Style is not Ability

People and institutions tend to value other people and institutions like themselves. The result is that we tend to see as higher in ability those who are like us. As a result, many children as well as adults are never appreciated for what they are, but rather for how they fit into the stylistic pattern of the evaluator.

There are those who look for and appreciate only others like themselves, and there are those who look for quality, whether or not it is the same kind of quality they have to offer. We will better utilize other people’s talents, and better help them develop, if we recognize people for their own stylistic strengths, rather than for what we might ideally like them to be.

Robert Sternberg, Thinking Styles

articles of interest - March 27

***TECHNOLOGY

Elon Musk’s next company wants to put tiny electrodes in our brains so we can survive the age of AI   Quartz

Scientists Hack a Human Cell and Reprogram It Like a Computer  Wired

Mapping platforms like Google Earth have the legacies of colonialism programmed into them  Real Life

***BIG DATA & STATISTICS

A 'Black box' technique may lead to more powerful AI: it could make neural network’s faster/leaner  Engadget

Some tips and tricks for solid deep learning neural networks  KD Nuggets

The 8,700 docs made public by WikiLeaks in early March offer a wealth of info on the CIA’s cyber-subcontractors  Intelligence Online

Using Big Data to analyze images and video better than the human brain  Phys.org

The skills set needed when switching careers from Java to Big Data  Hadoop 360

 ***SOCIAL MEDIA

Instagram Has Two-Factor Authentication Now, So Turn It On  Wired

A tool that can archive a Twitter hashtag even if you've forgotten to set one up  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Facebook Messenger Finally Makes Group Chat Not a Total Hassle  Wired

***PERSONAL GROWTH

One Creative Thing Every Day  Becoming (my site)

***GRAMMAR           

The $10 Million Lawsuit That Hinges On An Oxford Comma  NPR

***WRITING& READING

Good Samaritan was honored for breaking up a street fight that went viral ("My mom would make us read books and write a short story or a poem")  WPVI-TV  

***LANGUAGE

Teaching Language With Culture In California  NPR

San Diego’s Bilingual Paradox  Voice of San Diego

Describing language objectively need not meaning doing so dispassionately: A lexicographer is a chronicler, not a guardian  Economist

The most useful language for English speakers to learn, according to an economist  Quartz

***LITERATURE

If you break literature down by the numbers  Minnesota Public Radio

How to Tell a Good Story, as Explained by George Saunders, Ira Glass, Ken Burns, Scott Simon, Catherine Burns & Others  Open Culture

***GENDER  

Gender Pay Gap Persists Across Faculty Ranks  Chronicle of Higher Ed

A Short Video Introduction to Alice Guy-Blaché (1873–1968), the First Female Film Director & Studio Mogul  Open Culture

Men and the Manufacturing Decline  The Atlantic

Gender bias distorts peer review across fields  Nature News

The Increasing Significance of the Decline of Men  The New York Times

Female brokers punished more harshly for misconduct than males  Financial Times

***RACIAL ISSUES

Out Of Bounds: New Research On Race And Paying College Athletes  NPR

***FREE SPEECH

Academic Ethics: Defending Faculty Speech  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Free Speech Is Not an Academic Value premium By Stanley FishYou don’t have the right to say whatever you want on a college campus (Opinion)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

How the First Amendment Applies to Trump’s Presidency  New Yorker

In a Polarized Climate, Free-Speech Warriors Seize the Spotlight (sub. req.’d)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***LEGAL ISSUES

How U.S. Law Inspired the Nazis  Chronicle of Higher Ed

We’re suing the federal government to be free to do our research  The Conversation

Defamation in a Forwarded Email  Technology & Marketing Blog

When Your Scholarship Goes to Court  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***ART & DESIGN

Art as a Weapon: The inventor of auto-destructive art was 90  Economist

***MUSIC

Hear Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit” Shifted from Minor to Major Key, and Radiohead’s “Creep” Moved from Major to Minor  Open Culture

Sensational music from Syria: How the civil war is helping to spread Syrian music across the globe  Economist

***THE BUSINESS OF MEDIA

Mobile-focused Quartz manages to turn a profit on digital journalism  Crains
 

***JOURNALISM

I studied how journalists used Twitter for two years. Here’s what I learned  Poynter

