and articles included here were given to me by several different friends over the past few years. So although the stuff you own does say a lot about you, I'd like to ask those who decide to download this material to kindly abstain from making any strong inferences (flattering or unflattering) about me from the list of items in my library. ;-) I hope to keep seeding indefinitely, but I can't guarantee this for the long term. So please seed, too, if you can. One final thing: if you have a large library of files yourself, please consider sharing it with us! UPDATE: the torrent became corrupted when I added new files to the directory (which I do regularly, since my library is constantly expanding). So I created a new torrent with a zipped file of the library at its current state. You won't be able to pick which pdfs to download, but at least the torrent will not become corrupted again. The magnet URI changed, so make sure you have the updated version, posted above. 2nd UPDATE: there are now two separate torrents; see here for details.
1theduffman11y
Could you please resume seeding this library so that I can download it and help? This seems potentially useful.
0Pablo11y
Please update the magnet URI. Let me know if you are still encountering problems.
1theduffman11y
There are no seeds during the day (Australian time). And then I leave my computer on overnight and it only downloads an extra couple of percent. downloading at about 4kB/sec. Unlikely to be a problem on my end. Would be keen for increased seeding of this. And then I can split up the file, pick the good parts and then repackage it in a new LW/rationality torrent. :/ Just as soon as it gets seeded better.
0Pablo11y
I've now created a separate torrent which allows for selective downloading of individual files. See here.
0AlexSchell11y
I'd like to echo other folks' requests for seeds from anyone who has the whole thing. I am currently making very slow progress in discrete spurts in downloading this, at 45%. Once I have the whole thing I am willing to work on doing something like this for the books in the library and/or support theduffman's proposal by seeding.
0Pablo11y
I'll keep seeding this indefinitely, so you should be able to download the entire library eventually. However, if you'd like to download specific files, there's now a separate torrent which contains all the files in the original, uncompressed format. See here.
0AlexSchell11y
Okay. I wrongly guessed that there was no one who had the whole thing and was seeding.
0David_Gerard11y
No seeds, none for a while in fact.
2Pablo11y
Please update the magnet URI. Let me know if you are still encountering problems.
1David_Gerard11y
Downloading at last! Currently running at 4kB/sec ;-) Thank you for this :-)
0Michelle_Z11y
Google drive. It can be set so that a folder is only available to someone if you send them the link. If there isn't enough room on one account, make a couple different accounts and separate them by subject.
1Pablo11y
Thanks. Unfortunately Google Drive offers 5 GB of space only. Yes, in principle I could create four different accounts, but in practice this would be a hassle, since ideally I would want to keep the library updated and this would require me to switch accounts frequently. It would also be harder for visitors to access the material, since I really lack the time to sort thousands of files into separate subjects. I might consider this approach if there are no other options, but I'd strongly prefer to upload all the files to a single account. A possible alternative: I could send people here invites to Dropbox and earn additional storage space. If sufficient folks sign up (~25), this would provide me with enough space to upload all of this material.
0[anonymous]11y
I haven't signed up either.
0Michelle_Z11y
Sure. How does that work? I use dropbox but never before for anything like that.
0sixes_and_sevens11y
I haven't gotten round to signing up for Dropbox. Hit me up.
0Pablo11y
Invite sent.
0[anonymous]11y
Same here.
2Pablo11y
Invite sent. (I just noticed that Dropbox gives additional storage space to both the person sending and the person receiving the invite. So you'll get an extra .5GB.)

This site is the best for academic papers: http://libgen.org/scimag

Seriously. Look at their list of available journals. They claim to have access to 21M papers.

I have subscriptions to both ACM and IEEE. Just sayin'.

0jsalvatier11y
Good to know!

Request: "K. Hoskin (1996) The ‘awful idea of accountability’: inscribing people into the measurement of objects. In Accountability: Power , Ethos and the Technologies of Managing, R. Munro and J. Mouritsen (Eds). London, International Thomson Business Press, and references therein."

(Cited by: Strathern, Marilyn (1997). "'Improving ratings': audit in the British University system". European Review. John Wiley & Sons. 5 (3): 305–321. doi:10.1002/(SICI)1234-981X(199707)5:3<05::AID-EURO184>3.0.CO;2-4.)

See Google Books, and Worldcat (Available in man... (read more)

4gwern3y
If Reddit falls through, email me and I can order a scan for you. (Might want to delete your duplicate comments here too.) EDIT: ordered a scan
2Davidmanheim3y
I also just requested this on reddit
2Davidmanheim3y
Also just requested on reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/Scholar/comments/mtwl4d/chapter_k_hoskin_1996_the_awful_idea_of/

PDFs of the following books are available upon request (I will likely send you a link by next business day):

Kahnemann, Slovic, Tversky, eds. (1982) Judgment under Uncertainty: Heuristics and Biases

Howson & Urbach (2006) Scientific Reasoning: The Bayesian Approach 3rd ed.

Thaler & Sunstein (2008) Nudge

Elliott Sober (2008) Evidence and Evolution

Huw Price (1997) Time's Arrow and Archimedes' Point

James Stewart (2011) Calculus: Early Transcendentals 7th ed.

Craig & Moreland, eds. (2009) The Blackwell Companion to Natural Theology

Jordan Howard So... (read more)

0Paulovsk11y
Could you send the 1st and 2nd for me, please? paulo at username dot com

Goode, P. (2002). Connecting with the reservoir. Australian Petroleum Production and Exploration Association Journal, 42(2).

According to Welsh et al. (2002), this paper estimates that "biases such as anchoring and overconfidence contribute to a US$30 billion/year loss in the oil and gas industry."

1VincentYu11y
Here. Unfortunately, the $30 billion/year loss is not explained and no citation is given:
3gwern11y
One possible attack for a citation is, besides the obvious searches for those two figures or looking for related government reports/statistics, is looking for a McKinsey report on that industry written before then; they're widely read but not always cited, and they have industry-wide views because of their prestige and numerous clients.
0Larks11y
Another would be stock broker research, especially from one of the top research banks (Morgan Stanley, Merryl Lynch), though this'd probably be harder to get access to.
1VincentYu11y
Requested.

Report from the FDA's Sugards Task Force, 1986 (Link is to first four pages.)

