Ambika K's Profile

medical student, gaining insights on rational & empathizing nature.
I like social entrepreneurship,global trade,modern architecture,writing,transcendentalism [Emerson's philosophy: discovering nature of reality by analysing thought processes rather than things],science & tech,behavioral sci.

I am interested in Movies: Michael Douglas films,.Audrey Hepburn's Roman holiday,Gregory Peck's Mackenna's gold.. TV: Lost in space,Star trek,Dennis the menace,Where on earth is Carmen Sandiego. Books: why we do what we do by edward deci,the one thing you need to know by marcus buckingham,the 5 temptations of a CEO,33strategies of war,Secret garden,Linda Goodman's LS,Linus Geisler's Doctor-Patient dialogue. My Heros are Abraham Lincoln,Dr.Devi Prasad Shetty,Dr.Vilayanur Ramachandran,RamojiRao.

I use Diigo because I loved it while annotating, reviewing my library, sending blog drafts & gaining from friends & groups.

Member since Aug 29, 2008, follows 1 people, 2 public groups, 947 public bookmarks (987 total).

More »
Tags

Recent Tags:
Top Tags:

More »
Recent Bookmarks and Annotations

  • Newspapers and technology: Network effects | The Economist 31 minutes ago
    • Elaborate ruses involving fast boats, carrier pigeons, express trains and even semaphore systems meant that papers, not businessmen, started getting the news first. Editors boasted about the timeliness of their news, and how they had beaten other papers to it. When the Journal of Commerce arrived in Boston by mail, merchants would fight to see it: one eyewitness reported seeing “crowds, in Topliff’s News-room in Boston, disagreeably elbowing each other around the file of the Journal of Commerce, on the arrival of the New York mail.” Newspapers were democratising information. Bennett once declared that “speculators should not have the advantage of earlier news than the public at large.”



      The telegraph, it seemed, would put an end to this productive rivalry. Raw news and market information would now arrive first at the telegraph office; papers, along with merchants and everyone else, would have to queue for it. Telegraph firms would establish a new monopoly over news delivery, and would sell early access to the news to the highest bidder. Papers would be unable to compete. Circulation would decline and advertisers would flee. The democratisation of news would be undone.



      There was hope, however. Bennett believed that a few papers which provided commentary and analysis (including the Herald) would survive. “The telegraph may not affect magazine literature, nor those newspapers that have some peculiar characteristic,” he predicted. But he warned that “mere newspapers”, which simply reported the news, were doomed. He was not alone in this view. The Alexandria Gazette opined that the telegraph would henceforth deliver the raw news, leaving newspapers to “examining causes, tracing effects, enlightening the judgments, and directing the reflections of men.” It seemed that the only way to survive was to offer analysis and opinion, or to focus on events in a narrow field, too obscure to merit coverage by telegraphic news services. A reshaping of the entire industry appeared to be imminent.

    • Predictions that newspapers would henceforth favour analysis and opinion over news also got things exactly backwards. Instead, the balance tipped towards the latest news.
    • 9 more annotations...
  • Study Hacks » Blog Archive » If You're Nervous About Quitting Your Boring Job, Don't Do It about 1 hour ago
    • building up a valuable skill until you’ve eliminated this nervousness.


      Once your stomach stops churning about your occupational day dreams, the time is right to make them a reality. 

