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00:00 - 18:0018:00 - 00:00

18:00
Then, interpret the abstract of this
Especially the part "This finding provides important evidence from awake, behaving animals t(...) that can optimize cognitive processes and performance. "
so you don't even need to read a book, go excersize
Need to link to more studies?
38 is not a lot of data? Lol? Secondly, it's irrelevant that they're medical students. Do you actually expect a different outcome in a study with homeless people? Sorry, they aren't taking exams.
@Gizmo you must have not noticed that article I linked to five years later that pointed out that all of these studies are bust.
Lets do our own studies then
Except I have no budget so that's one small problem :)
@Columbo Well, yes, 38 is a horrendously small sample size. And frankly, there certainly could be a different outcome for homeless people. You don't know if there is if you've only studied medical students.
But if all those studies are bust, why did anyone invest into them
18:03
@Gizmo Bad question.
they didn't know they were bust
@Puppy No, 38 is perfectly fine if the pattern emerges in every single case.
no, it really isn't
The probability of that being coincidental is minuscule.
Well surely alot of smart/intelligent/knowledgable/university-degree people could forsee such a "disaster"
18:04
.. among a group chosen for being homogenous?
@Gizmo That is definitely a faulty assumption
@Puppy Those are completely random humans that happen to all do a medical degree, not a bunch of clones
They're not genetically correlating
Do I need to link to studies aswell for that? xD
I have no will nor energy to join the conversation, but I want to add that @Puppy is on point
@Gizmo I recall a particularly interesting one about how a bunch of monkeys making random decisions performed equally well to stock market traders.
Hehe, cool
18:05
@Puppy Oh, but you don't know if the monkeys didn't base their decisions on the screen.
Until then, I call bullshit on that.
@Columbo They're not completely random humans at all. They're wealthy humans in a wealthy part of the world with a shared culture, a common education, who live in a common environment, and are mostly of a very similar age.
@Columbo I don't think they gave them a screen ;p
@Puppy Well, I think they would, because otherwise you may as well just use a random number generator. The point is to show that they're not doing a better job than a monkey in that same position, surely?
no, I think it was the random that was the point
I don't recall the details, but I think that not beating an RNG was part of it
@Puppy We're talking genetics. Except for a common ethnicity (and even this may be wrong), they are of different gender, and all come from completely different families.
@Puppy Right, so you actually pay for a bunch of monkeys for them to randomly press up or down
@Columbo We're not talking genetics at all. Genetics is simply a part of it.
18:07
Ugh anyway you guys discuss full=head=on what you want, I'm out of this discussion because I don't have the knowledge or background to participate in it nor do I want to come to the point that I will have to show you studies that confirm we exists either virtually or really.
@Puppy What else but genetics reliably determines how the brain will respond to certain stimulus
environment, upbringing, drugs of various kinds, medical conditions (diagnosed or otherwise)?
Again, I know a bunch of medical students here, and except for being reasonable human beings, they're very different. I can only assume the same for German students.
@Gizmo I'm too lazy to read it, but I still might comment :-)
any of them homeless?
18:09
@Puppy Hmm. Maybe now.
@Mikhail Can't blame you
@Puppy Study?
:P
maybe, but
> there's a massive gap between "changes in regions of the parietal cortex" and actual concrete benefit
The crux of the matter is that they didn't shoot themselves in the parietal cortex. They used it over and over again. And the human body generally follows the principle that if you put stress on a particular part of it, it develops so as to be able to handle the stress. Work out -> more muscles. Endurance sports -> better performance of your lungs. And there is undeniable evidence that the same works for the brain. So yeah, I believe that there has been concrete benefit for the medical students.
the history of science is littered with things that looked like they made sense but were completely and totally untrue
18:14
@Puppy Yeah, and if we sit at home and question everything and everyone, no progress is being made, either
are you kidding?
questioning everything and everyone is how we progressed to this point
7
Sorry, I didn't want to insult you
it's literally the whole point of peer review, open papers, etc
And we write papers by being sceptical?
yep
18:16
@Puppy So you're saying my perfectly valid argument may not be right because people have been wrong before?
