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Finally! This would be wonderful. Almost like back in 2001 when you could find many academic papers online.
We’re crowd-sourcing health discovery byhelping anyone create group health studies.
you never know when it might come in handy... :)
Makes sense. It's more to do with mental models and openness of mind, however some good points in the comments. I'd say, case not yet closed...
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It concludes that while there are clear differences between older people and younger in their use of technology, there’s no evidence of a clear break between two separate populations.
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On one side of the divide is the young person who uses technology like she drives her car, without the need for conscious attention to the process. On the other side sits a grizzled and mature individual, maybe a would-be ‘silver surfer’, frowning impotently at a keyboard and calling for his granddaughter.
very cool and amazing
interesting read. semantic people take note. :)
interesting
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“Side effects” are not a feature of reality, but a sign that the boundaries of our mental models are too narrow, our time horizons too short.”
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But, these simple models are of limited value when dealing with dynamic, complex systems, such as you find in areas from health care to financial markets to climate change. We make the wrong decisions and get in trouble when there is a large gap between the complexity of the real problems we are trying to address and our simple mental picture of the problem. “. . . Where the world is dynamic, evolving, and interconnected, we tend to make decisions using mental models that are static, narrow, and reductionist. Among the elements of dynamic complexity people find most problematic are feedback, time delays, and stocks and flows.”
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Fascinating. And explains a lot, I tell ya! :)
excellent graphic representation of country-specific regulation governing privacy and data protection.
only the individual whose behaviour is being observed can confer the meaning of that behaviour. otherwise, responses based on observation of someone's behaviour are likely to fall into the 'uncanny valley' category.
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people mistakenly assume that 1) any social network that can be boiled down to a graph can be compared and 2) any theory of social networks is transitive to any graph representing connections between people. Such mistaken views result in broad misinterpretations of social networks and social network sites.
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three distinct ways of modeling a social network. These are not the only ways of modeling a social network, but they are three common ways that are often collapsed in public discourse.
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