This is the best part.
Someone with this CV got a position as an Assistant Professor. Imagine what she had to do to get there. No, not that. She is way too ugly, although evidently not everybody is choosy these days.
Tee Hee. BTW, this is Matt Haughey's wife.
It's all on the Web, so Privacy Issues are no problem here. Do a Search for
Kay Livesay and you'll see that she is indeed an Assistant Professor with such a shitty CV.
L I V E S A Y . O R G
current vitaresearch interestsselected publications
Kay Livesay
University of San Francisco
Department of Psychology
2130 Fulton Street
San Francisco, CA 94117
(415) 422-5097
livesay@usfca.edu
Education 9/92 - 12/98 University of California, Riverside
Ph.D., Psychology: area of emphasis, Cognitive Psychology
Dissertation: Multiple constraints and individual differences in semantic and syntactic processing.
9/92 - 12/96 University of California, Riverside
Masters of Arts: Psychology, emphasis Cognitive Psychology.
Thesis: Category facilitation in free recall: The have's and have not's in free recall
9/87 - 3/92 University of California, Los Angeles
Bachelor of Science in Psychobiology
Honors and Awards APA Dissertation Research Grant (1997-1998)
Graduate Division Dissertation Research Grant (1997-1998)
Humanities Research Grant (1997-1998)
Invited to attend the 3CAPS Modeling workshop at Carnegie Mellon (summer 1995)
Current Research Interest High-dimensional space modeling of meaning representation.
Determining the effects of syntax, semantics and discourse constraints on sentence comprehension.
Factors contributing to individual differences in reading comprehension.
Teaching Experience Courses Taught
Psychological Research Methods (4 semesters, USF)
Psychological Statistics (1 quarter UCR, 1 quarter UCLA)
Cognitive Psychology (2 semesters USF, 2 quarters UCLA)
Learning and Memory (2 semesters USF, 1 quarter UCR)
Service Advisor to Psi Chi, national honor in psychology
Advisor to the Psychology Club, a general interest psychology club.
Policy Board: College of Arts and Science, Arts representative to the faculty union's policy board. The policy board makes decisions concerning union contracts, faculty grievances and negotiations with the administration.
Papers Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (in press). Mediated Priming in the Cerebral Hemispheres, Brain & Cognition, X, XX-XX.
Burgess, C & Livesay, K. (1998). The effect of corpus size in predicting reaction time in a basic word recognition task: Moving on from Kucera and Francis. Behavior Research Methods, Instrument Computers, 30, 272-277.
Livesay, K, & Burgess, C. (1998). Mediated priming in high-dimensional semantic space: No effect of direct semantic relationships or co-occurrence. Brain & Cognition, 37, 102-105.
Burgess, C., Livesay, K. & Lund, K. (1998). Explorations in context space: Words, sentences, discourse. Discourse Processes, 25, 211-257.
Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (1997). Mediated Priming: A representational and empirical account using the HAL model. In: Proceedings of the Cognitive Science Society (pp. 436-441). Hillsdale, N. J. : Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.
Burgess, C , Livesay, K. & Lund, K. (1996). Modeling parsing constraints in high-dimensional semantic space: On the use of proper names. In: Proceedings of the Cognitive Science Society (pp. 737). Hillsdale, N. J. : Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.
Published Abstracts Livesay, K. (2001). The influence of verbal ability on mediated priming. In: Abstracts of the Psychonomics Society (p.). Austin, TX: Psychonomic Society Publications.
Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (2000). Influence of verbal ability and working memory on syntactic processing. In: Abstracts of the Psychonomics Society (p. 48). Austin, TX: Psychonomic Society Publications.
Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (1999). Mediated priming: The role of verbal ability and contextual consistency. In: Abstracts of the Psychonomics Society (p. 9). Austin, TX: Psychonomic Society Publications.
In Preparation Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (in preparation). The effects of semantic relatedness, lexical co-occurrence and context on mediated priming.
Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (in preparation). Efficacy of high-dimensional semantic neighborhoods as word definitions.
Presentations Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (2002). Factors influencing mediated priming. Paper presented at the 14th Annual Meeting of the American Psychological Society.
Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (2002). Mediated priming in the cerebral hemispheres. Paper presented at TENNET XIII, The Thirteenth Annual Conference on Theoretical and Experimental Neuropsychology, Montreal, Quebec.
Livesay, K. (2001). The influence of verbal ability on mediated priming. Paper presented at the 42nd Annual Meeting of the Psychonomics Society.
Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (2000). Influence of verbal ability and working memory on syntactic processing. Paper presented at the 41st Annual Meeting of the Psychonomics Society.
Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (1999). Mediated priming: The role of verbal ability and contextual consistency. Paper presented at the 40th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomics Society.
Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (1997). Mediated priming: A representational and empirical account using the HAL model. Paper presented at the 19th annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, Stanford, CA.
Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (1997). Mediated priming in high-dimensional semantic space: No effect of direct semantic relationships or co-occurrence. Paper presented at TENNET VIII, Eighth Annual Conference on Theoretical and Experimental Neuropsychology, Montreal, Quebec.
Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (1997). Mediated priming does not rely on direct semantics or co-occurrence. Paper presented at the 10th Annual CUNY Sentence Processing Conference, Santa Monica, CA.
Burgess, C , Livesay, K. & Lund, K. (1997, invited talk). Using High dimensional context space: Semantic neighborhoods, word and sentence vectors, and inferencing. Paper presented at the Winter Text Conference, Jackson Hole, WY.
Burgess, C , Livesay, K. & Lund, K. (1996). Modeling parsing constraints in high-dimensional semantic space: On the use of proper names. Paper presented at the 18th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, San Diego.
Livesay, K. & Clark, S. E. (1995). Category facilitation and interference in free recall. Paper presented at the 1995 Annual Meeting of the Western Psychological Association.
Burgess, C., Clark, S. E., Audet, C. & Livesay, K. L. (1995). Eyewitness interpretation of an ambiguous event: bias and gender effects. Paper presented at the 1995 Annual Meeting of the Western Psychological Association.
Clark, S. E., Livesay, K. L. & Callan, S. (1994). Effect of organization on free recall. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Mathematical Psychology.
Clark, S. E., Livesay, K. L. (1994). Organization and independence in recall. Paper presented at the 35th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomics Society.
Professional Affiliations Western Psychological Association
American Psychological Society
Psychonomics Society
look at these poor critters. They really need to get out and get a life. Something more than just hanging on to a shitty web site. Tee hee. Including the writer of the Lawmeme article, one of Matt Haughey's lakeis.
The Lawmeme article is not insightful at all. The writer is just sucking up to Matt Haughey, the "creator" of metafilter, the jilted lover of Blogger.
I guess most of you know by now, that Blogger got bought by Google, and unemployed Matt Haughey, former Pyra employee really feels let down. The dot.com boom sort of passed him by.
He takes revenge in unleashing the dogs on Laurie.
February 28, 2003
Accidental Privacy Spills. (found via/.) In which are discussed the Laurie Garrett thread and its implications for privacy, correspondence, and the getting of life.
posted by brownpau to MetaFilter-related at 2:42 PM PST
That should be/. I know I tested that link. Gah.
posted by brownpau at 2:48 PM PST on February 28
Double post, I'm afraid.
Worth looking at again though.
posted by feelinglistless at 2:51 PM PST on February 28
Ah hell, sorry, everyone. That's what I get for not dropping by MeTa often enough.
posted by brownpau at 2:56 PM PST on February 28
Actually it's fun to read what the Slashdotters have to say. What a closed group self-righteous introverts, spending all day arguing on a website. They really need to get a life.
posted by Stan Chin at 3:18 PM PST on February 28
I don't have any problems with Laurie Garrett's
original email or the second one. It's quite refreshing to get a sneak peak into that world.
I have problems with how the issue was handled later on by turds like Matt Haughey and his lakeis. That also includes the writer of the LawMeme article.
If you want to convince yourself of their duplicity, all you need is to read their last shit dropped on metatalk.
The best part is what they write about Slashdot.
People who spend all their day on a website called metafilter. Tee hee. No wonder Matt Haughey is so bitter. He is completely dead. His former company, Pyra just got bought up by Google so he has every reason to hate the world.
February 28, 2003
Accidental Privacy Spills. (found via/.) In which are discussed the Laurie Garrett thread and its implications for privacy, correspondence, and the getting of life.
posted by brownpau to MetaFilter-related at 2:42 PM PST
That should be/. I know I tested that link. Gah.
posted by brownpau at 2:48 PM PST on February 28
Double post, I'm afraid.