EDIT: Resolved via /r/scholar/

4gwern10y
Are you sure this is a journal publication and not an entire book? http://www.worldcat.org/title/report-from-fdas-sugars-task-force-1986-evaluation-of-health-aspects-of-sugars-contained-in-carbohydrate-sweeteners/oclc/153620633 suggests it's a book, and I don't see any hits in Google Scholar for a Journal of Nutrition paper covering it, and from your PDF, 1000 citations sounds like it would take up a lot of space.
2ChrisHallquist10y
Special issue of a journal, apparently. I ended up getting the executive summary via /r/scholar so it's resolved.

"A Preliminary Report of Kayak-Angst Among the Eskimo of West Greenland: a Study in Sensory Deprivation" http://isp.sagepub.com/content/9/1/18.extract

2VincentYu11y
Here.
0gwern11y
Thanks.
  1. 'Lithium in drinking water and the incidences of crimes, suicides, and arrests related to drug addictions', Schrauzer & Shrestha 1990 http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF02990271
  2. "The mathematical relationship of drinking water lithium and rainfall to mental hospital admission" https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/5497853
  3. "Relationship of lithium metabolism to mental hospital admission and homicide" http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/4648454
4VincentYu11y
1. Here. 2. Requested. 3. Requested.
2VincentYu11y
2. Here. 3. Here.
0gwern11y
Thanks.
4jsalvatier11y
Requested.
2VincentYu11y
Here.
0gwern11y
Thanks.

I was halfway through writing a post asking for this paper, but remembered to Google first and it turns out gwern already has that covered. Thanks!

(The result of my research: creatine is probably a good nootropic only if you are a vegetarian. This is valuable information, since I am a vegetarian.)

1gwern11y
More generally: http://www.gwern.net/Creatine
0ModusPonies11y
Thanks! Any advice on dosages?
0gwern11y
The doses in the paper? So a few grams a day.
0paulfchristiano11y
Thanks!
4gwern11y
* http://dl.dropbox.com/u/85192141/1985-johnson.pdf * http://dl.dropbox.com/u/85192141/2009-salas.pdf Couldn't get the last one.
0paulfchristiano11y
Thanks!
2chemotaxis10111y
Bats, balls, and substitution sensitivity: cognitive misers are no happy fools
4boredstudent11y
http://ge.tt/2zSks1Z/v/0
0lukeprog11y
Thanks!
4jsalvatier11y
here
4lukeprog11y
Thanks!
7lukeprog11y
sigh. I guess somebody is systematically downvoting all my comments again, if even this comment gets a downvote. :(
-1Larks11y
It's those damn karma intrinsic egalitarians who bite the bullet on the Levelling Down Objection.
2gwern11y
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/85192141/2011-koomey.pdf
2gwern11y
http://www.cs.ru.nl/~marinav/Teaching/BDMinAI/influencediagrams05.pdf ?
0lukeprog11y
Oh you're right, they've got the same DOI number, just different titles.

(If anyone knows a general way to get theses when the obvious download fails, I'd appreciate knowing. They seem pretty hard to get.)

2jsalvatier11y
Yeah, I've had difficulty accessing theses as well. My roommate tells me that the reason is that nobody wants to access them because they're almost always just a set of previously published papers (in many fields you publish 3 papers and staple them together for a thesis). This suggests the alternative of finding the papers that make up the thesis. You'll miss out on the introduction by the author, but they may be a lot easier to get a hold of.
1gwern11y
That works sometimes, but not usually for the theses I seem to be interested in - for example, the iodine thesis has no preceding papers or else I would've found those first before running into the thesis.
0jsalvatier11y
Interesting. It seems odd that they would publish only in as a thesis given that they have such a reputation for not being read.
8gwern11y
I've given up trying to predict people's reactions. Some researchers or post-grads, when I contact them, seem thrilled to answer any questions I have or provide unpublished data; other seem to completely ignore me and as far as I can tell, pretend the thesis never existed. I'll give a recent Evangelion example: http://eva.onegeek.org/pipermail/evangelion/2012-October/007214.html I reviewed a like >200pg PhD thesis which as far as I can tell has been neither discussed nor cited anywhere online; I excerpt it, praise and criticize parts, point out several specific problems which could be fixed in it or places where new material would add substantially to her discussion, submit it to Reddit where it gets 3 praising comments. Then I ping her on Twitter and... nothing in almost a month despite occasional tweets posted by her. I don't understand how she could not reply, if only to defend herself: she must have spent years working on the thesis, and given the lack of Google hits, I might be one of maybe 10-20 people in the world to ever read it. If I had spent years working on something and someone sent me such an email, I don't think I could ignore it: I'd be prostrate with joy that someone knowledgeable read it carefully, or I'd be berserk with rage that they would dare do anything but praise it and would reply tearing them a new one. Silence, however, I simply cannot understand.
6Risto_Saarelma11y
The end result of PhD programs is a degree, and finishing a thesis is instrumental to this.The thesis might end up a sunk cost labor of hate that you just want to forget afterwards, even if it did take years, if you mostly just want the degree. Don't know how much this happens at PhD level.
6katydee11y
My hypothesis would be ugh fields.
0Mitchell_Porter11y
A month is nothing. Especially if she only just graduated and is busy with post-thesis life. If you take a topic seriously, if you've just spent several years making the effort to think about it and write about it at levels of rigor far beyond the casual standards of ordinary thought and communication, you may put off responding to someone's questions, precisely because you don't want to lower your standards again, and you don't immediately have the time to answer properly.
2gwern11y
No, she was doing it while working as an ESL teacher and still working, according to her tweets. Has had time to continue low-quality anime blogging too. There is no proper answer to several of my criticisms: she is simply flat out wrong or sloppy. Evangelion is one of the few topics where I acknowledge few peers and fewer superiors, and she is neither.
2Kindly11y
In that case, perhaps she agrees with your criticisms, but doesn't want to admit to being wrong.
0Plasmon11y
The bureaucracy involved needs a way to check that the phd candidate is doing decent work (preferably something more objective than the promoter's say-so), and the scientific peer review process can be used for this purpose. Thus, phd candidates are often asked to produce some amount of papers and publish them (sometimes in journals with a specified minimal impact factor). Knowing how much work goes into the production of a paper, and how long the review process can take ( > 6 months is no exception), it would be unreasonable to also expect a fully original thesis. Ideally, but not always, the thesis expands somewhat on the previously-published papers.
2VincentYu11y
* I couldn't access the first thesis. * Second thesis. Hmm... unfortunately, the author ignored the past two decades of research using the Big Five and relied instead on personality typing. (I think recent theses from most US institutions are available from the ProQuest database. I don't know any general way to get non-US theses.)
1gwern11y
Thanks for the second; there's actually a surprising number of papers using MBTI in online education, it's really annoying. I may have to look into converting MBTI to Big Five if I do a meta-analysis.
1jsalvatier11y
Finally, Here
0VincentYu11y
Thanks!
1jsalvatier11y
Requested.

I need some guidance with a problem in the calculus of variations. I want to use direct methods to prove the existence of a minimizer of a certain functional, but I don't really know what I'm doing. If anyone with expertise is reading, I've given a full description at MathOverflow.

2Cyan11y
I think Minimax methods in critical point theory with applications to differential equations by Paul Rabinowitz might help me out.
2VincentYu11y
You can download the book here.
0Cyan11y
Thanks!

For the editing. How could I sign up to help? I don't have the skills in research yet, but I am decent at writing and could help.

2jsalvatier11y
Thanks for the offer Michelle! Either 1 - monitor these comments and wait for someone to ask for help (I use RSS to do that) or 2 - I can remember that you offered to help and can let you know when someone offers. Unfortunately, we've only had a few requests for that kind of help. I might use it in a while, though.
0Michelle_Z11y
Both. Chances are at some point I will forget.
0jsalvatier11y
Cool. Will do.
4VincentYu11y
Here.
0lukeprog11y
Thanks!
4jsalvatier11y
requested
4jsalvatier11y
These links make it hard to find the article because for me to go to the wiley login page. If you link to 'abstract' it works fine though.
2lukeprog11y
Oops, sorry! http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/wcs.1222/abstract
4jsalvatier11y
here apologies about the delay.
0lukeprog11y
Thanks so much!
4jsalvatier11y
Requested.
5beriukay11y
The Big One: A Review of Richard Posner's "Catastrophe: Risk and Response"
2lukeprog11y
Thanks again!
5boredstudent11y
http://ge.tt/8DsktOY/v/0
0lukeprog11y
Thanks!
4jsalvatier11y
requested.

I'm looking for a thesis by Bullock 2007, "Experiments on partisanship and public opinion: Party cues, false beliefs, and Bayesian updating" (may be accessible via Proquest).

I'm interested in it because I've come up with a Bayesian justification of the backfire effect, but it seems like Bullock may have covered it already in the last section. ;_;

EDIT: He did some interesting stuff in "Part 3, Bayesian Updating of Political Beliefs: Normative and Descriptive Properties", but not exactly what I have in mind.

5VincentYu11y
Here.
0gwern11y
Thanks!

Churchland, Paul M., State-space Semantics and Meaning Holism in Philosophy and Phenomenological Research JStor Philosophy Documentation Center

4VincentYu11y
Here.
4Morendil7y
On Sci-Hub
0RomeoStevens7y
Thanks a lot!
[-][anonymous]9y00

this was an unhelpful comment, removed and replaced by the comment you are now reading

[This comment is no longer endorsed by its author]Reply
0VincentYu9y
Chapter 3 is available from the publisher as a sample. (BTW, this is an old help desk thread; the newest one is here.)

Is this page still active? My institution doesn't have access to the journal Psychophysiology going back far enough... would anyone be able to find this:

Fischler, I. et al. "Brain potentials related to stages of sentence verification." Psychophysiology 20(4), 400--409.

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1469-8986.1983.tb00920.x/pdf

Thanks very much!

5gwern10y
Most people would be looking at newer threads like http://lesswrong.com/lw/ji3/lesswrong_help_desk_free_paper_downloads_and_more/
0Emily10y
Ah, thanks, I didn't spot that there were more recent ones.
2Emily10y
Update: obtained from another source.

Two requests:

Shelf life and safety concerns of bakery products--a review. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15077880

Predicting and preventing mold spoilage of food products. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23462093

5VincentYu10y
1. Here. 2. Here.
0RomeoStevens10y
YES! thank you. These are super helpful.
0gwern10y
(I can't get either, sorry.)
0RomeoStevens10y
Thanks for trying.

Greene LS. "A retrospective view of iodine deficiency, brain development, and behavior from studies in Ecuador". In: Stanbury JB, ed. The Damaged Brain of Iodine Deficiency. New York, NY: Cognizant Communication; 2004:173-185.

2VincentYu10y
Here.
0gwern10y
Thanks.
2VincentYu10y
Requested.
6gwern10y
1. http://www.econ.wayne.edu/agoodman/5550/week1/HE_2011.pdf 2. http://scholar.harvard.edu/files/cutler/files/health_aff-2013-cutler-841-50.pdf The first one can be found by searching the title in Google Scholar. The second one can be found the same way but the Harvard PDF link in GS is currently broken; I re-searched the title in regular Google, which led me to another Harvard page with a fresh PDF download link.
2Larks10y
Sorry for not finding them myself; that is embarrassingly easy.
2gwern10y
You're hardly the first. :)
4VincentYu10y
Here.
0gwern10y
Thanks.
4protest_boy10y
Found a proof of this article at: http://sapir.psych.wisc.edu/papers/lupyan_brainsAlgorithms_proof.pdf
[-][anonymous]10y00
[This comment is no longer endorsed by its author]Reply
4gwern10y
http://www.theglobalnews.net/can-google-avoid-death/ ?
0ChrisHallquist10y
That's... odd. I picked up this issue at the airport, and there was a much longer cover story in there. Maybe this is actually the short introduction to the longer cover story?
0gwern10y
Entirely possible. But that will make it a lot harder to collect all the stories, because you need to find titles for each of them before anyone can retrieve them from a database. This is one of the situations where you may be best off just biting the bullet and buying or borrowing a copy or visiting your local library (which presumably gets Times).