FAA clarifies rules for drone use in education and journalism  Student Press Law Center

AP style change: Singular they is acceptable ‘in limited cases’  Poynter

University fires reporter over “bathroom bill” stories after local lawmaker complaints  Times Free Press

The ‘Live Blog’ quickly becoming the default way for newspaper websites to handle breaking news  Talking New Media

***FAKE NEWS

Fake news successfully mitigated in social media study  The Stack

Why Fact Checking Matters & How to Do It  Video Strategist

***STUDENT LIFE

Three Millennial Tech Myths Busted  Techpinions

Study: 60 percent of rural millennials lack access to a political life  The Conversation

***SEXUAL HARASSMENT & ASSAULT

UC Berkeley’s Star Philosophy Professor accused of sexually harassment, assault, and retaliation in Lawsuit  BuzzFeed

Jury hands out one of the most serious criminal conviction of a college leader in American history  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***SCIENCE

The Famous Schrodinger’s Cat Thought Experiment Gets Brought to Life in an Off-Kilter Animation  Open Culture

***HEALTH

The findings of medical research are disseminated too slowly: That is about to change  Economist

Cancer Is Partly Caused By Random Mutations, Study Finds : Shots - Health News  NPR

Medical research: The shackles of scientific journals  Economist

Patients Lose Sight After Stem Cells Are Injected Into Their Eyes  New York Times

Understanding The Role Of Compounding Pharmacies After Dozens Of Deaths  NPR

Social Media Influencers Finally Come to … Medicine  Wired

***PSYCHOLOGY            

The psychology behind and economics of hits in pop culture: Publicity over Talent  Economist

***PHILOSOPHY

The Philosophy Of 2017's 'Ghost In The Shell' Explained  Movie Pilot

Introduction to Philosophy: A Free Online Course  Open Culture

This college student teaches philosophy to homeless women to help them ponder life’s great questions  Washington Post

Albert Camus Explains Why Happiness Is Like Committing a Crime—”You Should Never Admit to it” (1959)  Open Culture

Ayn Rand’s “objectivist” philosophy is now required reading for British teens  Quartz

***RELIGION

Princeton Theological Seminary reverses decision to honor Redeemer’s Tim Keller   Religious News Service

This West Virginia school district has weekly Bible classes. A kindergartner is suing  Washington Post

A Christian Conservative Professor Accuses Colleges of Indoctrinating Students (sub. req.’ed) Chronicle of Higher Ed

Katy Perry Nearer to Closing $15M Deal to buy Convent in LA  Courthouse News

Focus on the Family turns 40  Colorado Gazette

Are You Descended From (Alleged) Witches?  NPR

'In God We Trust' license plate bill constitutionally suspect, attorney general says  The Tennessean

How did celibacy become mandatory for priests?  The Conversation

***RELIGION & POLITICS

Trump returning to Liberty University as commencement speaker  Baptist News

Majority of states have all-Christian congressional delegations  Pew Research Center

Mike Pence, finding God, and the shifting agenda of Christian music festivals  The Guardian  

***HIGHER ED

College Classes In Maximum Security: 'It Gives You Meaning'  NPR

Georgetown University plans a religious ceremony as an apology for its historical ties to slavery  Washington Post

Federal court finds Christian college lacked the right to tell pregnant instructor to either marry the father of child she was carrying, stop living with him or lose her job  Inside Higher Ed

Liberty University Students Divided Over President Trump as Commencement Speaker  TIME

Hookup Culture Varies at 3 Types of Catholic Colleges: A professor of theology delves into how the cultural pressure to engage in casual sex affects students at different religious institutions  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***TEACHING

Do Their Stereotypes Affect Your Teaching?  Chronicle of Higher Ed

You Probably Believe Some Learning Myths: Take Our Quiz To Find Out  NPR

Why I Teach Online  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***RESEARCH

Dozens of Predatory journals offered a sham scientist a place on their editorial board  Nature

Academic Journals Plagued by Bogus Impact Factors  SpringerLink

Gates Foundation announces open-access publishing venture  Nature News

Why are citations important in research writing?  Medium

 

 

One Creative Thing Every Day

A study found participants who engaged in creative pursuits one day significantly boosted their mood for the following day. Overall, they reported feeling more energetic, enthusiastic, and excited.

