Its weird many of the comments here are trivializing this. I will admit, yah! it seems pretty fucking obvious to add this feature.
However, what open source software does this? I am genuinely interested. Does Libre Office? I would love to see this in a text reader programs because I haven't seen that feature in any of the ones I've used like Voice Dream Reader or Capti.
The comments here are stupid. I actually RTFA in protest. Here is a summary provided by SMMRY:
A tsunami warning was initially issued for Mexico and other nearby countries, but later lifted.
The quake, which struck at 23:50 local time on Thursday, was felt hundreds of miles away in Mexico City, with buildings swaying and people running into the street.
BBC in depth - Earthquakes A history of deadly earthquakes Can earthquakes be predicted? Twenty-three people are reported dead in Mexico's Oaxaca state, 17 of them in the town of Juchitán, state Governor Alejandro Murat said.
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center had originally said that tsunami waves of more than 3m were possible along the coasts of Mexico, with threats also facing El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Costa Rica.
Panic on the streets BBC's Lourdes Heredia The earthquake has brought back memories of the tremor of 1985, which left massive destruction in Mexico City and a death toll of 10,000.
At magnitude 8.2, the quake outstrips the deadly 1985 tremor that hit close to Mexico City and caused thousands of deaths.
Mexico is currently also being threatened on its eastern coast by Hurricane Katia.
I see many people talking about the operational definition of consciousness and how it is related to memory. There is a problem here in that memory is not a single consistent entity. There are different forms of it. What did I eat this morning vs. what is the capital of Idaho vs. how do I ride a bike vs. I am I afraid of spiders? These rely on different parts of the brain.
Let us explore the common concept of memory:
Most people are probably talking about 1. all the things I can consciously recall. and
2. think things are forever stored in their mind like a filing cabinet.
The above 2 points are very general, and I admit they may be wrong.
Lets look at memory moving from behaviorist to more cognitive understanding:
Classical Conditioning:
Pavlov makes a dog salivate when ringing a bell. Memory or recall at an unconscious level is responsible for the reaction.
Operant Conditioning:
Punishment for a particular behavior will reduce the likelihood of that behavior occurring again. Again memory is somewhere in the mix. I have a response I will do less often because I don't want to get punished.
From the above orientation, we see memory as being inherent in the behavior.
Moving more cognitively:
People who have damage to their hippo campus can develop anterograde amnesia. These people can not form new memories. (think Memento). Studies have been done on them to determine if indeed they no longer have the ability to produce memories. One experiment, used an aversive event on subjects, then distracted them long enough that they forgot the event. It was found that even though they would forget the event, they would still physiologically react to it before it occured again. In this case the reaction would be increased heart rate and sweat.
More cognitively (and more salient to this topic):
Elizabeth Loftus has found that memories can be changed after the fact. She has found that that certain ques in questions can change the way we remember things. For instance, in one experiment participants viewed a car accident on video and then answered a question about how much broken glass was on the street at the accident. Participants who were prompted with the question "How much glass was on the street" reported remembering glass significantly more often than those who were ask "Was there glass on the street?" This shows that memory retrevial is fallible.
Yeah. It totally could according to classical conditioning. If we connect the scent scent of coffee with wakefulness then there is the possibility that it will produce that state even when we aren't drinking coffee. Its actually very plausible. The other scents I am not so sure about.
Did some work with a couple of species of Arabdopsis last summer. The lab sequenced one of genes that the plant uses for glycolysis and compared it across several different species as part of a phylogenetic study. It was a joint effort between our lab and a lady in South Africa.
I feel the stories are good especially the third book (Holy crap! I love that book.) The 4th and beyond not so much. I find that I hate the lurching pace of the narrative because of Douglas Adam's jokes getting in the way. As an alternative, I posit John Scalzi's Fuzzy Nation. He writes very funny science fiction stories.
You know that might actually work. Educational outreach really is over rated for some health issues.
Which education interventions do you suggest? How do you plan on delivering it?
Its weird many of the comments here are trivializing this. I will admit, yah! it seems pretty fucking obvious to add this feature. However, what open source software does this? I am genuinely interested. Does Libre Office? I would love to see this in a text reader programs because I haven't seen that feature in any of the ones I've used like Voice Dream Reader or Capti.