Sure,
except idc
it's not perfectly valid
that's my point
you're making an analogy between things that are completely different and just assuming they are the same
I didn't assume they are the same
I assumed they follow the same principles
which is the same thing.
@Columbo Please consider reading Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance it has very insightful thoughts about quality of science
18:18
there are plenty of parts of the human body which do not respond this way at all.
go ahead
Show me that my toe nail doesn't work that way
teeth don't get stronger if you don't brush em
Study?
Trust me
I can't make my mind up until that has been statistically validated
18:19
not sure but I'll check
@Puppy this is the argument of climate change deniers, it's completely facetious
no
the argument of climate change deniers is that the science doesn't support climate change
which it completely does.
it's not that nobody bothered to do the science and everybody just assumed climate change
@Mgetz "Facetious" means something on the order of "intended to be humorous". Perhaps you meant "fallacious"?
@Columbo have a look at ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK8259, there's various references there as well
@JerryCoffin probably but I'm indubitably using that wrong too
18:28
hmm
I got some new LED bulbs for my kitchen which are seriously bright
now I can really see how much more I should be cleaning the aforementione d;p
buy a UV bulb
18:45
My day was so boring that taking out the thash almost felt exciting.
Puppy, you question so much that I am beginning to think that if someone tells you U (voltage in Volts) = I (current in Amperes) x R (resistance in Ohms), andl inks you to studies, you will come up with an article that says that all studies that show U=IR are bullshit.
Nothing against you, just the vibe I'm getting
Since when is the CPP room up for such long discussions without any advancement?
Always
1998 I guess?
Also to add insult to injury I would expect Puppy to question the existence of voltage and currents and ask for studies from "experts" on to which those experts will be the 'questionable' part, and round and round we go.
this has been my experience with your discussion with Columb for the past.. how many hours do you have this discussion already?
I wonder if it even can be considered a discussion. But I'm no expert. I have no studies to support the claim that this cannot be considered a discussion, neither have I a degree in this field nor can I back up any assertions of what a discussion is.
Point is, trust and integrity has to start somewhere, even if just assumed, else there will never by any advancements.
you trust your compiler to make sure int holds values from at least -2^31 to 2^31-1, but you have no studies for each compiler to back that up, just some measily specification, and most programmers use it, compile code, test it, it works, then it just workst, it is considered the truth, no studies needed.
19:09
May it be that you're both bored and somewhat butthurt for some reason?
maybe not the best example but I can see people question int, for the sake of argument assume the long context because some platforms int is 16 bits
Yeah maybe they're butthurt but I don't know about what
Nah, Puppy is never butthurt. Puppy hurts butts.
Wanna hurt mine?
`<( )>`
` ^`
Ell
Ell
oh no
Ell
Ell
19:23
nice :D
@Gizmo That sounds like an assumption to me. I'm pretty sure that the scientific revolution started by not having trust in anybody, it's continued by such, and that's the way it's done.
19:45
@Gizmo Didn't exist until 15 Oct, 2010.
19:58
@Puppy I did not say that you have to trust a person per se. Trust in your abilities to recognize patterns is one example. "hey these objects are the same weight and they both take equial time to fall from x height".
en yes you can go on about that if you have a weight measure that it will display different results for different objects etc... to give studies that this weight scale is correct or at least ocnsistent.. I mean somewhere it begins with some basic understanding and intuition, you can't keep asking for everything to be linked to studies
I do realize that human brains aren't basic by any means, and that it's an advanced topic probably way out of the scope of anyone here, but given the fact there are good (and bas) researchers out there, not all information can be wrong. Something has to be true out there, some studies will and do hold up, right?
