I'm surprised this isn't getting more attention. If this holds it would imply a lot for a wide variety of fields.
In the US, you have heights of inequality, underemployment, and rampant rent-seeking monopolies, along with ageism. In my experience, among those who are employed and paid well, the hours are often brutal and huge…
That's true, but they do make the more abstract assumption that any bias isn't associated with birth date within cohort. I think the idea is that if there were bias due to instrumentation, it would have to be somehow…
I have mixed feelings about the predictions; I get the sense that significant change is in the air, at least in the US, whatever direction that takes. I see some of these things as being realistic, especially on a…
Not old-time, but tenured professor for 10 years. I definitely saw this happen in my time. The university has a faculty legislature that at one time was the administrative core, but it's largely a symbolic gesture at…
Alexander is maybe reading the wrong therapy books and literature. He should look up Bruce Wampold's research, for example. The dodo bird effect is well documented: therapy works relative to all sorts of placebos, but…
There are whole fields of research devoted to the questions you're raising. As such, it's hard to reply with anything that would do justice to them. This isn't to say your questions aren't important, just that your lack…
So, I shared some of your impressions, but also some of what Vox is conveying. Speaking from personal experience, the problem with large public institutions (maybe any institution?) hiring these consultancies is that…
The clothing itself isn't really what I necessarily expected, if you look at the pictures themselves (https://osf.io/v2j43/). The "rich" clothing is just more like "formal" or "conservative" clothing, and the "poor" is…
The ego depletion effect story is interesting to me for numerous reasons, some of which are statistical/inferential, some of which are more theoretical, and some of which are kind of personal or anecdotal (I know the…
I can't speak to venture funding or terrorism, but something seems really misleading to me about the NIH grant applications model. My sense is that a grant, like an academic paper, is often basically well-received or…
I think in general I mean that people are seen as cogs in a machine, rather than individuals to be trained, and there's no safety net from the government, either in terms of real retraining or advanced education or life…
Former tenured professor. I think your impression is generally spot-on although there's nuances and it's more complicated than that. In general, universities are suffering from many of the same pressures as other…
My personal impression is decentralized tech — at least with regard to established equivalent functionality — is still in a kind of emergent state. I think there's a lot of options, and there's some coalescing around…
I think we've reached some singularity with regard to the obviousness of the futility of large scale content moderation on social media.
Some people hallucinate without drugs. There's a range of this, in terms of intensity and type. Some people take drugs. They tend to onset around the same age (adolescence to early adulthood). Ergo, by base rates, some…
I had a different take on this paper. There's a well-known phenomenon whereby narcissism and self-evaluation is generally related to positive mood. It's part of an overall positive tint. So one interpretation of this is…
I have to agree this was done really poorly. Another example of why randomized controlled trials aren't always what they're cracked up to be. Not sure if a junk food diet would fly, but they could have at least given…
Interesting. I think I've heard that before somewhere else. I'll have to ask one of my colleagues about it. Where my family is from, in the northern US, the night sky is very clear and visible (barring clouds etc which…
Off topic, but after my daughter was born I realized how sad and worried I was that she wouldn't be familiar with looking up at the sky on a clear night and seeing the Milky Way. Stuff like what's in this article is…
After reading the BMJ piece I wondered if any study strategy would satisfy Ioannidis, to be honest. I came away from it feeling like his calls to eliminate observational studies and smaller randomized trials are…
Although I think that's reasonable at some level, I think there's dangers in it as well, in that I don't think we really know that much about metabolism or physiology in the grand scheme of things. Physiological and…
I was kind of wondering about this after reading the passage. On the one hand the traditional Bayesian response is something like "yes, we're making our prior assumptions explicit and then incorporating that into a…
I don't follow him regularly unless something he's saying comes up somehow, at which point I kinda look into him again. He's famous for lambasting psychology, some of which is deserved, but some of which is just…
Eh. I admit I have a complex with Taleb. It's not just his narcissism per se, although there's that too: he's just wrong about a lot of stuff, and other times fails to recognize how old his ideas are. He gets over his…
I'm surprised this isn't getting more attention. If this holds it would imply a lot for a wide variety of fields.