Well. Thanks for telling us. I hate being bored too.
Damn you, Captin! If my karma wasn't so bad, I would up-vote the hell out of this post. These are some solid, contemporary books. Will check them out.
Nice! One I haven't seen before.
Where do you recommend, like move to Spain or what?
The comments here are stupid. I actually RTFA in protest. Here is a summary provided by SMMRY: A tsunami warning was initially issued for Mexico and other nearby countries, but later lifted. The quake, which struck at 23:50 local time on Thursday, was felt hundreds of miles away in Mexico City, with buildings swaying and people running into the street. BBC in depth - Earthquakes A history of deadly earthquakes Can earthquakes be predicted? Twenty-three people are reported dead in Mexico's Oaxaca state, 17 of them in the town of Juchitán, state Governor Alejandro Murat said. The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center had originally said that tsunami waves of more than 3m were possible along the coasts of Mexico, with threats also facing El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Costa Rica. Panic on the streets BBC's Lourdes Heredia The earthquake has brought back memories of the tremor of 1985, which left massive destruction in Mexico City and a death toll of 10,000. At magnitude 8.2, the quake outstrips the deadly 1985 tremor that hit close to Mexico City and caused thousands of deaths. Mexico is currently also being threatened on its eastern coast by Hurricane Katia.
Please explain it because you have it in front of you.
You're uncomfortable with the intelligence of ethnic groups?
Would you say that these tools require more effort to teach with, specifically to get the same amount of information taught as a traditional lecture?
You disagree with this persons compass.
You are mad at imperialist countries.
That is an interesting thought.
Reading this comment as a liberal at first I bristled, then I agreed ?
Great comment. One question what do you think of the liberals who hate Hillary. Are they shills to? Please enlighten us.
http://memeburn.com/2011/08/th...
Let us explore the common concept of memory: Most people are probably talking about 1. all the things I can consciously recall. and 2. think things are forever stored in their mind like a filing cabinet. The above 2 points are very general, and I admit they may be wrong.
Lets look at memory moving from behaviorist to more cognitive understanding: Classical Conditioning:
Pavlov makes a dog salivate when ringing a bell. Memory or recall at an unconscious level is responsible for the reaction.
Operant Conditioning: Punishment for a particular behavior will reduce the likelihood of that behavior occurring again. Again memory is somewhere in the mix. I have a response I will do less often because I don't want to get punished.
From the above orientation, we see memory as being inherent in the behavior.
Moving more cognitively: People who have damage to their hippo campus can develop anterograde amnesia. These people can not form new memories. (think Memento). Studies have been done on them to determine if indeed they no longer have the ability to produce memories. One experiment, used an aversive event on subjects, then distracted them long enough that they forgot the event. It was found that even though they would forget the event, they would still physiologically react to it before it occured again. In this case the reaction would be increased heart rate and sweat.
More cognitively (and more salient to this topic): Elizabeth Loftus has found that memories can be changed after the fact. She has found that that certain ques in questions can change the way we remember things. For instance, in one experiment participants viewed a car accident on video and then answered a question about how much broken glass was on the street at the accident. Participants who were prompted with the question "How much glass was on the street" reported remembering glass significantly more often than those who were ask "Was there glass on the street?" This shows that memory retrevial is fallible.
Yeah. It totally could according to classical conditioning. If we connect the scent scent of coffee with wakefulness then there is the possibility that it will produce that state even when we aren't drinking coffee. Its actually very plausible. The other scents I am not so sure about.
Did some work with a couple of species of Arabdopsis last summer. The lab sequenced one of genes that the plant uses for glycolysis and compared it across several different species as part of a phylogenetic study. It was a joint effort between our lab and a lady in South Africa.
Does this mean that religion is a placebo?
I feel the stories are good especially the third book (Holy crap! I love that book.) The 4th and beyond not so much. I find that I hate the lurching pace of the narrative because of Douglas Adam's jokes getting in the way. As an alternative, I posit John Scalzi's Fuzzy Nation. He writes very funny science fiction stories.
No. It is very emphatically about the addiction. They don't want get high again.
There are areas where you can do good science with dimestore materials Which ones would those be? I am curious. Can you elaborate?
Was "I *do* XXX" a Freudian slip when talking about internet related productivity problems?