20:51
@Gizmo It's only after they've been held up that they're credible
Xeo
Xeo
21:21
Not taking any chances, I'll start with self-immolation — Jeff 5 hours ago
I've heard that Herb proposed metaclasses for C++ in a talk, that it allows to manipulate the AST, etc... I wonder what the proposal will actually look like.
21:46
that's dumb
Featuring the dreaded $ symbol.
user1804599
ugh
22:15
that's what your momma said when she saw your face
@Xeo Can you summarize which shows I should be watching this season? Tonight is the night that I'll have the time to... look them up and download them.
@JerryCoffin California may not have any Microcenters, but the Frys/square-mile factor is much higher in California than anywhere else. OTOH, Newegg is based in California, so you have to pay sales tax.
22:31
> Hood slang for dynamic programming, a method of solving complex problems by breaking them down into simpler sub-problems.
Rohan: Yo my nig did you solve that bitch ass 0-1 knapsack problem yet?

Raul: Hell damn ass yes, I slapped some DP on that bitch and fucked it right up!
That's how I want to collaborate with other computer scientists.
@Mysticial As I recall, Newegg apparently had some office (or something) in Colorado as well, so I had to pay sales tax there too...
@Morwenn no java pls.
@Columbo I'm truly sorry to hear that. I hope you get better soon.
@JerryCoffin According to what metric
@Columbo I live in the US. We (mostly) don't do metric. Sorry.
22:39
@JerryCoffin Oh that sucks...
@JerryCoffin I'm truly sorry to hear that. I hope you get better soon.
@Columbo I'm fine. Some of my countrymen (and -women) ..well, let's just leave that alone.
@JerryCoffin That attitude of "leaving idiots alone" has really not worked out for anybody, has it
@Columbo I dunno. Religions have flourished for years, and most of the time religious people seem to be fairly innocuous.
@JerryCoffin Are you fucking serious? My best friend's father said he'd kick him out of the house if he found out he was gay.
Guess why.
I don't think that's innocuous. It's inhuman.
And I don't think we need to get started on Scientology.
Or the catholic church, which has caused a great deal of evil in the world.
22:51
@Columbo Perhaps I should rephrase: I see little difference in the level of inhumanity between those who are religious and those who aren't. The Catholic church has certainly caused harm--but while it existed, the Soviet Union but also caused a great deal of evil in the world (despite being strongly against religion).
> In Iran it is illegal to execute a young woman if she is a virgin, according to religious law.
@JerryCoffin So you know what they do when they need to execute a virgin?
Nevermind the Soviet Union; they can only match this kind of evil, not top it. And this solely happens because reasonable people are pushed into believing fairy tales resulting in barbaric acts.
@Columbo It's pretty easy to guess. But rape isn't particularly a religious act--it's just assholes using religion as an excuse to be shitty.
@JerryCoffin Right, but this excuse is really, really good. That's the crux.
Fuck. I call fork() like 128 times, and the child process have an abnormally large number of bad allocations. Problem only appears on Linux. Which animal do I sacrifice? Also using Python because I wanted my code base to be more accessible to undergrads.... and I didn't know that Python was bullshit.
Linux
22:57
@Columbo Based on the Soviet Union, the Nazis, and so on, one thing quickly becomes apparent: assholes will find excuses, regardless of religion.
@Mikhail Linus.
@JerryCoffin Fair enough, I guess. This kind of stuff just triggers me. :-(
@Columbo Having gone to Catholic schools as a child, I can't blame you at all.
23:23
@JerryCoffin unless you are a scientist or a drug dealer
@Code-Apprentice Don't you go ruining my pun with mere facts!
But it's an ironic fact!
@Code-Apprentice Ironic would be if we sold steel (or other iron derivatives) by the metric tonne.
To paraphrase my favorite movie: "No more puns now, I mean it!"
23:46
@Code-Apprentice On rome buns won, I name it!
If you are trying to anagram, you missed the p and put a b instead
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