These findings might not seem too surprising, but here’s the kicker: it didn’t take much creative activity for participants to reap the benefits. Just one, small creative activity a day helped. And you don’t have to be a skilled artist either. Something as simple as mindless doodling, making a joke, or even daydreaming will do.

Patrick Allan writing for LifeHacker

Fixed Intelligence

We’ve long assumed that positive feedback always has desirable results. But some recent research has painted a more complex picture. Melissa Kamins discovered that children who receive primarily person-praise (“how smart you are”) rather than good words about their efforts will usually develop fixed views of intelligence. When children are young and family members consistently tell them how brilliant they are (or how dumb), they get the message: life depends on your level of intelligence, not on how you work at something. You’ve got it or you don’t. Nothing can change that reality, they think. In short, fixed views of intelligence or growth mindsets stem from conditioning, not from some inborn character trait. They too can change.

Ken Bain, What The Best College Students Do

Social Media is no Panacea for Loneliness

A new study finds that spending more time on social media platforms is actually linked to a higher likelihood of feeling socially isolated. Although it's possible that increased social media use could help alleviate feelings of social isolation, increased social media use could also have the opposite effect in young adults, by limiting in-person interactions, the researchers wrote in the study.  In addition, social media can give people the impression that others are leading happier lives, because people sometimes portray themselves unrealistically online, the researchers wrote.

"It's possible that young adults who initially felt socially isolated turned to social media. Or, it could be that their increased use of social media somehow led to feeling isolated from the real world. It could also be a combination of both," said senior study author Dr. Elizabeth Miller. "But even if the social isolation came first, it did not seem to be alleviated by spending time online, even in purportedly social situations.”

Sara G. Miller, Live Science

articles of interest - March 20

***SOCIAL MEDIA

Social Media is no Panacea for Loneliness  LiveScience

Facebook Is Trying Too Hard  Techpinions

***TECHNOLOGY

Head in the cloud: Microsoft Transforms its Culture  The Economist

Facebook's secret team is working on hardware that can scan your brain and read your mind  Tech Republic

Google Maps will soon be able to find your parked car  Mashable

***BIG DATA & STATISTICS

The skills set needed when switching careers from Java to Big Data  Hadoop 360

The Fed Gov’s effort to more quickly buy commercial geospatial intelligence and cut redundant purchasing called CIBORG  FedScoop

Hadoop: “It’s free like a puppy, not free like a beer”  Datanami

A basic overview of machine learning for the novice  The Monkey Learn Blog

The Hadoop dream has all but failed in a smoking heap of cost and complexity  Datanami

***GRAMMAR           

A court’s decision in a Maine labor dispute hinged on the absence of an Oxford comma  Quartz

***WRITING& READING

Literature by Degree: Teaching Creative Writing  New York Times

***LANGUAGE

It Begins: Bots Are Learning to Chat in Their Own Language  Wired

When Language Can Cure What Ails You  Daily Jstor

***GENDER  

Women's International Film Festival at Liberty Station March 24-26  SD News

'BBC dad' parody imagines how a mom would handle the situation  Mashable

Only 4.2% of Fortune 500 companies are run by women  Quartz

Despite gains, women remain underrepresented among U.S. political and business leaders  Pew Research

***RACIAL ISSUES

New Interactive Map Visualizes the Chilling History of Lynching in the U.S. (1835-1964)  Open Culture

***FREE SPEECH

Talking Past Each Other on Free Speech (sub. req.’ed)  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Researchers: The more economically exclusive the institution, the more likely the students have attempted to hinder free speech  Brookings

