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February 07, 2012

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Great Minds on Measurement

  • Stephen Jay Gould“The best way to have a good idea is to have lots of ideas.”
    Linus Pauling, chemist, peace activist, author, educator; Nobel Prize in chemistry, Nobel Peace Prize (1901-1994)

Numbers

  • 44%

    Increase in volume of scientific papers published annually in Thomson Reuters' online database over the last ten years.

    1300%

    Increase in volume of retraction notices published annually in the same database over the same period.

    (See The Daily Stat from Harvard Business Review.)

Your Reading List:
Fun and Informative

  • NYTimes: More Genes than Humans, the Tomato Decoded
    The tomato, whose genome has just now been decoded, turns out to be one well-endowed vegetable, possessing 31,760 genes. This rich legacy, possibly a reflection of the disaster that killed off the dinosaurs, is some 7,000 more than that of a person, and presents a complex puzzle to scientists who hope to understand its secrets.
  • delanceyplace.com: Chess grandmasters have average intelligence
    Chess grandmasters have average cognitive skills and memories for matters outside of chess, and only show their extraordinary skills within the discipline of chess. This suggests that expertise in chess (and most other areas) has less to do with analytical skills -- the ability to project and weigh the relative merits of hundreds of options -- and more to do with long-term immersion and pattern recognition.
  • delanceyplace.com 5/15/12 - unconventional education
    "Taken together, this work reverses a bevy of educational practices. Instead of top-down instruction, [these 'self-organized learning environments'] are bottom up. Instead of making students learn on their own, this work is collaborative. Instead of a formal in-school setting for instruction, the Hole-in-the-Wall method relies on a playground-like environment. Most importantly, minimally invasive edu­cation doesn't require teachers. Currently there's a projected global short­age of 18 million teachers over the next decade."
  • This Is The Inspirational Quote Apple Employees Receive On Day One - Business Insider
    "There's work and there's your life's work..."
  • The Numbers Guy, in The Wall Street Journal
    Carl Bialik examines the way numbers are used, and abused.
  • delanceyplace.com
    Eclectic little non-fiction excerpts delivered to your email every day.
  • 33 ways to stay creative
  • The Daily Stat - Harvard Business Review
    Five days per week, The Daily Stat brings you facts and figures offering a quick, sometimes quirky perspective on our world and the business that happens in it.

Your Reading List:
Measurement

Your Reading List:
Social Media

Your Reading List
Social Science Research Blogs

  • sciencefriday.com - making science user-friendly
    NPR’s Science Friday site has articles and videos and a wide range of fascinating science-related material, dedicated to making science user friendly.
  • io9. We come from the future.
    If you think science news belongs right alongside news about Dr. Who and Star Wars (and of course it does), you will love this blog.
  • Wired Science - News for Your Neurons | Wired.com
    A wide range of topics, including recently: -- Elephant problem solving -- Unknown species in your refrigerator -- Otzi the Iceman's demise -- Coldest darkest stars -- Dolphins feeding video
  • Brain Pickings
    “Brain Pickings is a discovery engine for interestingness, culling and curating cross-disciplinary curiosity-quenchers, and separating the signal from the noise to bring you things you didn’t know you were interested in until you are... Brain Pickings is your LEGO treasure chest, full of pieces across art, design, science, technology, philosophy, history, politics, psychology, sociology, ecology, anthropology, you-name-itology.”
  • Alertbox: Jakob Nielsen's Newsletter on Web Usability
    A bi-weekly column by Dr. Jakob Nielsen, principal, Nielsen Norman Group.
  • TED: Ideas Worth Spreading
    The TED talks are short video lectures by experts on a wide range of fascinating topics. And this page is a cool interactive theme-oriented browser.
  • David Brooks at NYTimes.com
    “...covers the intellectual, cultural and scientific findings that land on David Brooks's desk nearly everyday...”
  • National Affairs—Findings: A Daily Roundup of Academic Studies by Kevin Lewis
    “Serious, Sublime, Surreal, and Otherwise” new research summarized. There are a great many papers here, organized by a different category each day, such as “It Could Be Worse,” “Motherhood and Apple Pie,” and “Intoxicating.” Highly recommended for research geeks.

