Skip to main content

Home/ INF 6107 Web social/ Group items tagged IT

Rss Feed Group items tagged

anonymous

Shirky: Ontology is Overrated -- Categories, Links, and Tags - 1 views

  • I want to convince you that many of the ways we're attempting to apply categorization to the electronic world are actually a bad fit, because we've adopted habits of mind that are left over from earlier strategies.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      need of novelty
  • because it is both widely used and badly overrated in terms of its value in the digital world.
  • ...25 more annotations...
  • Yahoo is saying "We understand better than you how the world is organized, because we are trained professionals. So if you mistakenly think that Books and Literature are entertainment, we'll put a little flag up so we can set you right, but to see those links, you have to 'go' to where they 'are'."
  • You don't have to have just a few links, you could have a whole lot of links.
  • A URL can only appear in three places. That's the Yahoo rule.
  • They missed the end of this progression, which is that, if you've got enough links, you don't need the hierarchy anymore. There is no shelf. There is no file system. The links alone are enough.
  • One reason Google was adopted so quickly when it came along is that Google understood there is no shelf, and that there is no file system. Google can decide what goes with what after hearing from the user, rather than trying to predict in advance what it is you need to know.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      Laisser les usagers se faire leur langage et le tagger à leur façon puis, en tant que Google, prendre cette info et l'utiliser pour créer une ''taxonomie''.
  • "Well, that's going to be a useful category, we should encode that in advance."
  • They point to the signal loss from the fact that users, although they use these three different labels, are talking about the same thing.
  • You can also turn that list around. You can say "Here are some characteristics where ontological classification doesn't work well": Domain Large corpus No formal categories Unstable entities Unrestricted entities No clear edges Participants Uncoordinated users Amateur users Naive catalogers No Authority
  • The other big problem is that predicting the future turns out to be hard, and yet any classification system meant to be stable over time puts the categorizer in the position of fortune teller.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      ne pas prévoir d'avance
  • Here is del.icio.us, Joshua Shachter's social bookmarking service. It's for people who are keeping track of their URLs for themselves, but who are willing to share globally a view of what they're doing, creating an aggregate view of all users' bookmarks, as well as a personal view for each user.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      chouette description concrète de l'utilisation de del.icio.us!
  • " If you find a way to make it valuable to individuals to tag their stuff, you'll generate a lot more data about any given object than if you pay a professional to tag it once and only once.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      utilité du tagging
  • Tags are simply labels for URLs, selected to help the user in later retrieval of those URLs. Tags have the additional effect of grouping related URLs together. There is no fixed set of categories or officially approved choices. You can use words, acronyms, numbers, whatever makes sense to you, without regard for anyone else's needs, interests, or requirements.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      Chouette description de ''Tags''.
  • The chart shows a great variability in tagging strategies among the various users.
  • But this is what organization looks like when you turn it over to the users -- many different strategies, each of which works in its own context, but which can also be merged.
  • We are moving away from binary categorization -- books either are or are not entertainment
  • But they either had no way of reflecting that debate or they decided not to expose it to the users. What instead happened was it became an all-or-nothing categorization, "This is entertainment, this is not entertainment." We're moving away from that sort of absolute declaration, and towards being able to roll up this kind of value by observing how people handle it in practice.
  • What you do instead is you try to find ways that the individual sense-making can roll up to something which is of value in aggregate, but you do it without an ontological goal.
  • you believe that we make sense of the world, if we are, from a bunch of different points of view, applying some kind of sense to the world
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      ''we make sens of the world together thru what's worth aggregating'' = not ontology 
  • we're going to be able to build alternate organizational systems, systems that, like the Web itself, do a better job of letting individuals create value for one another, often without realizing it.
  • If you think the movies and cinema people were going to have a fight, wait til you get the queer politics and homosexual agenda people in the same room.
    • Marie-Noëlle Therrien
       
      ¸Bel exemple pour démontrer la problématique.
  •  
    Un article de Clay Shirky qui nous donne son analyse de l'Ontologie, un point de vue intéressant sur les différentes façons de classer l'information sur le Web.
Pierre Beaudoin