***LEGAL ISSUES

Google thaws (a little) on defamation cases  Search Engine Land  

Supreme Court of Georgia Issues iHeart Radio Ruling  Coosa Valley News

California Today: A Journalism Scandal Roils the Central Coast  New York Times

***MUSIC

Why The Music Industry Is Finally Taking Podcasts Seriously  Forbes

A Crash Course in Contemporary Christian Music  OC Weekly

U2 On 'The Joshua Tree,' A Lasting Ode To A Divided America  NPR

***JOURNALISM

Researchers Examine Breitbart's Influence On Election Information  NPR

UT-owned Del Mar Times has a typo-filled job post  San Diego Reader

Drones in Visual Journalism  New York Times

WATCH: Journalism used to fight for the working man, now it’s a bastion of “trust fund kids”  Salon

Ten insights, three actions toward community-driven storymaking  AIR

Why Journalism, Education Could Benefit From a Mixed-Methods Approach  Media Shift

***FAKE NEWS

Why Piling On Facts May Not Help In The Battle Against Fake News  NPR

Watch Celebs Try (and Fail) to Tell Fake News From Real News  Wired

Facebook continues to be under fire for peddling fake news, but the platform will never take real responsibility  TechCrunch

Video: Top 5 ways to get trustworthy news  Tech Republic

***ADVERTISING

Brands Are Digging Into GIF Data to Understand Consumer Behavior  Ad Week

Guardian Pulls Ads from Google After They Were Placed Next to Extremist  The Guardian

The fine line between sponsored content and advertising  Talking New Media

***STUDENT MEDIA

The role of a college newspaper on campus  The Vantage (student newspaper at Newman University is a private Catholic college)

Administration refuses to provide public documents  The Nichollsworth (student newspaper for Nicholls State University)

Which College Degrees Produce the Most (and Least) Financially Responsible Students?  Priceonomics

Private California university requests takedown of student news article  Student Press Law Center

***SEXUAL HARASSMENT & ASSAULT

U of California strengthens faculty policies against sexual harassment and assault  Inside Higher Ed

Suit Alleges Ohio U sat on Complaints of Professor’s Sexual Misconduct for a Decade  Inside Higher Ed

***HEALTH

An Alarming Number of Kids Are Getting Their Hands on Opioids  Gizmodo

***PSYCHOLOGY           

Apocalypse Oak Park: Dorothy Martin, the Chicagoan Who Predicted the End of the World and Inspired the Theory of Cognitive Dissonance  Chicago Mag

***SOCIOLOGY

What if Sociologists Had as Much Influence as Economists?  New York Times

***PHILOSOPHY

An Animated Introduction to Arthur Schopenhauer  Open Culture

***PERSONAL GROWTH

 Feel like you’re not the person you used to be? You’re probably right  Becoming (my site)

***RELIGION

Fast-Growing, Entrepreneurial Christianity Is About A Lot More Than Church Attendance  Fast Company

Conservatives Question choice of churches by Trump’s Supreme Court Nominee  CNN

The Rise Of Secularism And The Alt-Right  NPR

MormonLeaks website squares off with Mormon Church, posts leaked ‘Enemies List’   Washington Post

Twila Paris Defends Brother Indicted for Bribery at Christian College  Christianity Today

***HIGHER ED

Sharp growth of California's free community college programs  Inside Higher Ed

Trump Seeks Deep Cuts in Education and Science  Inside Higher Ed

Investigation found that staff members improperly handled financial aid funds and changed student grades  Inside Higher Ed

This little circle in SoCal became the intellectual hub of Trumpism  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***TEACHING

Communication professor establishes ground rules for political conversations with his students in class  Inside Higher Ed

Can a Failing Grade Motivate a Student?  Chronicle of Higher Ed

***STUDENT LIFE

How Millennials Lose And Win Under The GOP Health Bill  NPR

Out Of Bounds: Competitive Video Gaming And Scholarships  NPR

A wider partisan and ideological gap between younger, older generations  Pew Research

The disturbing trend of homeless community college students  Washington Post

***ACADEMIC LIFE

Don’t allow yourself to be treated as a checked box on someone else’s to-do list  Chronicle of Higher Ed

Impact of Social Sciences – Google Scholar is a serious alternative to Web of Science  London School of Economics and Political Science

How can we tackle the thorny problem of fraudulent research?  The Guardian

Predatory publishers and events  The Research Whisperer

Honest mistakes by young scientists shouldn't doom their careers  Stat News

Bad incentives push universities to protect rogue scientists  Slate

 

I'm not who I used to Be

Feel like you’re not the person you used to be? You’re probably right. The longest-running personality study ever conducted reveals that people change so dramatically as the years go by that they often bear little resemblance to their younger selves.