  • China’s 863 Program, a crash program for clean energy : The New Yorker on 2009-12-25
    • China is so big—and is growing so fast—that in 2006 it passed the United States to become the world’s largest producer of greenhouse gases. If China’s emissions keep climbing as they have for the past thirty years, the country will emit more of those gases in the next thirty years than the United States has in its entire history. So the question is no longer whether China is equipped to play a role in combatting climate change but how that role will affect other countries. David Sandalow, the U.S. Assistant Secretary of Energy for Policy and International Affairs, has been to China five times in five months. He told me, “China’s investment in clean energy is extraordinary.” For America, he added, the implication is clear: “Unless the U.S. makes investments, we are not competitive in the clean-tech sector in the years and decades to come.”
  • www.outlookindia.com | New Year Diary on 2009-12-25
  • Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy in Severe Mental Illness - Psychiatric Times on 2009-12-25
    • Alternative explanations can be explored. For example, a patient who believes he is being electrocuted because his fingers tingle is given information about anxiety and a controlled experiment is undertaken to reproduce the symptoms. By modifying the misinterpretation of events that served to reinforce the delusional belief, the cognitive cycles that maintained the delusion are broken. Exercises that use Socratic questioning to examine beliefs and to foster discussion are very useful in assessment and relationship building. Gentle probing by the therapist can provide additional information and build trust on the part of the patient.
    • When beliefs are very strong and a “chink of insight” cannot be found to build on, such discussion eventually begins to become repetitive and it may be necessary to agree to disagree.
    • 9 more annotations...
  • Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy in Severe Mental Illness - Psychiatric Times on 2009-12-25
    • techniques to help manage delusions, hallucinations, and negative symptoms are based on the development of a good therapeutic relationship between patient and therapist
    • : techniques to help manage delusions, hallucinations, and negative symptoms are based on the development of a good therapeutic relationship between patient and therapist and formulation of the experiences, competencies, thoughts, feelings, and actions of the patient
    • 3 more annotations...
  • Accept Defeat: The Neuroscience of Screwing Up | Magazine on 2009-12-25
    • Dunbar knew that scientists often don’t think the way the textbooks say they are supposed to. He suspected that all those philosophers of science — from Aristotle to Karl Popper — had missed something important about what goes on in the lab. (As Richard Feynman famously quipped, “Philosophy of science is about as useful to scientists as ornithology is to birds.”)
    • The scientists had these elaborate theories about what was supposed to happen,” Dunbar says. “But the results kept contradicting their theories.
    • 14 more annotations...
  • I Hope Nobody Finds Out: Imposter Syndrome, Survivor Guilt, and the Bane of Progressive Political Organizations | Psychology Today on 2009-12-25
    • origins of such beliefs and feelings are understood, their irrationality can be recognized more deeply and more effectively counteracted
    • tremendously liberating to share these doubts and fears with others and thereby reduce shame about something that is human and universal.
    • 3 more annotations...
  • Overcoming Bias : Tiptoe Or Dash To Future? on 2009-12-25
    • whether you want to move fast or slow through a destructive region depends on the details of the region.
    • If we run out of today’s resources before we can reach the next tech level, we risk not being able to grow to reach that level.  This factor says go fast.
    • 2 more annotations...
  • who will own your audience: thoughts on the future of publishing « Tribal Writer on 2009-12-24
    • Influence marketing happens when you promote yourself indirectly. You influence someone with your style, your behavior and how much they like you. It is “personality” promotion. You are so well liked or respected that people want to be like you or associated with you in some way. That means buying what you recommend because they believe in and/or like you.


      Influence, says Technosailor “is not manipulative but leads from a position of conversational power.”


      Whether you believe in the concept of “personal brand”, or you dismiss it outright, the desire to latch onto a recognized individual plays out everyday.


      Being a celebrity is a dead end road. Celebrities simply wow people with imagery and public facing acts. Being an influencer involves changing games and lives and moving needles…


      To be an influencer, you’re going to have to balance that self brand, personal marketing for the sake of being known with providing absolute, unquestioned value to the greater community. Carrying the mantle of an influencer means being a celebrity for the community. It means always giving of yourself so that the rest of the crowd benefits. It’s almost self-sacrificial, flying in the face of personal brand or celebrity.

    • True value comes from what can’t be downloaded or shared. This is the writer’s presence. This is his or her interaction with the community in general and individuals in particular.


      Direct connection with the writer also means much more direct connection with the work itself, and the blood, sweat and labor that goes into it. When people can see that process and understand it, they’ll have more respect for the labor…and be more willing to pay for its fruits.


      The best creative entrepreneurs are also visionaries in one form or another. Visionaries understand that you must allow others to opt in to that vision, to feel they have a part to play in it.

More »
Groups

  • Clif's Notes for Future Teachers

    156 members, 198 items

    Resources for future teachers (Preservice teachers).

  • Medical Education

    73 members, 618 items

    Medical Education is a group for individuals involved in medical education, nursing education and other health professions education. It's a place to share resources, ideas and best practice and get connected with others working in this field. This group is NOT for promoting products or services, the focus is on sharing bookmarks about education, medical education, Web 2.0, resources which would be helpful to students and teachers to support learning and teaching in medicine and the health professions.

Highlighter, Sticky notes, Tagging, Groups and Network: integrated suite dramatically boosting research productivity. Learn more »

Join Diigo