Search Results web social - 1 views

  • Fourth myth: We know that copyright makes us collectively better off. The evidence points in the opposite direction. Germany had weak copyright laws up until the Copyright Act of 1901. Yet, maybe because of these weak laws, it became a literary and scientific power: (…), only 1,000 new works appeared annually in England at that time – 10 times fewer than in Germany – and this was not without consequences. Höffner believes it was the chronically weak book market that caused England, the colonial power, to fritter away its head start within the span of a century, while the underdeveloped agrarian state of Germany caught up rapidly, becoming an equally developed industrial nation by 1900. (No Copyright Law The Real Reason for Germany’s Industrial Expansion? by Frank Thadeusz)
  • Fifth myth: Without copyright, authors would not get paid.
  • Open access
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) which would allow the government to shut down web site that is suspected of violating copyright. Using SOPA, a publisher could have a repository of research papers shut down. While at it, the publishers are also promoting a bill, the Research Works Act which would make it illegal for government agencies to require open access from publicly funded researchers.
  • we finally get a hint at why it is so hard it is to open up science: the business of science has become intertwined with businesses like the publishing business.
  • Do we need copyright? The concept of property is a social construction
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      Copyright Versus Oneness of collective knowledge a conflicting phenomena
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      Activité-A
  • First myth: Copyright is meant primarily to protect authors.
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      3-étoiles
  • My position: I see no justification for copyright. I am effectively a writer: I write lecture notes, research articles and blog posts. I get paid without relying on copyright. Instead, I have patrons: funding agencies, students, and blog readers.
  •  
    Yet we are trained to hold copyright as a natural right. People who infringe on copyright are labelled as pirates, thieves. We are told that they literally steal from hard-working creators.
Harry Sahyoun

Collective Knowledge Systems: Where the Social Web meets the Semantic Web - 1 views

  • Collective Knowledge Systems: Where the Social Web meets the Semantic Web
  • What can happen if we combine the best ideas from the Social Web and Semantic Web?
  • The Vision of Collective Intelligence
  • ...20 more annotations...
  • The Social Web is represented by a class of web sites and applications in which user participation is the primary driver of value.
  • Collective intelligence is a grand vision, one to which I subscribe.  However, I would call the current state of the Social Web something else: collected intelligence.   That is, the value of these user contributions is in their being collected together and aggregated into community- or domain-specific sites
  • The grand challenge is to boost the collective IQ of organizations and of society
  • With the rise of the Social Web, we now have millions of humans offering their knowledge online, which means that the information is stored, searchable, and easily shared.  The challenge for the next generation of the Social and Semantic Webs is to find the right match between what is put online and methods for doing useful reasoning with the data.  True collective intelligence can emerge if the data collected from all those people is aggregated and recombined to create new knowledge and new ways of learning that individual humans cannot do by themselves.
  • Technology can augment the discovery and creation of knowledge. For instance, some drug discovery approaches embody a system for learning from models and data that are extracted from published papers and associated datasets.  By assembling large databases of known entities relevant to human biology, researchers can run computations that generate and test hypotheses about possible new therapeutic agents.
  • The first approach is to expose the structured data that already underlies the unstructured web pages.  An obvious technique is for the site builder, who is generating unstructured web pages from a database, to expose the structured data in those pages using standard formats.
  • the second approach, to extract structured data from unstructured user contributions [2] [28] [39] .  It is possible to do a reasonable job at identifying people, companies, and other entities with proper names, products, instances of relations you are interested in (e.g., person joining a company) [1] [7] , or instances of questions being asked [24] . There also techniques for pulling out candidates to use as classes and relations, although these are a bit noisier than the directed pattern matching algorithms [8] [23]  [31] [32] [36] [38] [42]
  • Tomorrow, the web will be understood as an active human-computer system, and we will learn by telling it what we are interested in, asking it what we collectively know, and using it to apply our collective knowledge to address our collective needs.
  • The other major area where Semantic Web can help achieve the vision of collective intelligence is in the area of interoperability.  If the world's knowledge is to be found on the Web, then we should be able to use it to answer questions, retrieve facts, solve problems, and explore possibilities. 
  • In a sense, the TagCommons project is attempting to create a platform for interoperability of social web data on the Semantic Web that is akin to the "mash-up" ecology that is celebrated in Web 2.0.
  • An example of how a system might apply some of these ideas is RealTravel.  RealTravel is an example of "Web 2.0 for travel".  It attracts travelers to share their experiences: sharing their itineraries, stories, photographs, where they stayed, what they did, and their recommendations for fellow travelers.  Writers think of RealTravel as a great platform to share their experiences -- a blog site that caters to this domain.  People who are planning travel use the site as a source of information to research their trip,
  • The collection of tags for a site is called the folksonomy, which is useful data about collective interests.
  • like many Web 2.0 sites, combines these structured dimensions to order the unstructured content.  For example, one can find all the travel blogs about diving, sorted by rating.  In fact, the site combines all of the structured dimensions into a matrix, which offers the user a way to "pivot browse" along any dimension from any point in the matrix.
  • This paper argues that the Social Web and the Semantic Web should be combined, and that collective knowledge systems are the "killer applications" of this integration.  The keys to getting the most from collective knowledge systems, toward true collective intelligence, are tightly integrating user-contributed content and machine-gathered data, and harvesting the knowledge from this combination of unstructured and structured information.
  • Structured and unstructured, formal and informal -- these are not new dimensions.  They are typically considered poles of a continuum.
  • We are beginning to see companies launching services under the banner of Web 3.0 [25] that aim explicitly at collective intelligence.  For instance, MetaWeb [35] is collecting a commons of integrated, structured data in a social web manner, and Radar Networks [25] is applying semantic web technologies to enrich the applications and data of the social web.
  • The third approach is to capture structured data on the way into the system.  The straightforward technique is to give users tools for structuring their data, such as ways of adding structured fields and making class hierarchies.
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      Folksonomies_Semantic_Collectivities Web2_To_Web3
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      3-étoiles
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      Activité-A
  •  
    Technology can augment the discovery and creation of knowledge. For instance, some drug discovery approaches embody a system for learning from models and data that are extracted from published papers and associated datasets. By assembling large databases of known entities relevant to human biology, researchers can run computations that generate and test hypotheses about possible new therapeutic agents
jlecot