In 1950, researchers asked teachers to assess specific personality traits of 1,208 14-year-old students, including their self-confidence, originality, perseverance, conscientiousness, stability of moods, and desire to excel. In 2012, 174 of the original students agreed to participate in a second evaluation. Now in their 70s, they completed cognitive tests and answered detailed questionnaires, rating themselves on the same characteristics. They also had a close friend or relative evaluate their personality.

After comparing the results, the researchers found no correlation between the participants’ current personality and who they were as teenagers, HuffingtonPost.com reports. “Personality changes only gradually throughout life, but by older age it may be quite different from personality in childhood,” the authors say, noting that genetic and environmental factors likely influence how personalities evolve over time.

The Week Magazine

 

pick a side

"There’s nothing I can do."  (Let’s look at our alternatives.)

"That’s just the way I am."  (I can choose a different approach)

"He makes me so mad."  (I control my own feelings)

"They won’t allow that."  (I can create an effective presentation)

"I have to do that."  (I will choose an appropriate response)

"I can’t."   (I choose)

"I must."  (I prefer)

"If only."  (I will)

A serious problem with reactive language is that it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. People become reinforced in the paradigm that they are determined, and they produce evidence to support the belief. They feel out of control, not in charge of their life or their destiny. They blame outside forces--other people, circumstances, even the stars--for their own situation.

Stephen Covey, The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People

a mental short-cut that can lead us away from truth

Imagine I tell you that a group of 30 engineers and 70 lawyers have applied for a job. I show you a single application that reveals a person who is great at math and bad with people, a person who loves Star Wars and hates public speaking, and then I ask whether it is more likely that this person is an engineer or a lawyer. What is your initial, gut reaction? What seems like the right answer?

Statistically speaking, it is more likely the applicant is a lawyer. But if you are like most people in their research, you ignored the odds when checking your gut. You tossed the numbers out the window. So what if there is a 70 percent chance this person is a lawyer? That doesn’t feel like the right answer.

That’s what a heuristic is, a simple rule that in the currency of mental processes trades accuracy for speed. A heuristic can lead to a bias, and your biases, though often correct and harmless, can be dangerous when in error, resulting in a wide variety of bad outcomes from foggy morning car crashes to unconscious prejudices in job interviews.

David McRaney writing in BoingBoing

Getting closer to the truth

Most of us view the world as more benign than it really is, our own attributes as more favorable than they truly are, and the goals we adopt as more achievable than they are likely to be. We also tend to exaggerate our ability to forecast the future, which fosters optimistic overconfidence. In terms of its consequences for decisions, the optimistic bias may well be the most significant of the cognitive biases. Because optimistic bias can be both a blessing and a risk, you should be both happy and wary if you are temperamentally optimistic.

Optimism is normal, but some fortunate people are more optimistic than the rest of us. If you are genetically endowed with an optimistic bias, you hardly need to be told that you are a lucky person -- you already feel fortunate.

An optimistic attitude is largely inherited, and it is part of a general disposition for well-being, which may also include a preference for seeing the bright side of everything. If you were allowed one wish for your child, seriously consider wishing him or her optimism. Optimists are normally cheerful and happy, and therefore popular; they are resilient in adapting to failures and hardships, their chances of clinical depression are reduced, their immune system is stronger, they take better care of their health, they feel healthier than others and are in fact likely to live longer.

Of course, the blessings of optimism are offered only to individuals who are only mildly biased and who are able to “accentuate the positive” without losing track of reality.

Optimistic people play a disproportionate role in shaping our lives. Their decisions make a difference; they are inventors, entrepreneurs, political and military leaders -- not average people. They got to where they are by seeking challenges and taking risks. They are talented and they have been lucky, almost certainly luckier than they acknowledge. Their self-confidence is reinforced by the admiration of others. This reasoning leads to a hypothesis: the people who have the greatest influence on the lives of others are likely to be optimistic and overconfident, and to take more risks than they realize.

Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow