Curating the Internet: Science and technology digest for November 10, 2019
Describing the uncanny valley in robotics; Android malware with unusual persistence puzzles security experts; Using obfuscation as a privacy tool; Nature-inspired architecture; Critics say nutrition science is performing poorly and lacks funding; and a Steem essay on technologies that will influence education in the future.
Straight from my RSS feed | Whatever gets my attention |
Links and micro-summaries from my 1000+ daily headlines. I filter them so you don't have to.
- What Is the Uncanny Valley? - For some reason, IEEE Spectrum doesn't have their "weekly selection of awesome robot videos" this week, so here's a post from Wednesday about the phenomenon known as the "uncanny valley". Basically, people are ok with robots that don't resemble humans at all, but as the robot (or prosthetic device) becomes more human-like, there's an area of perception where it makes people uncomfortable. The name was coined, somewhere around 50 years ago, by Masahiro Mori in a seminal essay, and illustrated in the accompanying chart, from wikimedia. This article contains a number of examples of technologies that seem to trigger the "yuck" response signaling that the uncanny valley has been reached. The concept was not proposed as a rigorous idea, but it has been criticized in that light. Karl MacDorman is quoted saying that he thinks of it more as a heuristic for organizing ideas than as a theory. In order to get across the Uncanny Valley, the article suggests that facial expressions need to match body movements and tones of speech.
From the article, here is a video with a "virtual human" that occupies the valley:
Click through for some other examples.
So, what we're trying to create actually is an environment that blurs the boundary in between architecture and nature. So architecture is no longer a functional machine for living. It also reflects the nature around us. It also reflects our soul and spirit. So, as an architect, I don't think in the future we should repeat those soulless matchboxes anymore. I think what I'm looking for is the opportunity to create a future with harmony in between humans and nature.
“I’ve worked in many different fields, and it’s hard to find another field that seems to be performing so poorly,” Ioannidis said in an interview, noting that he believes the epidemiological studies are particularly problematic. “It does draw amazing attention in the news, but nothing seems to be validated. I can’t think of any other field that has that constellation of failure.Personally, I'm not a fan of the "funding == quality" paradigm of thought that permeates the article, but I think the critiques are important. It also occurs to me that an absence of funding could be a response to poor performance, and not a cause of it. h/t Retraction Watch
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Fortunately personalized learning has always been available to folks that homeschool. I shudder to think what government indoctrinations will eventually get around to using modern technology to do. Homeschooling was easy. My kids were information sponges, and still are, having loved learning the things they wanted to know.
Odd that government schools have the opposite effect.
Thanks!
When I was in elementary school, we had something called an "Individualized Learning System" (or something like that), where the kids in my class all covered the material semi-independently at our own speeds. It seemed like it worked pretty well, but it disappeared when we got to middle school, and I think it was entirely discontinued in the school district shortly after that. Coincidentally, or not, my grades went from straight-As to barely passing after elementary school. I hope the essay is right, and we see a technology-driven return to that style of learning.