Jon Udell / 2004/08/16 / Information routing - 1 views

  • inbound items fall into three categories: Must be acted on immediately. Can be discarded. May be of future interest to ourselves, our colleagues, or others.
  • Option one: nothing. Rely on search to be able to find it again
  • Option two: tell someone else about it
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • Option three: tell your subscribers about it
  • Option four: blog it to a topic
  • Option five: blog it to a shared topic
  • the historical lesson is clear: concentrate on what you can get from users, and use whatever protocol can maximize their voluntary contributions.
    • jlecot
       
      Planning for a social media collaboration, it is crutial to build colective value on top of invididual value gains. not the opposite.
  • Pure self-interest is a sufficient driver.
  •  
    Information routing
  •  
    Everybody processes a ton of email and feeds that can be processed in one of three ways: 1-acte on immediately; 2-discard; 3-act on in the future. (may be of future interest to ourselves, our colleagues, or others.)
rogersmuk

Palia is a warm, cozy hug of a game | Kaser Focus | VentureBeat<meta name="description"... - 0 views

  •  
    "An effort by United States lawmakers to prevent government agencies from domestically tracking citizens without a search warrant is facing opposition internally from one of its largest intelligence services. Republican and Democratic aides familiar with ongoing defense-spending negotiations in Congress say officials at the National Security Agency (NSA) have approached lawmakers charged with its oversight about opposing an amendment that would prevent it from paying companies for location data instead of obtaining a warrant in court. Introduced by US representatives Warren Davidson and Sara Jacobs, the amendment, first reported by WIRED, would prohibit US military agencies from "purchasing data that would otherwise require a warrant, court order, or subpoena" to obtain. The ban would cover more than half of the US intelligence community, including the NSA, the Defense Intelligence Agency, and the newly formed National Space Intelligence Center, among others."
Harry Sahyoun

Do we need copyright? - 1 views

  • Yet we are trained to hold copyright as a natural right. People who infringe on copyright are labelled as pirates, thieves. We are told that they literally steal from hard-working creators.
  • Fourth myth: We know that copyright makes us collectively better off. The evidence points in the opposite direction. Germany had weak copyright laws up until the Copyright Act of 1901. Yet, maybe because of these weak laws, it became a literary and scientific power: (…), only 1,000 new works appeared annually in England at that time – 10 times fewer than in Germany – and this was not without consequences. Höffner believes it was the chronically weak book market that caused England, the colonial power, to fritter away its head start within the span of a century, while the underdeveloped agrarian state of Germany caught up rapidly, becoming an equally developed industrial nation by 1900. (No Copyright Law The Real Reason for Germany’s Industrial Expansion? by Frank Thadeusz)
  • Without copyright, authors would not get paid.
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • Similarly, Japan, Korea and Taiwan have maintained weak intellectual property regimes. It is believed that this was a key factor to explain
  • My position: I see no justification for copyright. I am effectively a writer: I write lecture notes, research articles and blog posts. I get paid without relying on copyright. Instead, I have patrons: funding agencies, students, and blog readers. But if we insist on having copyright, it should at least be limited to a short term (say 5 years or less).
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      Copyright_Openness_collective_knowledge_conflicting_phenomena
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      1-étoile
    • Harry Sahyoun
       