Converting relative risks to absolute risks: A graphical approach http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/sim.4780080603/abstract

6VincentYu10y
Here.
0gwern10y
(I can't get it.)
0RomeoStevens10y
Thank you for trying.

Narratives and goals: Narrative structure increases goal priming. Laham, Simon M.; Kashima, Yoshihisa http://psycnet.apa.org/journals/zsp/44/5/303/

4VincentYu10y
Here.

W. Krull 1930/1987 http://www.springerlink.com/content/3203036jq8v23484/ "The aesthetic viewpoint in mathematics"

2VincentYu10y
Here.
1gwern10y
Thanks.
  1. "Melatonin in elderly patients with insomnia.– A systematic review", Rikkert & Rigaud 2001
  2. "Melatonin in sleep disorders and jet-lag", Cardinali et al 2002
  3. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8844341 'Neuroimmunotherapy with low-dose subcutaneous interleukin-2 plus melatonin in AIDS patients with CD4 cell number below 200/mm3: a biological phase-II study', Lissoni et al 1995
  4. Claustrat et al 1984 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6498244 "A chronobiological study of melatonin and cortisol secretion in depressed subjects: plasma
... (read more)
2VincentYu10y
4. Here. 5. Here.
0gwern10y
Thanks.
2VincentYu10y
1. Here. 4. Requested. 5. Requested. 6. Here. 7. Here. 8. Here. 9. Here.
0gwern10y
Thanks.
[-][anonymous]10y00

Would it be possible to get a pdf of the original (1934) version of Dale Carnegie's How to Win Friends and Influence People? The one's I found are from the revised edition. I'm trying to put together links to all the books recommended by Satvik Beri in a recent exchange he had with Ben Kuhn, in the hope that this will help EAs interested in earning to give.

[This comment is no longer endorsed by its author]Reply

"The healthy donor effect: a matter of selection bias and confounding."

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1537-2995.2011.03270.x/abstract

2VincentYu10y
Here.
0RomeoStevens10y
thank you so much!

"Sleep symptoms associated with intake of specific dietary nutrients", Grandner et al 2013 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jsr.12084/abstract

2VincentYu10y
Here.
0gwern10y
Thanks.
2VincentYu10y
Here.
0gwern10y
Thanks.

Santos, Santos, and Shimony, "Implicitly preserving semantics during incremental knowledge base acquisition under uncertainty".

Santos, Wilkinson, and Santos, "Fusing multiple Bayesian knowledge sources".

The first describes a formalism called the Bayesian knowledge base that is more compact than the usual conditional probability table approach to a Bayesian network, along with other advantages; the second presents an algorithm for aggregating representations in this formalism.

I ran across this in a book on adversarial reasoning, and have... (read more)

3gwern10y
Your first link seems to be open access already. Your second link is easily accessed through Google Scholar where a PDF.pdf) is already linked. I think so; the worst that could happen is you get downvoted.
0LM780510y
D'oh. My "Elsevier == paywall" assumption kicked in too quickly. Thank you.
4gwern10y
http://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/182368464/1995-choi.pdf
0Kaj_Sotala10y
Thank you!

Gentzen’s Cut Elimination Theorem for Non-Logicians

Knowledge and Value, Tulane Studies in Philosophy Volume 21, 1972, pp 115-126

3VincentYu10y
Here.
0pangel10y
Thank you!
3gwern10y
I can't get it either, sorry.
2somervta11y
http://philpapers.org/rec/MILGCE The PDC appears to be offline, and although wayback machine has the Tulane page here, it doesn't seem like it has the pdf linked to by philpapers. Hopefully someone else can work with this.
2Kawoomba11y
1. Here.
0gwern11y
Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't VincentYu provide #1 2 days ago?
2Kawoomba11y
Sheesh, I blame LW's commenting system. I still count this as my good deed for the year.
2VincentYu11y
4. Here.
0gwern11y
As always, thanks.
2VincentYu11y
1. Here. 2. Here. 3. Here. 4. Requested.
0gwern11y
Thanks.
4somervta11y
2 - Two-year-olds learn novel nouns, verbs, and conventional actions from massed or distributed exposures. (Childers, Jane B)
2VincentYu11y
1. Here.
2gwern11y
Thanks.
2VincentYu11y
1. Requested.
4somervta11y
2 - Chinese journal finds 31% of submissions plagiarized. (Yuehong Zhang)
2VincentYu11y
1. Here.
0gwern11y
Thanks.

Martin Gardner's Mathematical Games column from Scientific American Volume 242, Number 6, June, 1980. Paywalled here:June:1980).

EDIT: escape characters

3VincentYu11y
Here.
0Quinn11y
Thanks!
4somervta11y
http://ge.tt/7Lwdwlj/v/1
0gwern11y
Thanks. I've reuploaded to http://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/182368464/2013-feyrer.pdf

Ken Binmore & Hyun Song Shin. Algorithmic knowledge and game theory. (Chapter 9 of Knowledge, Belief, and Strategic Interaction by Cristina Bicchieri.)

EDIT: Actually, I'd be pretty happy to see any paper containing both the phrases "common knowledge" and "Löb's theorem". This particular paper is probably not the only one.

3lukeprog11y
Here.
0Quinn11y
Awesome, thanks!
3gwern11y
Sorry, can't get it. There's a Google Books version you might be able to use, but the UWash access is only to a physical copy. As for your edit, well, * http://www.google.com/search?q=%22common+knowledge%22+AND+%28%22L%C3%B6b%27s+theorem%22+OR+%22Loeb%27s+theorem%22+OR+%22Lob%27s+theorem%22%29 * http://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=%22common+knowledge%22+AND+%28%22L%C3%B6b%27s+theorem%22+OR+%22Loeb%27s+theorem%22+OR+%22Lob%27s+theorem%22%29 turn up some things that might be useful.
0Quinn11y
Thanks for looking! I'll try to get my hands on a physical copy, as the Google Books version has highly distracting page omissions.
[-][anonymous]11y00

Jeffrey Smith, "America's arsenal of nuclear time bombs", Washington Post National Weekly Edition, May 28-June 3, 1990

