Bryce Allen Bagley

345 Followers
53 Following
106 Posts
Interdisciplinary applied scientist working at various intersections of physics, AI, applied math, and neuroscience | MD student @Stanford | anti-ableism | 2nd gen Belizean-American
Complexity ScienceUnderstandings beyond reductionism
Equity + Anti-extinctionFight for all people, present AND future
PostdisciplinaryArbitrary borders in knowledge are absurd
Everything is based on theoryWhether or not it’s acknowledged

Brainstorming corrections for scientific myopia

I’m convinced that we’ve inadvertently created a scientific culture that disproportionately dissuades high-level, big-picture thinking. How do we rectify that?

A few venues I know. Please add to this list!

We write at a high-level. Venues: perspective pieces of journals, thetransmitter.org, aeon.org, etc

We hold workshops to discuss things, at a high-level. Venues like https://www.tfi.ucsb.edu/ & https://esforum.de/ have interesting models.

We devote some time to this at conferences (I’ll be trying that here: https://2024.ccneuro.org/; let’s see how it goes). Know any other examples?

We write, read and discuss books.

I understand astrophysics does something organized (given shared resources): everyone is polled; plans are discussed; reports are written.

The Foundations Institute | UC Santa Barbara | The Foundations Institute | UC Santa Barbara

Advancing scientific progress by reassessing foundational ideas.

"As she prepared to leave for college, she started to understand that most #Duke students there would not be like her.... 'I never felt like I was the poor kid, and then you get to Duke, and you realize some of these kids have yachts and have mansions.'... Lower-income students must navigate: the costs of joining fraternities and sororities, eating at off-campus restaurants, joining friends for spring-break." That was my experience at #BrownUniversity in the '80s, too. https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2023/09/07/magazine/duke-economic-diversity.html
When my company moved us from private offices to an #OpenPlan, they surveyed us about our workflow and needs. Then we discovered they’d already built out the space; the consultation process was a sham. This is common, as I write in #ScientificAmerican. A major insight from #InclusiveDesign, #DisabilityRights, and #DeafSpace is that people should be meaningfully involved in designing their physical environment. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/fixing-the-hated-open-design-office/
Fixing the Hated Open-Design Office

Open-office designs create productivity and health problems. New insights from Deaf and autistic communities could fix them

Scientific American
For my #neuro nerds 🧠
“In a letter published by JAMA Pediatrics, I and a group of my colleagues estimated that from January 2020 to May 2022, 10.5 million children lost primary or secondary caregivers to COVID-associated deaths.* The toll on these children is enormous. After a caregiver dies, children may experience grief, inadequate care and separations from other family members. They may have decreased access to food, support and housing. They can be at higher risk of violence and abuse.” https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-number-of-children-orphaned-by-covid-keeps-rising/
The Number of Children Orphaned by COVID Keeps Rising

HIV has taught us how to care for children who have lost a parent, but more countries need to step up

Scientific American

@ArminLak

Wow, the #Neuropixels preprint just landed!

“Large-scale brain-wide neural recording in nonhuman primates” Trautmann et al. 2023

“4416 electrodes along a 45 mm shank, and 2496 along a 25 mm shank. … users can programmably select 384 channels, enabling simultaneous multi-area recording with a single probe. We demonstrate recording from over 3000 single neurons within a session, and simultaneous recordings from over 1000 neurons using multiple probes”
#neuroscience

People worry a lot about losing knowledge — about "burned-down libraries".

Comparatively few people seem to worry about what happens if you take a billion books full of auto-generated, often-untrue junk text and *add* them all to the library.

In theory, nothing is lost. In reality, everything is lost, because nothing useful can now be found.

“Black Americans have had to consistently push the United States to live up to its ideals of freedom, liberty, and justice for all.” - ASALH: Association for the Study of African American Life and History

Black history is American history.

4/4

https://nmaahc.si.edu/explore/stories/knowing-past-opens-door-future-continuing-importance-black-history-month

https://watch.historyvault.com/topics/black-history

#BlackMastodon #BlackTwitter #BlackFedi #BlackExcellence #BlackJoy #histodons #History

Knowing the Past Opens the Door to the Future: The Continuing Importance of Black History Month

No one has played a greater role in helping all Americans know the black past than Carter G. Woodson, the individual who created Negro History Week in Washington, D.C., in February 1926.

National Museum of African American History and Culture
The Indian government sent in riot police and plainclothes thugs. University administrators cut off power. Twitter blocked posts. All to stop students from watching a BBC documentary on PM #Modi. https://nyti.ms/3Y0wH1T
As India Tries to Block a Modi Documentary, Students Fight to See It

Officials at a public university cut the electricity before a planned screening, and the government has prevented clips from appearing online.

Robert Reich: Five truths about the pending debt-ceiling fight that the mainstream media doesn't want you to know https://robertreich.substack.com/p/five-truths-about-the-pending-debt?utm_source=twitter&utm_campaign=auto_share&r=df9r
Five truths about the pending debt-ceiling fight that the mainstream media doesn't want you to know

"Both-sides"ism is rampant. And it's seriously misleading the public.

Robert Reich