      Activité-A
  •  
    Yet we are trained to hold copyright as a natural right. People who infringe on copyright are labelled as pirates, thieves. We are told that they literally steal from hard-working creators.
rosemaliza5

What is SEO and What Does it Mean for eCommerce Businesses | Digitoly - 1 views

  • Every shop needs customers who buy from that shop. In traditional brick and mortar establishments, the numbers of customers were limited to a specific area.The competition was also very less because of the very few shops selling the same or similar products in the vicinity.
  • SEO helps increase the organic search traffic to your website. This way SEO connects your website to the prospective customers who are searching online for the products your website offers
  • SEO is the backbone of the entire online business. SEO stands for Search Engine Optimization and it helps the websites rank better in the search engines.Top ranking websites gain the trust of the customers and also get much more sales than the website those don’t get those top ranks.
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • SEO is not going to be finished ever.
  • Google and other search engines rank the websites based on algorithms that consider over 200 different factors to award top ranks.
  • SEO is a constant process and requires constant monitoring of the trends, numbers, algorithm updates, competitor’s activities, content demand in the market, new keywords or keyword updates and a lot more.
  • As you know SEO is a complex process and it takes time to give results. Let’s see what those challenges are.
  • SEO is a complex process and takes time to make a website rank on the top of the search engines.
  • Doing all of that takes time and sometimes it takes up to two or maybe three year
  •  
    Est-ce que ça vaut la peine d'investir dans la technologie SEO? Après la lecture de cette article, je suis confuse d'abord sur ce qu'est exactement SEO mais aussi sur la position de l'auteur qui semble dire que SEO est indispensable pour chaque ecommerce ...Certes les gros joueurs comme Amazon et Alibaba peuvent se permettre des investissements qui porterons fruit dans 3 ans mais les petits joueurs peuvent-ils s'offrir ce luxe?, de plus les paramètres de SEO changent indéfiniment et que dire si toutes les firmes faisant du ecommerce utilisent SEO? Quel résultat peut-on attendre d'une telle technologie?
Simon Rousseau

Réflexion suite à la lecture du billet « BrowserID: Will it Succeed Where Ope... - 2 views

  •  
    Voici une réflexion effectué suite à la lecture d'un billet intitulé: « BrowserID: Will it Succeed Where OpenID Failed? »
Cesar Villamizar

US Government Social Media | Social Media Today - 1 views

  • Doing it Wrong: State Department Buys Facebook Fans
  • Doing it Right: Transportation Security Administration (TSA) on Instagram
  • is worthwhile to consider the two programs, why they hit or miss the mark and what it means to social media marketing for brands.
Pure Money Making

SEO techniques - 0 views

  •  
    Increasing SEO is a game of patience. You are not going to realize a major change in your traffic overnight. It can take a lot of time if you are new to this. It is no different than having a brick and mortar store.
carinecroteau

It's not kids' screen time you should worry about - it's yours - The European Sting - C... - 0 views

  • It’s not kids’ screen time you should worry about – it’s&nbsp;yours
  • Emerging research is starting to look at the role that parents’ screen usage has on a child’s development, and the news isn’t good.
    • carinecroteau
       
      Point de vue intéressant.
  • children’s development is being harmed because their parents are constantly distracted by technology.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • unwittingly likely to increase the bad behaviour and tantrums that youngsters often rely on to get attention
  • Children learned the word when the teaching was not interrupted, but when the interaction was interrupted, they didn’t learn the word.
  • The vocal patterns parents everywhere tend to adopt during exchanges with infants and toddlers are marked by a higher-pitched tone, simplified grammar, and engaged, exaggerated enthusiasm. Though this talk is cloying to adult observers, babies can’t get enough of it. Not only that: One study showed that infants exposed to this interactive, emotionally responsive speech style at 11 months and 14 months knew twice as many words at age 2 as ones who weren’t exposed to it,” she writes.
  • Perhaps more alarmingly, Christakis also points out that distracted parents put their children in danger.
    • carinecroteau
       
      Mettons nous inconsciemment nos enfants en danger?
travelmaniac

Who Gets Their News From Which Social Media Sites? | WIRED - 0 views

  • social media users in the US.
  • And a majority of them (57 percent) say they expect that news to be “largely inaccurate.
    • travelmaniac
       
      so people tend to use social media as primary sources of information and in the meantime they know that information they rely on is inaccurate.
  • Republicans
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • nonwhites and people under the age of 29 are the most trusting groups of social media news readers
    • travelmaniac
       
      obviously, it is tempting to correlate these variables with education level ... but only keeping in mind the danger of spurious correlations ..
  • 71 percent of people who use Twitter get news from the site
  • 7 percent of social media news hounds between the ages of 18 and 29 think most news they see on social is accurate
    • travelmaniac
       
      age is a factor
  • Facebook, which announced in January that it would decrease news reach and focus its algorithm on so-called family and friend content—saw only a small decline.
    • travelmaniac
       
      Facebook has clearly oriented its algorithms toward adversiting which is the primary source of revenue for the company
  •  
    Comparaison rapide mais éclairante sur la présence et l'utilisation des principaux médias sociaux
Patrice Gauvin

Gartner revoit à la hausse les prévisions de dépenses IT - 0 views

    • Patrice Gauvin
       
      Les PC, tablettes, téléphones mobiles et imprimantes devraient compter pour 666 milliards de dollars, soit une hausse de 6,3% sur un an....
  •  
    Ça doit être particulièrement vrai pour les entreprise qui ne font pas du BYOD pour les tablettes et les téléphones mobiles...
Pure Money Making

VK videos - 0 views

  •  
    Do you know that you can also post videos in VK - the Russian Facebook? Yes - as you guessed it by now - VK, the social giant, can also be used for marketing your videos.
  •  
    Do you know that you can also post videos in VK - the Russian Facebook? Yes - as you guessed it by now - VK, the social giant, can also be used for marketing your videos.
Louisette Leduc

The New Atlantis » Virtual Friendship and the New Narcissism - 0 views

  • or centuries, the rich and the powerful documented their existence and their status through painted portraits.
  • Self-portraits can be especially instructive. By showing the artist both as he sees his true self and as he wishes to be seen, self-portraits can at once expose and obscure, clarify and distort.
  • Today, our self-portraits are democratic and digital; they are crafted from pixels rather than paints. On social networking websites like MySpace and Facebook, our modern self-portraits feature background music, carefully manipulated photographs, stream-of-consciousness musings, and lists of our hobbies and friends.
  • ...13 more annotations...
  • A new generation of social networking websites appeared in 2002 with the launch of Friendster, whose founder,
  • Friendster was an immediate success, with millions of registered users by mid-2003.
  • MySpace, launched in 2003, quickly to surpass it.
  • Besides MySpace and Friendster, the best-known social networking site is Facebook, launched in 2004.
  • Niche social networking sites are also flourishing:
  • Other niche social networking sites connect like-minded self-improvers;
  • 43things.com
  • Social networking sites are also fertile ground for those who make it their lives’ work to get your attention—namely, spammers, marketers, and politicians.
  • . On MySpace and Facebook, for example, the process of setting up one’s online identity is relatively simple:
  • By contrast, Facebook limits what its users can do to their profiles. Besides general personal information, Facebook users have a “Wall” where people can leave them brief notes, as well as a Messages feature that functions like an in-house Facebook e-mail account. You list your friends on Facebook as well, but in general, unlike MySpace friends, which are often complete strangers (or spammers) Facebook friends tend to be part of one’s offline social circle.
  • Social networking websites “connect” users with a network—literally, a computer network. But the verb to network has long been used to describe an act of intentional social connecting, especially for professionals seeking career-boosting contacts. When the word first came into circulation in the 1970s, computer networks were rare and mysterious. Back then, “network” usually referred to television. But social scientists were already using the notion of networks and nodes to map out human relations and calculate just how closely we are connected.
  • There is a Spanish proverb that warns, “Life without a friend is death without a witness.” In the world of online social networking, the warning might be simpler: “Life without hundreds of online ‘friends’ is virtual death.” On these sites, friendship is the stated raison d’être. “A place for friends,” is the slogan of MySpace. Facebook is a “social utility that connects people with friends.” Orkut describes itself as “an online community that connects people through a network of trusted friends.” Friendster’s name speaks for itself.
  • But “friendship” in these virtual spaces is thoroughly different from real-world friendship.
  •  
    or centuries, the rich and the powerful documented their existence and their status through painted portraits.
Caro Mailloux

Activité-A, partage de lien 7: Ease Transition To Facebook Timeline With Thes... - 0 views

  • The news that Facebook’s timeline will become the official standard has many people feeling pressure
  • And with that comes great responsibility in how you want to be perceived online
  • Enjoy the opportunity to try the timeline features. Just don’t take too much time doing it. Take it from someone who knows.
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • This is a valuable tool and another new feature that took up a lot of my time. But it didn’t have to.
  • So use the seven day feature, especially if you’re an active Facebook user and want to review and adjust years worth of previous posts.
  • I always felt like Facebook only showed a portion of my life to my friends. The timeline provides a more fully rounded picture.
  • Use the seven-day preview period before making your timeline active.
    • Caro Mailloux
       
      Le texte aborde l'importance de notre propre présentation sur le nouvel interface sur Facebook appelée Timeline. L'auteure donne des conseils de gestion pour la transition du profil actuel vers Timeline. Utile! L'auteure est Jennifer Moire et l'article a été publié le 1er février 2012 vers 12h32 pm.
  •  
    Le texte aborde l'importance de notre propre présentation sur le nouvel interface sur Facebook appelée Timeline. L'auteure donne des conseils de gestion pour la transition du profil actuel vers Timeline. Utile! L'auteure est Jennifer Moire et l'article a été publié le 1er février 2012 vers 12h32 pm.
Pierre Beaudoin

Facebook Starts Up Its Mobile Ad Network Again, Focuses On Improved Targeting | TechCrunch - 1 views

  • Facebook Starts Up Its Mobile Ad Network Again, Focuses On Improved&nbsp;Targeting
Serge Corbeil

5 Collaboration Tools Demonstrate How the Future Web Will Act | Social learning | Scoop.it - 0 views

  •  
    Social Learnig Plusieurs petits articles intéressants traitant des aspects éducatifs du web social Jacques Cool
carinecroteau

Opinion | The Big Myth About Teenage Anxiety - The New York Times - 0 views

    • carinecroteau
       
      Article présentant une opinion différente de celle généralement adoptée stipulant que l'utilisation des technologies a des impacts négatifs sur les jeunes. Dans cet article, le psychiatre Richard A. Freidman présente une opinion contraire stipulant que les effets ne sont pas aussi néfastes et alarmants que le mouvement ne le laisse paraître. Note : Cet article ne présente pas mon opinion, mais vaut la peine d'être présenté et ébranle également mon opinion sur le sujet. Je trouve pertinent de le présenter.
  • there is little evidence of an epidemic of anxiety disorders in teenagers
  • There are a few surveys reporting increased anxiety in adolescents
  • ...18 more annotations...
  • self-reported measures
  • overestimate the rates of disorders
  • not clinically significant syndromes
  • But it’s more likely that the epidemic is simply a myth. The more interesting question is why it has been so widely accepted as fact.
    • carinecroteau
       
      Intéressant
  • I believe, is that parents have bought into the idea that digital technology — smartphones, video games and the like — are neurobiologically and psychologically toxic
  • But, once again, these studies cannot tell us whether the brain abnormalities are the result of excessive internet use, or a pre-existing risk factor for it.
  • No surprise there. If I scan your brain while showing you whatever it is that turns you on — sex, chocolate or money, say — your reward pathway will light up like a Christmas tree. But that hardly means you are addicted to these things.
  • enduring changes
  • produce
  • real question
  • that addictive drugs do
    • carinecroteau
       
      Effets long terme sur le cerveau?
  • There is a difference between an anxiety disorder and everyday anxiety.
  • Teenagers — and people of all ages — will and should feel anxious occasionally.
  • What I have noticed is that more of my young patients worry a lot about things that don’t seem so serious, and then worry about their worry.
    • carinecroteau
       
      Serions-nous, parents, trop facilement inquiets? Plus que les générations précédentes?
  • Why, I wondered, didn’t they know this without me?
  • The myth of an epidemic of anxiety disorder rooted in a generation’s overexposure to digital technology reveals an exaggerated idea about just how open to influence our brains really are.
    • carinecroteau
       
      Intéressant
  • Even when we are young and impressionable, our brains have molecular and structural brakes that control the degree to which they can be rewired by experience
  • So don’t assume that there’s something wrong with your kid every time he’s anxious or upset. Our teenagers — and their brains — are up to the challenges of modern life.
1 - 20 of 178 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page