In the US, you have heights of inequality, underemployment, and rampant rent-seeking monopolies, along with ageism. In my experience, among those who are employed and paid well, the hours are often brutal and huge…
That's true, but they do make the more abstract assumption that any bias isn't associated with birth date within cohort. I think the idea is that if there were bias due to instrumentation, it would have to be somehow…
I have mixed feelings about the predictions; I get the sense that significant change is in the air, at least in the US, whatever direction that takes. I see some of these things as being realistic, especially on a…
Not old-time, but tenured professor for 10 years. I definitely saw this happen in my time. The university has a faculty legislature that at one time was the administrative core, but it's largely a symbolic gesture at…
Alexander is maybe reading the wrong therapy books and literature. He should look up Bruce Wampold's research, for example. The dodo bird effect is well documented: therapy works relative to all sorts of placebos, but…
There are whole fields of research devoted to the questions you're raising. As such, it's hard to reply with anything that would do justice to them. This isn't to say your questions aren't important, just that your lack…
So, I shared some of your impressions, but also some of what Vox is conveying. Speaking from personal experience, the problem with large public institutions (maybe any institution?) hiring these consultancies is that…
The clothing itself isn't really what I necessarily expected, if you look at the pictures themselves (https://osf.io/v2j43/). The "rich" clothing is just more like "formal" or "conservative" clothing, and the "poor" is…
The ego depletion effect story is interesting to me for numerous reasons, some of which are statistical/inferential, some of which are more theoretical, and some of which are kind of personal or anecdotal (I know the…
I can't speak to venture funding or terrorism, but something seems really misleading to me about the NIH grant applications model. My sense is that a grant, like an academic paper, is often basically well-received or…
I think in general I mean that people are seen as cogs in a machine, rather than individuals to be trained, and there's no safety net from the government, either in terms of real retraining or advanced education or life…
Former tenured professor. I think your impression is generally spot-on although there's nuances and it's more complicated than that. In general, universities are suffering from many of the same pressures as other…
My personal impression is decentralized tech — at least with regard to established equivalent functionality — is still in a kind of emergent state. I think there's a lot of options, and there's some coalescing around…
I think we've reached some singularity with regard to the obviousness of the futility of large scale content moderation on social media.
Some people hallucinate without drugs. There's a range of this, in terms of intensity and type. Some people take drugs. They tend to onset around the same age (adolescence to early adulthood). Ergo, by base rates, some…
I had a different take on this paper. There's a well-known phenomenon whereby narcissism and self-evaluation is generally related to positive mood. It's part of an overall positive tint. So one interpretation of this is…
I have to agree this was done really poorly. Another example of why randomized controlled trials aren't always what they're cracked up to be. Not sure if a junk food diet would fly, but they could have at least given…
Interesting. I think I've heard that before somewhere else. I'll have to ask one of my colleagues about it. Where my family is from, in the northern US, the night sky is very clear and visible (barring clouds etc which…
Off topic, but after my daughter was born I realized how sad and worried I was that she wouldn't be familiar with looking up at the sky on a clear night and seeing the Milky Way. Stuff like what's in this article is…
After reading the BMJ piece I wondered if any study strategy would satisfy Ioannidis, to be honest. I came away from it feeling like his calls to eliminate observational studies and smaller randomized trials are…
Although I think that's reasonable at some level, I think there's dangers in it as well, in that I don't think we really know that much about metabolism or physiology in the grand scheme of things. Physiological and…
I was kind of wondering about this after reading the passage. On the one hand the traditional Bayesian response is something like "yes, we're making our prior assumptions explicit and then incorporating that into a…
I don't follow him regularly unless something he's saying comes up somehow, at which point I kinda look into him again. He's famous for lambasting psychology, some of which is deserved, but some of which is just…
Eh. I admit I have a complex with Taleb. It's not just his narcissism per se, although there's that too: he's just wrong about a lot of stuff, and other times fails to recognize how old his ideas are. He gets over his…