I am reading Expecting Better, a book about evidence based pregnancy and in it, there are passages about the high rates of C-sections and why it might be. The conclusion was that one medical intervention, whether by drugs or over-monitoring, usually leads to another and another and you end up with a C-section. Non C-section births have better outcomes. So you want to avoid it if you can. The book also mentions that the use of a doula can reduce rates of C-sections to less than 10% from modern U.S. rates of 30%. That is very impressive. Why and how? ...
Here are the components of doing everything on your own:
1) You need to acquire the domain; that means, to have it officially recognized that "snowsage4444 . com" legally belongs to you. That costs about 10 dollars a year, and it allows you to create web pages like "snowsage4444 . com / welcome .html" or e-mails like "snowsage4444 @ snowsage4444 . com". What it actually does is that when anyone on the internet says "snowsage4444 . com", they will be redirected to a computer of your choice. But for this all to actually...
I'm reading The Last Psychiatrist's 'Don't hate her because she's successful' and having trouble with:
'No, she just means when you get married, to pick someone who supports your goals." In other words, a business relationship? Arranged marriage, only this time by Match.com's algorithm? "No, a marriage based not on passion but on mutual respect and shared values--" Stop, listen to what you are saying. Why would you want a man who agreed to this? Why would a man want a woman who thought like this?'
I mean, why would I not want a man who ag...
Why is it so hard to refrain from irrational participation in political arguments? One theory is that in the EEA, if you overheard some people talking covertly about political issues, there was a good chance that they were literally plotting against you. In a tribal setting, if you're being left out of the political conversation, you're probably going to be the victim of the political change being discussed. So we've probably evolved a mental module that causes us to be hyperaware of political talk, and when we hear political talk we don't like, to jump in and try to disrupt it.
Anyone have any good mind hacks to help stay out of political conversations?
When you write a comment, like this one, that only makes sense in the context of another -- in this case your earlier question -- you should make your later comment a reply to your earlier one.
More generally, you've posted these questions, all within a few minutes of one another:
These really don't need to be separate comments. Better would have been a...
I hope someone can help me find a blog post or webpage that I've seen before but can't find: it's someone describing a power law of scientists. There's a top level who have drastically more output than the level below, who are drastically more productive than the level below that. There's only a few at the top level, and a few hundred at level 2, and a few thousand at level 3. I think he mentions one scientist being level 0.5 - notably more productive than almost anyone else. It was on a relatively unstyled website, maybe Scott Aaronson's.
Anyone familiar with that?
Native GPU programming with CUDAnative.jl
http://julialang.org/blog/2017/03/cudanative
"You can now write your CUDA kernels in Julia, albeit with some restrictions, making it possible to use Julia’s high-level language features to write high-performance GPU code."
"The programming support we’re demonstrating here today consists of the low-level building blocks, sitting at the same abstraction level of CUDA C. You should be interested if you know (or want to learn) how to program a parallel accelerator like a GPU, while dealing with tricky performance characteristics and communication semantics."
On science reddit there is a link to an article about confirmation bias. About 1500 comments in the discussion are deleted, here are some examples:
...So how do you work to get out of this? I'm really afraid that I'm falling into thought bubbles and can't find my way out. I've always believed in many different ideas but as of recent, I feel like I'm in an echo chamber.
Doubt everything and become a cynical son of a bitch that nobody wants to be around. Or self-reflect regularly. It's a thin line. Good luck.
What gives a person the ability to self reflect and t
Mods are sleeping, but when they wake up, they are probably going to delete some of your comments. You had enough time to find the "Reply" button and learn about threads. Please try to keep related comments at one place in the future.
This looks like a great tool, a good philanthropy target. Simple, cheap, and temp insensitive blood testing tech. Graphene based,
http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/Graphene_sheets_capture_cells_efficiently_999.html
"They did this by enzymatically coating the treated graphene oxide surface with peptides called nanobodies - subunits of antibodies, which can be cheaply and easily produced in large quantities in bioreactors and are highly selective for particular biomolecules."
The findings are reported in the journal ACS Nano in a paper co-authored by Neelkanth Bardhan, an MIT postdoc, and Priyank Kumar PhD
interesting time based economic model for stock market stalls...
"He’s currently on the lookout for the benchmark to approach that upper green line, which represents a range of 21,800 to 22,000. "
“Don’t just go short,” he said. “ That’s where the public gets it all wrong. You have to wait for a break of the low of that weekly bar, and put a stop above the high.”
And here’s the crux of Jadeja’s concerns: If the rally inspired by last ...
