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Joined
1 yr. ago

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

Conflicted on AI Politics

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

Optimizing tea: An N=4 experiment

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

My advice on (internet) writing, for what it’s worth

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

Historical Tech Tree

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

DumPy: NumPy except it’s OK if you’re dum

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

What if this were easy?

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

The Heat Mirage: My least-favorite internet maneuver

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

I don’t like NumPy

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

India-Pakistan on the Brink: Forecasts for what happens next

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

How to title your blog post or whatever

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

The Case for Insect Consciousness

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

How much information is in DNA?

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

Will the growing deer prion epidemic spread to humans? Why not?

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

Compensating compassion

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

So much blood

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

"There's a guy who has this encounter with a statue of some kind, and it makes his head explode."

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

An Introduction To The Gut Microbiome, Part 1

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

“And then we get the robots”

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

Cultivating doubt: why I no longer believe cultivated meat is the answer

dynomight internet forum @lemmy.world

Trading stuff for money

  • The response I find really amusing is that lots of people respond with, basically, "But if you don't do this then it's harder to make money on twitter."

    (OK... If doing plagiarism makes it easier to make money, then it's not plagiarism?)

  • That first study appears to be non-blinded, so I tend to discount it. I wasn't aware of that second review. I'll take a look. At a glance, most of the studies seem to be included in the 2020 review I did cite previously and I don't seem to see much claim that it helps for stress--in fact, the opposite. It looks like the claim is that it helps with sleep and/or ADHD.

    That said, as far as I know, theanine is very likely to be completely safe. And I think it's totally possible given all the evidence that it does have a small effect on stress/anxiety and maybe some other things. So I don't think there's really any reason not to take it. I'm just 95% convinced that the people who claim it's lifechanging for stress/anxiety are delusional.

  • All fair points!

    1. To be honest, I'm not entirely sure of the difference between stress and anxiety and jitters. For me they're closely related, and I guess I tried to measure some combination of them.
    2. True, more isn't always more. But more does tend to be more, and this is one of the suggestions people made from the first experiment.
    3. I agree. However, I see this in the context of the first post—the scientific literature has tested theanine and found basically nothing! I was originally convinced that the internet was onto something, but now I tend to think the boring scientific literature had it right all along.
  • That's a good point re: biology. It's so vast that everyone seems to sub-sub-sub specialize. It's hard to speculate about what might follow if someone was able to master literally every aspect of biology at the same time.

    Re: Trump, my naive model is that people are just complicated and it's incredibly hard to model them and say how they will respond to a given situation, or how many of the different types of people there are, or exactly what media they've consumed, etc. Do you really mean that just using the existing polling data, etc. it should have been possible to be confident?

    The main thing that gives me pause there is that some people were very confident that Trump would win, most notably that French guy that made millions betting on the outcome. He definitely made some good points regarding polling analysis, though I wonder if there are other people who could have made equally good points if the election had gone the other way...

  • Currency is a great incentive. I think a good way of thinking about "rights" is a sort of structure to encourage transfers of currency. For example, should corporations be allowed to put up surveillance balloons and track every vehicle and sell that data to whoever? Or should that be a voluntary transaction, like in your case? (I don't have an answer, just trying to point to the complexities.)

  • Thanks, using this terminology, I guess I'm wondering about why different places settled on "inquisitorial" systems vs (whatever the opposite of inquisitorial is)-systems. Naive, it seems like an inquisitorial system would be the obvious way to do it. I'm sure that places with non-inquisitorial systems had reasons for choosing that, but I'm not sure why or what the tradeoffs are.

  • Well, I have good news for you! If you're doing pure social science research and you have no affiliation with any federal funded institution, then to the best of my knowledge, there's absolutely no IRB requirement! (At least as long as you exclude all subjects in Virginia/Maryland/New York.)

  • To be honest I wasn't very happy with the word "mentoring" either. What I really wanted was some word with a semantic meaning between "mentoring", "consulting" and "office hours"? But I liked that "mentoring" emphasizes broader issues. I don't like that "mentoring" sounds arrogant, but I decided that was a silly reason not to use the word and I'll just take the reputational hit.

    Re your project: I feel honor-bound to stick to my promise to only consider information in the application!