Science and Technology (old posts, page 186)
Actually, what is a Freedesktop Portal?
How to draft a will to avoid becoming an AI ghost—it’s not easy
Rocket Report: New delay for Europe’s reusable rocket; SpaceX moves in at SLC-37
UK dumps £2.5 billion into fusion pipe dream that's already cost millions
STEP sucked up £220 million in 2022, and it's still not apparent what that accomplished
UPDATED The UK government has just allocated another £2.5 billion to an ambitious fusion energy project without any indication it's progressed much beyond the planning stages.…
A Trick of the Mind by Daniel Yon review – explaining psychology’s most important theory
An immensely readable dive into the ‘predictive processing’ hypothesis, our best guess as to how the mind really works
The process of perception feels quite passive. We open our eyes and light floods in; the world is just there, waiting to be seen. But in reality there is an active element that we don’t notice. Our brains are always “filling in” our perceptual experience, supplementing incoming information with existing knowledge. For example, each of us has a spot at the back of our eye where there are no light receptors. We don’t see the resulting hole in our field of vision because our brains ignore it. The phenomenon we call “seeing” is the result of a continuously updated model in your mind, made up partly of incoming sensory information, but partly of pre-existing expectations. This is what is meant by the counterintuitive slogan of contemporary cognitive science: “perception is a controlled hallucination”.
A century ago, someone with an interest in psychology might have turned to the work of Freud for an overarching vision of how the mind works. To the extent there is a psychological theory even remotely as significant today, it is the “predictive processing” hypothesis. The brain is a prediction machine and our perceptual experiences consist of our prior experiences as well as new data. Daniel Yon’s A Trick of the Mind is just the latest popularisation of these ideas, but he makes an excellent guide, both as a scientist working at the leading edge of this field and as a writer of great clarity. Your brain is a “skull bound scientist”, he proposes, forming hypotheses about the world and collecting data to test them.
Continue reading...After a series of tumors, woman’s odd-looking tongue explains everything
Isaacman’s bold plan for NASA: Nuclear ships, seven-crew Dragons, accelerated Artemis
US auditors beg Pentagon to pay attention to latest report about IT system flaws
The DoD has ignored many past recommendations
US government auditors have been trying to whip the Pentagon's IT programs into shape for half a decade, and the latest report suggests it continues to be an uphill battle. …