unclesaamm | 2 years ago | on: Could science leave the university?
unclesaamm's comments
unclesaamm | 2 years ago | on: The diffusion of scientific discovery
unclesaamm | 2 years ago | on: The diffusion of scientific discovery
> Title: Prestige drives epistemic inequality in the diffusion of scientific ideas
> Abstract: The spread of ideas in the scientific community is often viewed as a competition, in which good ideas spread further because of greater intrinsic fitness, and publication venue and citation counts correlate with importance and impact. However, relatively little is known about how structural factors influence the spread of ideas, and specifically how where an idea originates might influence how it spreads. Here, we investigate the role of faculty hiring networks, which embody the set of researcher transitions from doctoral to faculty institutions, in shaping the spread of ideas in computer science, and the importance of where in the network an idea originates. We consider comprehensive data on the hiring events of 5032 faculty at all 205 Ph.D.-granting departments of computer science in the U.S. and Canada, and on the timing and titles of 200,476 associated publications. Analyzing five popular research topics, we show empirically that faculty hiring can and does facilitate the spread of ideas in science. Having established such a mechanism, we then analyze its potential consequences using epidemic models to simulate the generic spread of research ideas and quantify the impact of where an idea originates on its longterm diffusion across the network. We find that research from prestigious institutions spreads more quickly and completely than work of similar quality originating from less prestigious institutions. Our analyses establish the theoretical trade-offs between university prestige and the quality of ideas necessary for efficient circulation. Our results establish faculty hiring as an underlying mechanism that drives the persistent epistemic advantage observed for elite institutions, and provide a theoretical lower bound for the impact of structural inequality in shaping the spread of ideas in science.
unclesaamm | 2 years ago | on: U.S. bank lending slumps by most on record in final weeks of March
https://shop.nplusonemag.com/products/the-next-shift-by-gabr...
This pattern isn't unique to Pittsburgh, of course, and has played out broadly across the US.
unclesaamm | 3 years ago | on: Wild macaques challenge the origin of intentional tool production
another solution to this would be if Science Advances were to require submissions to provide a "Significance Statement", like PNAS does, which would be essentially at the level of readability you provided.
unclesaamm | 3 years ago | on: What does Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse mean for the financial system?
unclesaamm | 3 years ago | on: What is ChatGPT doing and why does it work?
I know people who work at the company, and they sign agreements that any intellectual property (including mathematical proofs) they generate are owned by Stephen Wolfram. Anything Wolfram puts out, like blog posts, scientific articles, and books, are likely to be partly or wholly ghost-written.
unclesaamm | 4 years ago | on: Polyhedra Viewer: Visualize relationships between convex regular-faced polyhedra
unclesaamm | 4 years ago | on: Police Shared Intelligence on Protesters with Pipeline Company
https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/the-supermanagerial-reic...
unclesaamm | 4 years ago | on: All you need is call/cc (2013)
unclesaamm | 5 years ago | on: Moved a server from one building to another with zero downtime
unclesaamm | 5 years ago | on: Richard Feynman's Perspective of Life
I love Richard Feynman as much as the next person (minus his famous misogyny), but this post is basically contentless. It's literally a motivational poster. Like why not post an essay or video instead.
unclesaamm | 5 years ago | on: Why aren’t we talking more about airborne transmission?
unclesaamm | 5 years ago | on: Why aren’t we talking more about airborne transmission?
unclesaamm | 5 years ago | on: What is a Product Roadmap?
A product roadmap describes this direction and intent for a product that doesn't exist yet, like where you plan to go.
A map, on the other hand, is more of a summary or representation of _past_ knowledge. You create a map as you explore the territory to reflect what you've seen. And sure, you consult a map before setting out too.
I think this distinction is actually critical, because becoming too attached to a product roadmap as if it were a literal roadmap that can guide you to your destination is one of the main flaws of poor product management. The author mentions this a little in saying the product roadmap is a "living document", but I don't think it's emphasized enough. It's not just like a map that gets updated occasionally, instead it's more like this fabricated fantasy road trip plan (one that you have to undergo without an actual map).
unclesaamm | 5 years ago | on: A man who can read letters but not numbers exposes roots of consciousness
unclesaamm | 5 years ago | on: How to write technical posts so people will read them (2019)
The main challenge of writing a technical post is deeper: who is your audience? And how much do you assume they already know?
The temptations are to take extremes: either you have to reexplain everything in the universe, or you assume you're talking to someone who already knows everything.
I've found this surprisingly hard to balance. In the end, though, I decided it's always better to err on the side of comprehensibility. This is true even for highly technical writing like scholarly articles.
One way that I've found works is to first write it out, stream of consciousness. Invariably this will be too technical. That will be obvious after waiting a day or two and revisiting it. Then build a bridge between where you are now and where the article is, with a more general introduction, and revise the body to flow with that new introduction. It's okay to push details to a supplement or appendix or footnote if necessary.
unclesaamm | 6 years ago | on: Current Wuhan Situation
https://nplusonemag.com/online-only/online-only/chinese-viru...
unclesaamm | 8 years ago | on: The Oforth Programming Language
unclesaamm | 8 years ago | on: Bus Lane Blocked, He Trained His Computer to Catch Scofflaws
In my experience, when politicians act defensively and cornered, they often go and make changes behind the scenes later. When you let them go without a scuffle they will view you as a non-threat. So great job, and cool project!
Annoyingly, the National Academy of Scholars was named in a way that collides in the namespace with the (actually reputable) National Academy of Sciences (publishers of PNAS).