This is an idea that just occurred to me. We have a large community of people who think about scientific problems recreationally, many of whom are in no position to go around investigating them. Hopefully, however, some other community members are in a position to go around investigating them, or know people who are. The idea here is to allow people to propose relatively specific ideas for experiments, which can be upvoted if people think they are wise, and can be commented on and refined by others. Grouping them together in an easily identifiable, organized way in which people can provide approval and suggestions seems like it may actually help advance human knowledge, and with its high sanity waterline and (kind of) diverse group of readers, this community seems like an excellent place to implement this idea.
These should be relatively practical, with an eye towards providing some aspiring grad student or professor with enough of an idea that they could go implement it. You should explain the general field (physics, AI, evolutionary psychology, economics, psychology, etc.) as well as the question the experiment is designed to investigate, in as much detail as you are reasonably capable of.
If this is a popular idea, a new thread can be started every time one of these reaches 500 comments, or quarterly, depending on its popularity. I expect this to provide help for people refining their understanding of various sciences, and if it ever gets turned into even a few good experiments, it will prove immensely worthwhile.
I think it's best to make these distinct from the general discussion thread because they have a very narrow purpose. I'll post an idea or two of my own to get things started. I'd also encourage people to post not only experiment ideas, but criticism and suggestions regarding this thread concept. I'd also suggest that people upvote or downvote this post if they think this is a good or bad idea, to better establish whether future implementations will be worthwhile.
A few of us at Singularity Institute tested Dual N-Back last year. For 1 week, 13 people were tested on dissimilar metrics of intelligence while some of them performed the same kind of Dual N-Back done in the original Jaeggi study.
Conclusion: It doesn't make you smarter.
Bonus: You get better at Dual N-Back though!
Interestingly, at around the same time as we were doing our tests last last year, the original research "replicated" her own results and published them again using new data. I'm sort of confused. I don't want to say Jaeggi doesn't understand training and practice effects... but I'm struggling to understand how else to explain this.
That said, it would still be cool to see LW folks test IA interventions. I just recommend exploring more promising ones. Perhaps seeking to confirm the results of these studies instead?
Louie, I don't remember the details of this. I thought folks ended up with a very small and not-very-powerful study (such that the effect would have had to be very large to show up anyhow), with the main goal of the "study", such as it was, being to test our procedures for running future potential experiments?
Could you refresh my memory on what tests were run?
Also, speaking about how "the folks at SIAI believe X" based on small-scale attempt run within the visiting fellows program last summer seems misleading; it may inaccurately seem ... (read more)