Worth looking at again though.
posted by feelinglistless at 2:51 PM PST on February 28
Ah hell, sorry, everyone. That's what I get for not dropping by MeTa often enough.
posted by brownpau at 2:56 PM PST on February 28
Actually it's fun to read what the Slashdotters have to say. What a closed group self-righteous introverts, spending all day arguing on a website. They really need to get a life.
posted by Stan Chin at 3:18 PM PST on February 28
This is the best part. Someone with this CV got a position as an Assistant Professor. Imagine what she had to do to get there. No, not that. She is way too ugly, although evidently not everybody is choosy these days. Tee Hee. BTW, this is Matt Haughey's wife. It's all on the Web, so Privacy Issues are no problem here. Do a Search for Kay Livesay and you'll see that she is indeed an Assistant Professor with such a shitty CV. L I V E S A Y . O R G current vitaresearch interestsselected publications Kay Livesay University of San Francisco Department of Psychology 2130 Fulton Street San Francisco, CA 94117 (415) 422-5097 livesay@usfca.edu Education 9/92 - 12/98 University of California, Riverside Ph.D., Psychology: area of emphasis, Cognitive Psychology Dissertation: Multiple constraints and individual differences in semantic and syntactic processing. 9/92 - 12/96 University of California, Riverside Masters of Arts: Psychology, emphasis Cognitive Psychology. Thesis: Category facilitation in free recall: The have's and have not's in free recall 9/87 - 3/92 University of California, Los Angeles Bachelor of Science in Psychobiology Honors and Awards APA Dissertation Research Grant (1997-1998) Graduate Division Dissertation Research Grant (1997-1998) Humanities Research Grant (1997-1998) Invited to attend the 3CAPS Modeling workshop at Carnegie Mellon (summer 1995) Current Research Interest High-dimensional space modeling of meaning representation. Determining the effects of syntax, semantics and discourse constraints on sentence comprehension. Factors contributing to individual differences in reading comprehension. Teaching Experience Courses Taught Psychological Research Methods (4 semesters, USF) Psychological Statistics (1 quarter UCR, 1 quarter UCLA) Cognitive Psychology (2 semesters USF, 2 quarters UCLA) Learning and Memory (2 semesters USF, 1 quarter UCR) Service Advisor to Psi Chi, national honor in psychology Advisor to the Psychology Club, a general interest psychology club. Policy Board: College of Arts and Science, Arts representative to the faculty union's policy board. The policy board makes decisions concerning union contracts, faculty grievances and negotiations with the administration. Papers Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (in press). Mediated Priming in the Cerebral Hemispheres, Brain & Cognition, X, XX-XX. Burgess, C & Livesay, K. (1998). The effect of corpus size in predicting reaction time in a basic word recognition task: Moving on from Kucera and Francis. Behavior Research Methods, Instrument Computers, 30, 272-277. Livesay, K, & Burgess, C. (1998). Mediated priming in high-dimensional semantic space: No effect of direct semantic relationships or co-occurrence. Brain & Cognition, 37, 102-105. Burgess, C., Livesay, K. & Lund, K. (1998). Explorations in context space: Words, sentences, discourse. Discourse Processes, 25, 211-257. Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (1997). Mediated Priming: A representational and empirical account using the HAL model. In: Proceedings of the Cognitive Science Society (pp. 436-441). Hillsdale, N. J. : Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc. Burgess, C , Livesay, K. & Lund, K. (1996). Modeling parsing constraints in high-dimensional semantic space: On the use of proper names. In: Proceedings of the Cognitive Science Society (pp. 737). Hillsdale, N. J. : Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc. Published Abstracts Livesay, K. (2001). The influence of verbal ability on mediated priming. In: Abstracts of the Psychonomics Society (p.). Austin, TX: Psychonomic Society Publications. Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (2000). Influence of verbal ability and working memory on syntactic processing. In: Abstracts of the Psychonomics Society (p. 48). Austin, TX: Psychonomic Society Publications. Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (1999). Mediated priming: The role of verbal ability and contextual consistency. In: Abstracts of the Psychonomics Society (p. 9). Austin, TX: Psychonomic Society Publications. In Preparation Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (in preparation). The effects of semantic relatedness, lexical co-occurrence and context on mediated priming. Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (in preparation). Efficacy of high-dimensional semantic neighborhoods as word definitions. Presentations Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (2002). Factors influencing mediated priming. Paper presented at the 14th Annual Meeting of the American Psychological Society. Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (2002). Mediated priming in the cerebral hemispheres. Paper presented at TENNET XIII, The Thirteenth Annual Conference on Theoretical and Experimental Neuropsychology, Montreal, Quebec. Livesay, K. (2001). The influence of verbal ability on mediated priming. Paper presented at the 42nd Annual Meeting of the Psychonomics Society. Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (2000). Influence of verbal ability and working memory on syntactic processing. Paper presented at the 41st Annual Meeting of the Psychonomics Society. Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (1999). Mediated priming: The role of verbal ability and contextual consistency. Paper presented at the 40th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomics Society. Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (1997). Mediated priming: A representational and empirical account using the HAL model. Paper presented at the 19th annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, Stanford, CA. Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (1997). Mediated priming in high-dimensional semantic space: No effect of direct semantic relationships or co-occurrence. Paper presented at TENNET VIII, Eighth Annual Conference on Theoretical and Experimental Neuropsychology, Montreal, Quebec. Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (1997). Mediated priming does not rely on direct semantics or co-occurrence. Paper presented at the 10th Annual CUNY Sentence Processing Conference, Santa Monica, CA. Burgess, C , Livesay, K. & Lund, K. (1997, invited talk). Using High dimensional context space: Semantic neighborhoods, word and sentence vectors, and inferencing. Paper presented at the Winter Text Conference, Jackson Hole, WY. Burgess, C , Livesay, K. & Lund, K. (1996). Modeling parsing constraints in high-dimensional semantic space: On the use of proper names. Paper presented at the 18th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, San Diego. Livesay, K. & Clark, S. E. (1995). Category facilitation and interference in free recall. Paper presented at the 1995 Annual Meeting of the Western Psychological Association. Burgess, C., Clark, S. E., Audet, C. & Livesay, K. L. (1995). Eyewitness interpretation of an ambiguous event: bias and gender effects. Paper presented at the 1995 Annual Meeting of the Western Psychological Association. Clark, S. E., Livesay, K. L. & Callan, S. (1994). Effect of organization on free recall. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Mathematical Psychology. Clark, S. E., Livesay, K. L. (1994). Organization and independence in recall. Paper presented at the 35th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomics Society. Professional Affiliations Western Psychological Association American Psychological Society Psychonomics Society
look at these poor critters. They really need to get out and get a life. Something more than just hanging on to a shitty web site. Tee hee. Including the writer of the Lawmeme article, one of Matt Haughey's lakeis. The Lawmeme article is not insightful at all. The writer is just sucking up to Matt Haughey, the "creator" of metafilter, the jilted lover of Blogger. I guess most of you know by now, that Blogger got bought by Google, and unemployed Matt Haughey, former Pyra employee really feels let down. The dot.com boom sort of passed him by. He takes revenge in unleashing the dogs on Laurie. February 28, 2003 Accidental Privacy Spills. (found via /.) In which are discussed the Laurie Garrett thread and its implications for privacy, correspondence, and the getting of life.
posted by brownpau to MetaFilter-related at 2:42 PM PST
That should be /. I know I tested that link. Gah.
posted by brownpau at 2:48 PM PST on February 28
Double post, I'm afraid.
Worth looking at again though.
posted by feelinglistless at 2:51 PM PST on February 28
Ah hell, sorry, everyone. That's what I get for not dropping by MeTa often enough.
posted by brownpau at 2:56 PM PST on February 28
Actually it's fun to read what the Slashdotters have to say. What a closed group self-righteous introverts, spending all day arguing on a website. They really need to get a life.
posted by Stan Chin at 3:18 PM PST on February 28
I don't have any problems with Laurie Garrett's original email or the second one. It's quite refreshing to get a sneak peak into that world. I have problems with how the issue was handled later on by turds like Matt Haughey and his lakeis. That also includes the writer of the LawMeme article. If you want to convince yourself of their duplicity, all you need is to read their last shit dropped on metatalk. The best part is what they write about Slashdot. People who spend all their day on a website called metafilter. Tee hee. No wonder Matt Haughey is so bitter. He is completely dead. His former company, Pyra just got bought up by Google so he has every reason to hate the world. February 28, 2003 Accidental Privacy Spills. (found via /.) In which are discussed the Laurie Garrett thread and its implications for privacy, correspondence, and the getting of life.
posted by brownpau to MetaFilter-related at 2:42 PM PST
That should be /. I know I tested that link. Gah.
posted by brownpau at 2:48 PM PST on February 28
Double post, I'm afraid.
Worth looking at again though.
posted by feelinglistless at 2:51 PM PST on February 28
Ah hell, sorry, everyone. That's what I get for not dropping by MeTa often enough.
posted by brownpau at 2:56 PM PST on February 28
Actually it's fun to read what the Slashdotters have to say. What a closed group self-righteous introverts, spending all day arguing on a website. They really need to get a life.
posted by Stan Chin at 3:18 PM PST on February 28