[This comment is no longer endorsed by its author]Reply

Jeffrey Smith, "America's arsenal of nuclear time bombs", Washington Post National Weekly Edition, May 28-June 3, 1990

  • Irani, T., Telg, R., Scherler, C., & Harrington, M. (2003). "Personality and its relationship to distance education students' course perceptions and performance". The Quarterly Review of Distance Education, 4, 445-453.
  • Lee, J. M., & Lee, Y. (2006). "Personality types and learners' interaction in web-based threaded discussion". Quarterly Review of Distance Education, 7(1), 83-94.
2VincentYu11y
* [1] * [2]
0gwern11y
Thanks.

http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1207/S15328031US0201_01 "Meta-Analysis and Power: Some Suggestions for the Use of Power in Research Synthesis"

2VincentYu11y
Here.
0gwern11y
Thanks.
  1. Fierro-Benitez, R.; Ramirez, I.; Suarez, J. "Effect of iodine correction early in fetal life on intelligence quotient. A preliminary report". Adv. Exp. Med. Biol. 1972, 30, 239–247
  2. Fierro-Benitez, R.; Ramirez, I.; Estrella, E.; Jaramillo, C.; Diaz, C.; Urresta, J. "Iodized Oil in the Prevention of Endemic Goiter and Associated Defects in the Andean Region of Ecuador. I. Program Design, Effects on Goiter Prevalence, Thyroid Function, and Iodine" In Endemic Goiter; Report of the Meeting of the PAHO Scientific Group on Research in Endemic
... (read more)
2VincentYu11y
2. Here. 3. Here.
0gwern11y
Thanks.
2VincentYu11y
1. Here.
2VincentYu11y
Requested all three.

"Annual injection of vitamin D and fractures of aged bones", 1992 http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF00298497

4VincentYu11y
Here.
2gwern11y
Thanks.
  1. "Caffeine, priming, and tip of the tongue: evidence for plasticity in the phonological system". VE Lesk, SP Womble - Behavioral Neuroscience, 2004
  2. "Caffeine, Sleep, and Quality of Life"; MM Lorist, J Snel - Sleep and Quality of Life in Clinical Medicine, 2008 http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-1-60327-343-5_33
2VincentYu11y
1. Here. 2. Here.
0gwern11y
Thanks.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17828627 / http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13825580600788100 McMorris, Terry (09/2007). "Creatine Supplementation and Cognitive Performance in Elderly Individuals". Aging, neuropsychology, and cognition (1382-5585), 14 (5), p. 517

4somervta11y
http://ge.tt/7Lwdwlj/v/0?c
0gwern11y
Thanks.
... (read more)
3VincentYu11y
1. Here. 2. Requested. 3. Here. 4. Here. 5. Here.
2VincentYu11y
2. Here. 8. Here.
0gwern11y
Thanks.
2VincentYu11y
6. Here. 7. Here. 8. Requested.
0gwern11y
Got'em all, thanks.

Electronics (ISSN 0883-4989), volume 63 (1963), May 31 issue: "Chart Gives RLC Values for Critical Damping" by Arthur B. Moulton, pg6

2VincentYu11y
Here.
0gwern11y
Got it.
2VincentYu11y
Could you check the volume number and year? That combination doesn't match the library records on WorldCat.
0gwern11y
Make sure you're not looking at a different Electronics, it describes at least two periodicals - I want the old trade magazine, the one that published Moore's law, not any academic journals. But no, I'm not sure of the volume number, that was just my best guess. I'm working off a snippet in Google Books describing a reprint notice that year for the original article.
2VincentYu11y
Requested. (I think it's on p. 34, vol. 36, no. 22, May 31, 1963. The TOC seems to be on p. 6.)
0gwern11y
Thanks.
4VincentYu11y
Here.
0gwern11y
Thanks.
2VincentYu11y
Requested.

Osterweil (1992). "Cognitive function in non-demented older adults with hypothyroidism". Journal of the American Geriatrics Society (JAGS) (0002-8614) https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1556359

2VincentYu11y
Here.
0gwern11y
Thanks.
2VincentYu11y
Requested.

Goldin et al (2013). "Training Planning and Working Memory in Third Graders". Mind, brain and education

2VincentYu11y
Here.
0gwern11y
Thanks.

waddell (2011). "Single-Case Design in Psychophysiological Research: Part II: Statistical Analytic Approaches". Journal of Neurotherapy: Investigations in Neuromodulation, Neurofeedback and Applied Neuroscience http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10874208.2011.570693

2VincentYu11y
Here.
0gwern11y
Thanks.
4gwern11y
http://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/85192141/2011-wong.pdf

As some of you probably know, Google Books restricts access to certain books to users with a US IP address. I tried to circumvent this restriction with a number of different proxy servers, but had no success. This is the book (or, rather, journal) I'm trying to download (PDF link on the left sidebar). If you live in the States and could download it for me, that would be great. If you could explain to me how to download this or any other book similarly restricted, that would be even better. Thanks!

0gwern11y
Why don't you use one of the many other versions instead, like the read-online or EPUB versions?
4Pablo10y
Here's the bibliography, in case anyone is interested in this obscure thinker.
2Pablo11y
This is for a bibliography I will put online (similar to my bibliography of Parfit). All the other papers are PDFs, with images of the original pages and actual page numbers. An EPUB would be better than nothing, but a PDF would be best.
6gwern11y
I see. Well, in that case here you go: http://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/85192141/The_Westminster_Review.pdf
2Pablo11y
Thanks!
4VincentYu11y
* [3].
4gwern11y
1. http://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/85192141/1996-walberg-olympiadcollection.pdf 2. http://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/85192141/2004-nokelainen.pdf 3. couldn't get it through UWash, sorry.
0lukeprog11y
Thanks!
2VincentYu11y
You can download the volume containing the article here.
2lukeprog11y
Thanks! And here is the article, for others' convenience.
2gwern11y
I failed at getting this through the UWash library; you could always try the version in Google Books http://books.google.com/books?id=e6Jb8-9M5cUC (which was missing 3 pages for me).
6BerryPick611y
Right here :)
0lukeprog11y
Thanks!
2VincentYu11y
Here.
0Kaj_Sotala11y
Thank you!
2gwern11y
I failed to get this through the UWash e-journals.
2lukeprog11y
Requested on /r/scholar here.
2VincentYu11y
Here.
0lukeprog11y
Thanks again!

Edmundson, R.H. (1990), Decomposition: a strategy for judgmental forecasting. Journal of Forecasting, 9, 301-314.

2VincentYu11y
Here.
4VincentYu11y
The book can be downloaded here (in .djvu format).
2lukeprog11y
Extracted and uploaded, thanks!
4VincentYu11y
Here.
0lukeprog11y
Thanks!
2VincentYu11y
Requested.
2VincentYu11y
Here.
0gwern11y
Thanks.
4lukeprog11y
Requested here, and found.
4VincentYu11y
* [1] * [2] * [3]
0lukeprog11y
Thanks for all these!
4jsalvatier11y
Requested.
0lukeprog11y
Thanks so much! (for all these recent requests)
4jsalvatier11y
here
2DaFranker11y
What's wrong with this one? (second "external link" on the page you linked) It's on the author's site, along with many (all?) of his other papers. If you want it in formatted PDF though, only Springer has it afaict, so someone else will have to help you there.
6jsalvatier11y
here
4jsalvatier11y
requested.
6jsalvatier11y
here
0gwern11y
Thanks.
8jsalvatier11y
trends and controversies does game theory work saletllite control using rational agent programming trust in automation computing and ai for a sustainable future computation and the prisoner's dilemma enabling autonomous exploration via the solar system internet cooperative game theory: basic concepts and computational challenges high frequency trading: the faster the better? computational deception and noncooperation
0lukeprog11y
Awesome, thanks!
6boredstudent11y
http://dropcanvas.com/#4B8w2CYmf6d4e2
0lukeprog11y
Thanks!

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1758-5899.12002/abstract (I want the publication version from this website, not the copy available free elsewhere.)

6vallinder11y
Here.
0lukeprog11y
Thanks!
4Richard_Kennaway11y
Freely available here. May also be of interest.
  1. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1046/j.1526-4637.2000.00042.x/abstract
  2. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/03601230600857130
  3. Petticrew M, Davey Smith G. "Monkey business: what do primate studies of social hierarchies, stress, and the development of CHD tell us about humans?" J Epidemiol Community Health 2003;57(suppl 1): A1-21.

(For http://lesswrong.com/lw/1lt/case_study_melatonin/8n2h )

4Elithrion11y
This appears to be all that exists for 3 (page 2): http://jech.bmj.com/content/suppl/2003/09/23/57.9.DC1/Abstracts.pdf It was so small that after finding it I kept looking for a good 15 minutes, but I'm pretty sure the abstract is all there is and the full article was never published (the first author doesn't list it on his personal page, and all the references seem to be to the abstract).
0gwern11y
Thanks for looking. It seems that it's another one of the many papers which get presented as an abstract and never published ("Full publication of results initially presented in abstracts (Review)").
2VincentYu11y
* First * Second
0gwern11y
Thanks.
0VincentYu11y
* Abramson * Linton
0gwern11y
Thanks.
4gwern11y
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/85192141/2013-seligman.pdf

"Iodine deficiency in pregnancy, infancy and childhood and its consequences for brain development"; Melse-Boonstra, A., & Jaiswal, N. (2010). Iodine deficiency in pregnancy, infancy and childhood and its consequences for brain development. Best Practice & Research Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 24, 29-38

2VincentYu11y
Here.
0gwern11y
Thanks.
7gwern11y
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/85192141/1985-meeden.pdf
[-][anonymous]11y00
[This comment is no longer endorsed by its author]Reply
7gwern11y
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/85192141/1961-pratt.pdf

"Full publication of results initially presented in abstracts" (this has been published in various versions since 1994; as far as I can tell, this is the latest one).

2boredstudent11y
http://ge.tt/60P3mfZ/v/0
0gwern11y
Thanks.

Berry, "Meta-analysis vs large trials: resolving the controversy" (in Meta-analysis in medicine and health policy, Stangel & Berry 2000; the version on Google Books is incomplete for me).

6boredstudent11y
Please always add a link because it makes the job of finding the paper much easier. A Google Scholar link works best for me personally. EDIT: The book can be found here: http://libgen.info/view.php?id=621853
0gwern11y
Thanks.
4boredstudent11y
http://ge.tt/8K65eZZ/v/0
0gwern11y
Thanks.
4Elithrion11y
http://dl.dropbox.com/s/hlcx9p04vrdnr0z/74477090-120823160907-phpapp01.pdf (Incidentally, the full text was the first result on google search.)
0ChrisHallquist11y
Thanks for letting me know about it coming up on Google. I had searched for it on Google Scholar getting the url I posted, but re-searching this looks like a case where plain Google works better than Google Scholar. Doesn't usually happen, but I'll keep it in mind in the future.
2boredstudent11y
Mission impossible: diffusion and drift in the microfinance industry (Sustainability Accounting, Management and Policy Journal)
5jsalvatier11y
Requested, though maybe gwern already has it.
2gwern11y
No, afraid not. It's one of the modafinil citations mentioned in PDFs I do have but which I haven't gotten around to getting fulltext for.
3boredstudent11y
http://www.sendspace.com/file/zli4qz
0David Althaus11y
Thanks a lot!
4boredstudent11y
http://ge.tt/80L02rY/v/0?c I have access to many databases(my school subscribes to them), and check this page pretty frequently. I can help on a semi-regular basis if you want.
0jsalvatier11y
Awesome! Thanks for helping :) I've found it useful to add this page to my rss feed.
0boredstudent11y
How do I do that? Is there any way I can just get rss for comments?
7jsalvatier11y
For google reader I just give it the thread url and it gave me the comment feed. http://lesswrong.com/r/discussion/lw/eto/lesswrong_help_desk_free_paper_downloads_and_more/.rss
2lukeprog11y
Maybe add this link to the OP?
2jsalvatier11y
Good idea.
0lukeprog11y
Yes, I've much appreciated your help. Thanks again!
2jsalvatier11y
Requested.
4jsalvatier11y
Requested.
2boredstudent11y
http://ge.tt/8a3WRQY/v/0?c

1) Aided and unaided decision making: improving intuitive judgement. Journal of Forecasting. Volume 1, Issue 4, pages 349–363, October/December 1982.

2) Cognitive biases and decision support systems development: a design science approach. Information Systems Journal. Volume 16, Issue 1, pages 55–78, January 2006.

3) Cognitive biases in the use of computer-based decision support systems. Omega. Volume 17, Issue 4, 1989, Pages 335–344.

4) Debiasing investors with decision support systems: an experimental investigation. Decision Support Systems. Volume 46, Issue... (read more)

7boredstudent11y
I found 1
5boredstudent11y
3
2chemotaxis10111y
Many thanks.
7beriukay11y
I could only get 2 and 4.
2chemotaxis10111y
Thanks!

Goal programming and cognitive biases in decision-making. Journal of the Operational Research Society (2005) 56, 1166–1175.

5boredstudent11y
This?
0chemotaxis10111y
Thanks.
4jsalvatier11y
here
0lukeprog11y
Thanks for all these!
4jsalvatier11y
Requested. Apologies for the delay.
4jsalvatier11y
Requested.
2jsalvatier11y
here

A. Carlone, S. M. Goldup, N. A Three-Compartment Chemically-Driven Molecular Information Ratchet http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ja302711z It is not a lesswrong related project so I retracted it.

[This comment is no longer endorsed by its author]Reply
2VincentYu11y
Here.

William Cochran, "Designing clinical trials". In: Evaluation of Drug Therapy 1961, ed. F. M. Forster, pp. 71—77. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.

(Trying to follow up a claim about correlational results getting more misleading with increasing sample size.)

4jsalvatier11y
here
0gwern11y
Thanks.
4jsalvatier11y
Requested.
4jsalvatier11y
here
0Kaj_Sotala11y
Great, thanks!
2jsalvatier11y
Requested.
4jsalvatier11y
here
0gwern11y
Thanks.
2jsalvatier11y
Requested.
... (read more)
5jsalvatier11y
Here they are: 1 2 3 4 5
0gwern11y
Thanks.
2jsalvatier11y
All Requested.
0jsalvatier11y
I've never asked, you this, but I should have. You've mentioned having access to the UW library. I assume this is the same University of Washington that I have access to? Do you have access to ILL?
2gwern11y
Yes; no. I have a proxy so I have access to anything for which IP-based authentication is sufficient, which is a lot of the regular academic journals - but to get ILL and a number of the more expensive databases like LexisNexis, I would need a valid UWash username/password (which I don't have).
0jsalvatier11y
Ok, cool, that clears it up for me.
[-][anonymous]11y00

Lashley, K. S. (1915). "The acquisition of skill in archery". Papers from the Department of Marine Biology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, 7, 105-128

[This comment is no longer endorsed by its author]Reply
  • Culler, E. A. (1912). "The effect of distribution of practice upon learning". Journal of Philosophical Psychology, 9, 580-583
  • Lashley, K. S. (1915). "The acquisition of skill in archery". Papers from the Department of Marine Biology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, 7, 105-128
  • Murphy, H. H. (1916). "Distributions of practice periods in learning". Journal of Educational Psychology, 7, 150-162
4jsalvatier11y
Here they are: 1 2 3
0gwern11y
Thanks.
2jsalvatier11y
All Requested.
0gwern11y
Thanks. I wonder how many the ILL librarian will be able to find? :)
4jsalvatier11y
here
0gwern11y
Thanks.
2jsalvatier11y
Requested.
2jsalvatier11y
I can't find easy access to this, theses are hard. Neither the author or supervisor seem to have a website. And it's held at a non US institution, so I am reluctant to ILL it. Edit: nevermind, found an email for Sarah Grant and messaged her.
0gwern11y
Well, if any of these were easy, I would've done them myself. Thanks. In the future, if you don't want to handle that, just tell me and I can email them myself and save you the effort.
2gwern11y
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/85192141/2012-colombo.pdf

Peter Norvig. 2008. Statistical learning as the ultimate agile development tool. ACM 17th Conference on Information and Knowledge.

2jsalvatier11y
I found this presentation by Norvig that has that name, but not a paper by that name, despite finding the "ACM 17th Conference on Information and Knowledge Management". Is that what you meant? Couldn't find "ACM 17th Conference on Information and Knowledge".
  • Ross, L. D., Amabile, T. M. & Steinmetz, J. L. (1977). Social roles, social control, and biases in social-perceptual processes. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 35, 485-494.

(UWash is timing out on me.)

2VincentYu11y
Here.
0gwern11y
Thank you.
2gwern11y
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/85192141/2001-chenoweth.pdf

http://wcx.sagepub.com/content/20/1/99.short

This is a case where Google scholar claims to have a PDF, but the link to the PDF is not working for me.

4jsalvatier11y
here
2gwern11y
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/85192141/1998-law.pdf
4gwern11y
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/85192141/1987-bateson.pdf
4jsalvatier11y
here

Neufeld, V. R., Norman, G. R., Barrows, H. S., & Feightner, J.W. (1981). Clinical problem solving by medical students: A longitudinal and crosssectional analysis. Medical Education, 15 , 315–322.

4jsalvatier11y
here
2jsalvatier11y
Requested.

Feltovich, P. J., & Barrows, H. S. (1984). Issues of generality in medical problem solving. In H. G. Schmidt & M. L. DeVolder (Eds.), Tutorials in problem-based learning. Assen, the Netherlands: Van Gorcum.

4jsalvatier11y
here
4jsalvatier11y
Requested.
4jsalvatier11y
here
0gwern11y
Thanks.
4jsalvatier11y
Requested.

Putnam, Hilary, 1961. “Brains and Behavior”, originally read as part of the program of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Section L (History and Philosophy of Science), December 27, 1961.

4jsalvatier11y
here
2jsalvatier11y
Requested.
4jsalvatier11y
Here
0gwern11y
Thanks.
4jsalvatier11y
Requested. (for some reason the link redirects to an uninformative login page for me, I had to google the link to find the title).

John Searle's 1980 paper Minds, Brains, and Programs. I'm requesting this because the version that comes up on Google Scholar is labeled as an "unedited penultimate draft," which is a problem for purposes of quoting it directly.

