Skip to main content

Home/ science/ Group items tagged Media

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Janos Haits

AlphaGalileo - 0 views

  •  
    The world's independent source of news from science, health, arts, humanities, technology and business.
Janos Haits

metaLAB (at) Harvard - 0 views

  •  
    Charting innovative scenarios for the future of knowledge creation and dissemination in the arts and humanities, metaLAB (at) Harvard is
Janos Haits

Wikimedia Foundation - 0 views

  •  
    Wikimedia is a global movement whose mission is to bring free educational content to the world.
Janos Haits

Real-time Web Monitor - 0 views

  •  
    "Akamai monitors global Internet conditions around the clock. With this real-time data we identify the global regions with the greatest attack traffic, cities with the slowest Web connections (latency), and geographic areas with the most Web traffic (traffic density)."
Janos Haits

Wikibrains - 0 views

  •  
    To create an online brain that will spark creativity and out of the box thinking through collaboration. Our larger goal is to promote multi-cultural understanding for an abundant future.
Janos Haits

Casetext - Annotated Legal Research - 0 views

  •  
    Casetext is a free legal research tool that lets you annotate the law. With Casetext you can: search using keywords or citations, read the full text of over one million federal and Delaware cases, and learn insights from the annotations of practicing attorneys, professors, and other experts.
Erich Feldmeier

Science and the Media: Why Every Lab Should Tweet | Christie Wilcox - Academia.edu - 0 views

  •  
    @NerdyChristie Don't think you need to be on g+ ? Time to reach 20 mio users: g+: 24 days tw: 1035 days fb: 1152 days
Janos Haits

MIT App Inventor - 0 views

  •  
    To use App Inventor, you do not need to be a professional developer. This is because instead of writing code, you visually design the way the app looks and use blocks to specify the app's behavior.
ratbeard

Exploring Emergence - 0 views

  •  
    Great introduction to emergence, including several simulations you can play with.  Simulations include the classic "Life," Brian's brain, and one that tends towards chaotic patterns. 

    Anyone who po

Charles Daney

'Nondiscovery' creates media ripple (physicsworld.com Blog) - physicsworld.com - 0 views

  •  
    In this week's edition of Nature, a cohort of researchers report the latest findings from two of the major players in this search for gravitational waves - The LIGO Scientific Collaboration located in the US and the Virgo Collaboration in France and Italy. The paper reports the latest data from these two experiments collected 2005 - 2007, and discusses the implication of these results for the standard picture of cosmology.
Skeptical Debunker

Belief In Climate Change Hinges On Worldview : NPR - 0 views

  • "People tend to conform their factual beliefs to ones that are consistent with their cultural outlook, their world view," Braman says. The Cultural Cognition Project has conducted several experiments to back that up. Participants in these experiments are asked to describe their cultural beliefs. Some embrace new technology, authority and free enterprise. They are labeled the "individualistic" group. Others are suspicious of authority or of commerce and industry. Braman calls them "communitarians." In one experiment, Braman queried these subjects about something unfamiliar to them: nanotechnology — new research into tiny, molecule-sized objects that could lead to novel products. "These two groups start to polarize as soon as you start to describe some of the potential benefits and harms," Braman says. The individualists tended to like nanotechnology. The communitarians generally viewed it as dangerous. Both groups made their decisions based on the same information. "It doesn't matter whether you show them negative or positive information, they reject the information that is contrary to what they would like to believe, and they glom onto the positive information," Braman says.
  • "Basically the reason that people react in a close-minded way to information is that the implications of it threaten their values," says Dan Kahan, a law professor at Yale University and a member of The Cultural Cognition Project. Kahan says people test new information against their preexisting view of how the world should work. "If the implication, the outcome, can affirm your values, you think about it in a much more open-minded way," he says. And if the information doesn't, you tend to reject it. In another experiment, people read a United Nations study about the dangers of global warming. Then the researchers told the participants that the solution to global warming is to regulate industrial pollution. Many in the individualistic group then rejected the climate science. But when more nuclear power was offered as the solution, says Braman, "they said, you know, it turns out global warming is a serious problem."And for the communitarians, climate danger seemed less serious if the only solution was more nuclear power.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • Then there's the "messenger" effect. In an experiment dealing with the dangers versus benefits of a vaccine, the scientific information came from several people. They ranged from a rumpled and bearded expert to a crisply business-like one. The participants tended to believe the message that came from the person they considered to be more like them. In relation to the climate change debate, this suggests that some people may not listen to those whom they view as hard-core environmentalists. "If you have people who are skeptical of the data on climate change," Braman says, "you can bet that Al Gore is not going to convince them at this point." So, should climate scientists hire, say, Newt Gingrich as their spokesman? Kahan says no. "The goal can't be to create a kind of psychological house of mirrors so that people end up seeing exactly what you want," he argues. "The goal has to be to create an environment that allows them to be open-minded."And Kahan says you can't do that just by publishing more scientific data.
  •  
    "It's a hoax," said coal company CEO Don Blankenship, "because clearly anyone that says that they know what the temperature of the Earth is going to be in 2020 or 2030 needs to be put in an asylum because they don't." On the other side of the debate was environmentalist Robert Kennedy, Jr. "Ninety-eight percent of the research climatologists in the world say that global warming is real, that its impacts are going to be catastrophic," he argued. "There are 2 percent who disagree with that. I have a choice of believing the 98 percent or the 2 percent." To social scientist and lawyer Don Braman, it's not surprising that two people can disagree so strongly over science. Braman is on the faculty at George Washington University and part of The Cultural Cognition Project, a group of scholars who study how cultural values shape public perceptions and policy
solar energy

illusions4real news and events - 0 views

  •  
    illusions4real, a energy saving solutions provider, maintaining ISO 9001:2000 and CE certifications, company based in Jaipur.
Skeptical Debunker

Naps May Improve Performance Later In The Day : NPR - 0 views

  •  
    "In the study, researchers took two groups of healthy young adults. Each group completed two learning sessions. The difference was that between the first and second sessions, one group got to take a 90-minute nap. The group that got the nap improved in their ability to learn by 10 percent, while the non-napping group did 10 percent worse."
Janos Haits

Vizzuality | Envisioning life - 0 views

  •  
    Rather than talk about how good we are we would like to show you.Committed to improving our world, one project at a time, for stories that matter
Janos Haits

The Atlas of Economic Complexity - 0 views

  •  
    mapping paths to prosperity
Janos Haits

Axiom | Annotate your digital documents - 0 views

  •  
    "Manage your knowledge. We make it easy for you to manage your digital documents "
  •  
    "Manage your knowledge We make it easy for you to manage your digital documents "
« First ‹ Previous 41 - 60 of 64 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page