Is neuroscience research underfunded? If so, I've been thinking more and more that trying to understand human consciousness has a huge expected value, and maybe EA should pay it more attention.
I have two straight-forward empirical questions for which I was unable to find a definitive answer.
1) Does ego depletion exist? There was a recent meta-study that found a negligible effect, but the result is disputed.
2) Does visualizing the positive outcome of a endeavor help one achieve it? There are many popular articles confirming this, but I've found no studies in either direction. My prediction is no, it doesn't, since the mind would feel like it already reached the goal after visualizing it, so no action would be taken. It has been like this in my personal experience, although inferring from personal experience is incredibly unreliable.
Important insight which LessWrong can comment on: link
To me, it's a very concise summary of what we all know yet stupidly enough, ignore because of irrational societies and educational systems. I'm not saying that I am taking it in. That would be the equal excuse as of any other. What do you think?
On science reddit there is a link to an article about confirmation bias. About 1500 comments in the discussion are deleted, here are some examples:
So how do you work to get out of this? I'm really afraid that I'm falling into thought bubbles and can't find my way out. I've always believed in many different ideas but as of recent, I feel like I'm in an echo chamber.
Doubt everything and become a cynical son of a bitch that nobody wants to be around. Or self-reflect regularly. It's a thin line. Good luck.
What gives a person the ability to self reflect and to question what they believe? I was once a very strong fundamentalist christian and far right republican who believed any evidence against my beliefs were lies. Somehow though I was able to break out of both of those things after evaluating them. I don't know what was different about the initial evaluation that caused the break other than it seemed to be self lead someone through tangential and research. I have no clue how to apply it to other people. I've found even very gentle, bible-backed evidence causing my family and friends to become defensive and angry and immediately throw up walls. I'm not even sure how to make sure I am evaluating new ideas outside of my own bubble.
You could try looking into a personality trait known as "need for closure." People with a high need for closure are rigid thinkers. They are very intolerant of ambiguity and are uncomfortable challenging their worldview, and thus tend to form beliefs quickly and are then less open to changing them. Conversely, people who have a low need for closure (this can also be termed "need for cognition") are not as uncomfortable with ambiguity and are more cognitively flexible. They are more interested in actively constructing their understanding of the world, and tend to be more intellectually engaged and comfortable with changing their beliefs. I believe variance of this trait plays a role in answering the question of why some people change their worldview over time and others do not. [...] there is some situational variability as well. People who are stressed, angry, tired, hungry, pressed for time, etc. demonstrate much less cognitive flexibility than they otherwise would have.
It's been my finding that you can never convince someone if they don't want to be convinced and you announce your opposition to their ideas before entering the debate. It's much more effective to go for the Socratic method. Make them think they're teaching you and use well placed questions to force them to think on thoughts that they might otherwise be uncomfortable with. And they'll do it because it the idea of gaining a convert usually outweighs the fear of this "innocent" corrupting their viewpoint.
Just try to remember that there are usually, at minimum, two sides to any argument, and those sides usually have, at least at some level, reasonable and arguable points that favor them. If you constantly challenge your own beliefs and argue convincingly for sides you may personally disagree with it can, at minimum, help you see things from the opposite point of view and empathize with the beliefs.
Actively pursue disproving what you believe. Play devils advocate with yourself. If you think you can't poke any more holes in what you believe, look for people who can; others may have ideas or arguments you haven't thought of. It also helps to work to identify your core values and rank them. Johnathan Haidt's breakdown of what these may be is popular, but they are only one way of identifying and categorizing them. Use that as a starting point and Google your way to some criticism. Weight the criticism. There's also a sub-reddit, /r/changemyview, that I don't really frequent, and so, can't really endorse or criticize, but I know exists. Just always question everything and step outside your comfort zone. Embrace intellectual conflict, but keep it classy; argue, don't fight.
Realize that it's OK to have an opinion without expressing it to others. I have deeply held beliefs on the usefulness of religion and the proper way to hang toilet paper, but I don't generally share them because I don't enjoy arguing, and I don't need validation. They're beliefs, not facts, so who cares what I think? By the same token, also know that it's OK to have NO opinion on something (particularly things which you accept you're unable to affect). You can listen to both sides of a debate, and choose neither. I'm largely agnostic about politics, for example.
On the other hand, if you do care about an issue and want to know more for the sake of empathy, asking people for their point of view without the need to give an opinion on it works just fine too.
I guess the comments broke some rule, probably that they don't present scientifically supported statements. It's still sad to see so much quality text removed. I understand that this is probably necessary to prevent a slippery slope from "science" to "just posting my random opinions". Still, it's sad.
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