- Want to solve a complex problem? Applied math can help
- Inadequate compensation for lost or downgraded protected areas threatens global biodiversity: Study
- Only 5 women have won the Nobel Prize in physics—recent winners share advice for young women in the field
- Madagascar's mining rush has caused no more deforestation than farming, study finds
- Scientists explore microbial diversity in sourdough starters
Paul Tiffany's blog
Computational Biology 101
Submitted by Paul Tiffany (not verified) on Sun, 11/01/2009 - 07:23Introduction
Undergraduate research in computational science can facilitate and finance undergraduate educations. With access to a University's resources, including an internet connection, undergraduates can analyse scientific data to find new connections.
This study closely follows a prior study, for reliability testing with old datasets and the potential to discover new understanding of the affect of caloric restriction with new datasets.
BIL and TED's Excellent Adventure
Submitted by Paul Tiffany (not verified) on Fri, 10/30/2009 - 13:28This weekend, the BIL:PIL conference in San Diego will set healthcare free. BIL:PIL is inspired by BIL, an unconference held annually in Long Beach, a grassroots mirror of the wildly popular TED conference series.
BIL:PIL is about "people who are changing the landscape of healthcare through science, technology and public policy."
For more information on BIL:PIL 2009, click this hyperlink.
Cloudy City-State
Submitted by Paul Tiffany (not verified) on Mon, 09/14/2009 - 11:50In 'Athens' on the Net, Anand Giridharadas examines wikipolitics, web-facilitated mass collaboration in governance. Don Tapscott's book, Wikinomics, is a technologist's bible, extolling four virtues: openness, peering, sharing, and acting globally. When applied, through new technology, to political processes, these principles provide substantial opportunity for reshaping the role of an informed and active citizenry. Giridharadas acknowledges the promise of possibilities for user-generated government, but also raises concerns.
Unknow the knowns we don't know we don't know
Submitted by Paul Tiffany (not verified) on Sat, 09/12/2009 - 10:10The following music video, by Tracy Hicks, elegantly reframes a masterpiece by American composer Phil Kline.
Consciousness and its Place in New York
Submitted by Paul Tiffany (not verified) on Tue, 09/01/2009 - 20:08
Philosophy ninja David Chalmers is the former Director of the Center for Consciousness Studies at the University of Arizona and the founder of the Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness. As a writer he is unequaled in framing difficult philosophical debates and postulating thought-provoking questions. |
This October, he will speak at the Singularity Summit, the preeminent conference for discussion on the promise and peril of future technology. This post summarizes and responds to Chalmers' groundbreaking publication, Consciousness and its Place in Nature, an apéritif to this upcoming feast of food for thought. |
The Times on the Future.
Submitted by Paul Tiffany (not verified) on Fri, 07/31/2009 - 18:58Last Saturday, New York TImes reporter John Markoff covered a conference by the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence, held this February in Monterey Bay, California.
Open source for transparency
Submitted by Paul Tiffany (not verified) on Sat, 07/04/2009 - 06:07The Federal IT Dashboard, launched this week, coordinates the Chief Information Officers of every government agency under Vivek Kundra's new transparency standards. In his presser, he notes: "In making this data publicly available, we are providing unfettered access to investment performance to its true owners - the American people." The Internet, above all, is a tool for connecting: people, ideas, organizations. This site is a tool providing open access to information, that a new community may form to make use of this data.
Networks versus blogospheres
Submitted by Paul Tiffany (not verified) on Wed, 07/01/2009 - 18:32Thanks to Gawker for the following gem:
My reaction
Submitted by Paul Tiffany (not verified) on Wed, 06/24/2009 - 14:01Teme has a friend in the Hastings Center. I am excited about this project, given its primary focus on encouraging dialogue and repect for for conflicting viewpoints. Teme provides technologies enabling both proactionary and precautionary undergraduates to advance information science.
Questions
Submitted by Paul Tiffany (not verified) on Wed, 06/24/2009 - 13:39When viewing synthetic bioethics from a non-human frame, but instead a global-brain frame, memetic frames, or others, we have great tension as selection seems to take place without much regulation.
I suspect many regulatory systems have evolved in non-human frameworks, but that it is difficult to identify these structures given our generally anthropocentric frame. If we shed that frame, we may identify many existing structures for regulation in, for instance, memetics, that we can apply more generally to synthetic memetics.