Posts Tagged ‘Cognitive Science’

New Technique for Analyzing Sentiment in Texts

November 19th, 2004

Researchers at Cornell have come up with a clever new way to determine the sentiment expressed in textual data. Their method relies of separating objective statements from subjective statements, and then just measuring the subjective ones. This results in more accurate measures of sentiment. Related Posts:Radar Networks Announces Twine.comCapturing Your Digital LifeNew York Times Article [...]

If the Universe is a Simulation, then What?

November 15th, 2004

Here’s an interesting speculation. Assume for the moment that our universe is in fact a simulation running on a vast computing system created a race of beings that is far more advanced than we can presently imagine. The next logical question would be, “Why would an advanced civilization want or need to undertake such a [...]

The Ontology Problem: A Definition with Commentary

November 15th, 2004

The Ontology Problem is a fundamental challenge of the emerging Semantic Web. This problem is comprised of three key sub-problems, the Upper Ontology Problem, the Domain Ontology Problem, and the Ontology Integration Problem, described in detail below: Related Posts:Radar Networks Announces Twine.comA Bunch of New Press About Radar NetworksWeb 3.0 Roundup: Radar Networks, Powerset, Metaweb [...]

My "A Physics of Ideas" Manifesto has been Published!

November 1st, 2004

Change This, a project that helps to promote interesting new ideas so that they get noticed above the noise level of our culture has published my article on “A Physics of Ideas” as one of their featured Manifestos. They use an innovative PDF layout for easier reading, and they also provide a means for readers [...]

Zapping Your Brain Improves Verbal Skills

October 27th, 2004

New research has found that running a mild electric current through your brain can significantly boost your verbal skills, with no side-effects, as far as anyone knows so far. Very interesting. It appears to decrease the firing threshold of neurons in the path of the current. This research was applied mainly to the frontal lobe [...]

Flying by Brain

October 24th, 2004

This is pretty cool stuff — growing brains using live tissue and then teaching them to control software: from an article in Slashdot: “Scientists at the University of Florida made a living ‘brain’ by extracting 25,000 neurons from a rat’s brain and culturing them inside a glass dish. Then, the neurons began to extend lines [...]

Great Article on Psychohistory and Sociophysics — Can We Predict Behavior?

October 20th, 2004

Great find from Rob Usey at Psydex Corporation: This article is a survey of the emerging field of “sociophysics” which attempts to apply statistical mechanics to predict human social behavior. It’s very cool stuff if you’re interested in social networks, memes, sociology and prediction science. The article discusses recent progress towards Isaac Asimov’s vision for [...]

Babies Process Sound Differently in Each Ear

September 13th, 2004

New research shows that babies process language better in their right ears, and music better in their left ears. Previously it was known that the brain processes sound differently in each hemisphere; this new research shows that the differences extend all the way to ears. Interesting. Related Posts:New Findings Overturn our Understanding of How Neurons [...]

FAQ for GoMeme 2.0

August 3rd, 2004

This posting is the FAQ and introduction for a new, improved, second-generation meme experiment that is designed to spread faster and more broadly than the first meme experiment. We call this kind of meme a “GoMeme” (pronounced Go-Meem), because it is a meme that is designed to Go. The actual GoMeme, which you can add [...]

A Physics of Ideas: Measuring The Physical Properties of Memes

July 8th, 2004

by Nova Spivack, http://www.novaspivack.com Original: July 8, 2004 Revised: February 5, 2005; February 28, 2010 (Permission to reprint or share this article is granted, with a citation to this Web Page: http://www.novaspivack.com/science/a-physics-of-ideas-measuring-the-physical-properties-of-memes) This paper provides an overview of a new approach to measuring the physical properties of ideas as they move in real-time through information [...]

Minding the Planet: From Semantic Web to Global Mind

June 26th, 2004

Draft 1.1 for Review (integrates some fixes from readers) Nova Spivack (www.mindingtheplanet.net) INTRODUCTION This article presents some thoughts about the future of intelligence on Earth. In particular, I discuss the similarities between the Internet and the brain, and how I believe the emerging Semantic Web will make this similarity even greater. DISTRIBUTED INTELLIGENCE The Semantic [...]

New Version of My "Metaweb" Graph — The Future of the Net

April 21st, 2004

Notes: Many people have requested this graph and so I am posting my latest version of it. The Metaweb is the coming “intelligent Web” that is evolving from the convergence of the Web, Social Software and the Semantic Web. The Metaweb is starting to emerge as we shift from a Web focused on information to [...]

A New Way to Find Patterns in Distributions of Numbers

March 26th, 2004

This evening I had an interesting idea for a new way to look for patterns in the distribution of numbers such as the prime numbers and the digits of Pi. In a nutshell I propose that there may be patterns in these number sequences that might not be evident to a computer but could be [...]

Brainwave Helmet Controls Video Game

March 24th, 2004

Wow. This is a very cool new project — controlling video games with a braincap. Related Posts:Big Thinkers' Most Dangerous IdeasMust-Know Terms for the 21st Century IntellectualA New Kind of Memory AidHuman-Brained Monkeys Pose Ethical ChallengeExtracting Video from Cat Brains