4jsalvatier11y
How about this: http://www.class.uh.edu/phil/garson/MindsBrainsandPrograms.pdf ?
0ChrisHallquist11y
Huzzah!
2VincentYu11y
Here.
0Cyan11y
Many thnaks.... thanks, even.
3gwern11y
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/85192141/1992-jungas.pdf
0roland11y
Thanks a lot!

GAMBLE, J.L.: Physiological information gained from studies on the life-raft ration. Harvey Lectures, 42, 247-273 (1946).

3jsalvatier11y
here
0roland11y
Thanks a lot!
3jsalvatier11y
requested.
1gwern11y
Did you get the full version? I took a look earlier and the obvious target behind a paywall apparently is an excerpted version, not the full original lecture.
0jsalvatier11y
I did not, but now I have, thanks :)
0roland11y
Thanks!
5beriukay11y
You make this so easy for us, luke. Explanation of 1/f noise
1lukeprog11y
Thanks very much!

I'm not sure how "LessWrong relevant" philosophy of religion is considered to be, but I could use having access to the section on Aquinas from William Lane Craig's book The Cosmological Argument from Plato to Leibniz.

2jsalvatier11y
I generally have trouble getting access to books sorry :-/
0ChrisHallquist11y
Thanks anyway :)
1VincentYu11y
Here.
0razor1111y
Thanks!
[-][anonymous]11y00

I need access to this. Well, really I'd like access to everything here, but I think I would settle for the data in the first link.

Thanks.

3VincentYu11y
Here. The following data are missing because I had no easy way to export them: * Government budget appropriations or outlays for RD * R-D personnel by sector of employment and qualification You will need the Beyond 20/20 Professional Browser.msi) to view the .ivt files.
0[anonymous]11y
Thanks! Do you know of any way to view .ivt files on a Mac without Bootcamp? Google yielded no answers.
0VincentYu11y
Sorry, I don't know.
[-][anonymous]11y00

While doing research for paper I plan to submit for publication, I discovered a talk given by Dr. Glimcher entitled "Neurobiological Evidence of a Cardinal Utility Signal: Implications for Welfare in Political Economy." My paper is on a remarkably similar topic, so it looks like exactly what I'm looking for! However, I cannot find a copy of the lecture online, nor a copy of the sources he used.

Reviewing his publications has gotten me a lot of information, most importantly this 2012 meta-analysis. But the paper doesn't use the term "cardin... (read more)

1VincentYu11y
The Academia Stack Exchange might be a good place to ask this. They had a related question.
2VincentYu11y
Here. The image quality is rather poor and some of the figures are unreadable, but the figures are also available from this previous conference paper, which has almost identical content.
0lukeprog11y
Thanks!
0VincentYu11y
Requested.
2VincentYu11y
Requested.
0VincentYu11y
Sorry, ILL request cancelled because "no library is able to supply this item".
2gwern11y
Guess I'll email her. EDIT: worked.
0VincentYu11y
Do you still have the paper? I'd like to take a look.
0gwern11y
Sure. Email address?
0VincentYu11y
rot13ed: i@i-lh.pbz Thanks.
3jsalvatier11y
I've requested this through ILL, but I'm not sure if it will work.
0gwern11y
Thanks for trying.
3jsalvatier11y
ILL was rejected. I think I would try emailing the author. You can also buy it here: http://www.library.uq.edu.au/iad/docdeliv/formlib.html, but that doesn't seem worth it.
0gwern11y
I've emailed her. EDIT: she replied with 2 papers covering half the thesis; a quarter of the thesis was just a replication of a previous study, and the remaining quarter is under peer review as a new paper so she didn't provide it. Satisfactory.

Mollick, Ethan. "Establishing Moore's law." Annals of the History of Computing, IEEE 28.3 (2006): 62-75.

2VincentYu11y
Here.
6VincentYu11y
Here.
0Kaj_Sotala11y
Wow, that was fast! Thank you.

Fischer Black, "Fact and Fantasy in the Use of Options", Financial Analysts Journal 31, pp36–41, 61–72 (July/August 1975).

2gwern11y
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/85192141/1975-black.pdf
0roland11y
Wow that was fast! Thanks a lot!
5VincentYu11y
Here.
0lukeprog11y
Thanks again!

I would be happy to be able to read Procrastination and the five-factor model: a facet level analysis ScienceDirect IngentaConnect (I'm not sure if adding these links helps you guys, but here they are anyways)

5gwern11y
The links help a bit. http://dl.dropbox.com/u/85192141/2001-watson.pdf

"Plasticity of executive functioning in young and older adults: Immediate training gains, transfer, and long-term maintenance", Dahlin 2008. (I should have been able to get this through UWash, but something kept going wrong in the connection.)

5VincentYu11y
Here.
0gwern11y
Thanks.

This one is a challenge.

I'd like to do a stylometrics analysis of the 2009 leaked live-action Death Note movie script, ostensibly by the Parlapanides brothers (an expansion of my old short essay on its authorship). The only other public writing I know of by them is the 2000 movie Everything For A Reason and the 2011 movie Immortals. I've found subtitles for Immortals without a problem, but I've been entirely unable to find any script or screenplay for either (an no subs for Everything For A Reason). Can anyone find it?

5beriukay11y
here ya go
1lukeprog11y
Thanks!

Computer-related accidental death: an empirical exploration (referenced in Hoare 1996; curiously, Google Scholar didn't show me any extensions or replications of the survey, at least since 2000. A gap in the literature, perhaps.)

3jsalvatier11y
here
0gwern11y
Thanks.
1jsalvatier11y
Requested.
[-][anonymous]11y00

"Refining the Theory of Basic Individual Values", Schwartz et al. (2012)

[This comment is no longer endorsed by its author]Reply

Kiefer, Introduction to Statistical Inference.

2jsalvatier11y
Did not have access.
0Pablo11y
Thanks anyway!

Jensen, Arthur R., Giftedness and genius: Crucial differences.

(Please note that this request is not particularly urgent or important; it probably deserves a lower priority than most other requests.)

4VincentYu11y
Here.
0Pablo11y
Wow, that was fast! Thanks so much!
3VincentYu11y
I've requested a scan from my library.
0Pablo11y
Thanks!