Your Reading List:
Science & Technology

  • "Imagine" by Jonah Lehrer, Reviewed in NYTimes
    Christopher Chabris delivers a bit of a dressing down to Jonah Lehrer and his book on creativity, "Imagine." The book apparently, contains a few too many errors and too much unscientific thinking for a book about science. -WTP
  • Roulette beater spills physics behind victory - New Scientist
    A PROMINENT mathematician famous the world over for successfully turning the odds of roulette against the house has broken his decades-long silence about how he achieved the coup.
  • Building Data Discovery into Your Organization - Thomas C. Redman - Harvard Business Review
    There are many ways to "put data to work," each with its own strengths and challenges. And while no one fully understands the various forms data-driven organizations will take, we can make some intelligent guesses.
  • Survival's Ick Factor: Disgust's Evolutionary Role is Irresistible to Researchers
    "Disgust is the Cinderella of emotions. While fear, sadness and anger, its nasty, flashy sisters, have drawn the rapt attention of psychologists, poor disgust has been hidden away in a corner, left to muck around in the ashes. No longer. Disgust is having its moment in the light as researchers find that it does more than cause that sick feeling in the stomach. It protects human beings from disease and parasites, and affects almost every aspect of human relations, from romance to politics."
  • Google Effects on Memory: Cognitive Consequences of Having Information at Our Fingertips
    The results of four studies suggest that when faced with difficult questions, people are primed to think about computers and that when people expect to have future access to information, they have lower rates of recall of the information itself and enhanced recall instead for where to access it. The Internet has become a primary form of external or transactive memory, where information is stored collectively outside ourselves.
  • The Rise of the New Groupthink -- NYTimes
    “Research strongly suggests that people are more creative when they enjoy privacy and freedom from interruption.”
  • The Dawn of the Relationship Era in Marketing | Advertising Age
    Ignore the Human Element of Marketing at Your Own Peril: Forget Product Positioning, This is the Dawn of the Relationship Era.
  • Emotional News Framing Affects Public Response to Crises
    When organizational crises occur, such as plane crashes or automobile recalls, public relations practitioners develop strategies for substantive action and effective communication. Now, University of Missouri researchers have found that the way in which news coverage of a crisis is framed affects the public’s emotional response toward the company involved.
  • Proof That The PC Is Dying: Business Insider
    There is a fabulous chart in this post that shows the number of units shipped for different brands of computers over the last 35 years. Summary: PCs have leveled off, Macs still rise, and phones and pads are rising fastest.
  • Infographic: Population Control, Marauder Style
    Matthew White’s “The Great Big Book of Horrible Things,” is an amusing (really) account of the murderous ways of despots, slave traders, blundering royals, gladiators and assorted hordes. Here is a fascinating infographic look at the sweep of human brutality presented in a timeline.

Your Reading List:
New Hampshire News

  • NH police: Man distracted by phone app in accident - Boston.com
    New Hampshire police say a man charged in a hit-and-run accident tells them he was distracted by a smartphone app. Police in Plaistow said 30-year-old John Sheehan was downloading the application on his phone. He's accused of hitting a man walking on the shoulder of a road on Sunday night.
  • Dog-dropping incident under investigation at Keene State - BostonHerald.com
    Two Keene State College students accused in the dropping of a dog from a second-floor dorm window last month will not face criminal charges, but could face disciplinary action from the college, officials say.
  • Exploding keg kills Redhook Brewery worker | SeacoastOnline.com
  • Police Officer Shot Multiple Times In Manchester - New Hampshire News Story - WMUR New Hampshire
    "A police officer was shot on Manchester's west side Wednesday evening and taken to a hospital where he underwent surgery and was listed in serious but stable condition, authorities said."
  • New Hampshire State Legislator Drops Gun During Committee Meeting
    "A Republican member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives... accidentally dropped one of his guns on the floor at the start of a committee meeting Tuesday morning. State Rep. Kyle Tasker (R-Nottingham) explained to onlookers that he had donated blood that morning and the effects caused him to drop his gun at the start of a House Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee meeting... The gun did not fire."
  • Former Legislator Accused Of $50 Million Defense Scam
    David Young, 49, a former state legislator from Alstead, is accused of steering military contracts to his friends. The federal government seized more than $15 million of his assets and accused him of scamming the the U.S. Department of Defense out of $54 million. "I was surprised. That's not the David Young I know. The David Young I know is a great guy with sound judgment, a hardworking guy," said New Hampshire Republican Party Chairman Wayne McDonald.
  • Peterborough Math Teacher Saves Choking Student
    Seventh-grade math teacher Susan Brewer said she was at the right place at the right time when one of her students suddenly couldn't breathe. "I was sitting at my desk talking with another student, and I looked up and Bruce was standing there," Brewer said. "His eyes were wide, as big as saucers. His mouth was open, and he just had a real panicked look on his face." Brewer rushed to help. "I jumped up and saw that he couldn't breathe," she said. "So I turned him around, got him in front of me and did the Heimlich. It only lasted about 5 seconds, and then I heard a gasp of air. He was breathing again."
  • Man Accused Of Threatening Clerk Over Beer
    Manchester police said Peter Mackey, 24, tried to buy a case of beer from a 7-Eleven early Saturday morning, but the clerk refused to sell it, saying it was too late. "He ignored that warning and brought the beer to the front counter area, and she again told him she couldn't sell him the beer, at which point he stated to her he had a knife, reached over the counter, started pushing the buttons on the register, opening the drawer of the register," said Lt. Maureen Tessier. Police said Mackey never showed a knife. They said he then took off running with cash and beer in hand, but he was found a few blocks away after police found a trail of discarded beer cans.
  • I-393 Crash Sparked By Couple's Road Rage, Police Say
    Interstate 393 eastbound was closed at exit 3 Thursday afternoon for a rollover accident related to road rage between a couple, police said. Police said boyfriend and girlfriend Travis Vachon, 24, and Bianca Roy, 17, were driving in separate cars when Vachon threw an object at Roy's vehicle, cracking the windshield.

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