“The Only Good Indians” by Stephen Graham Jones. Watch out for deer. You never know.
At least we tried? #tfr
- 10 Posts
- 35 Comments
ragica@lemmy.mlto science@lemmy.world•A do-or-die moment for the scientific enterprise - Good article shows the extent of coordinated scientific fraud and involvement of some editorsEnglish10·20 days agoThis blog post hyperbolically has “do-or-die moment” in title, and then concludes with with the final breathless line, “we must act now, before it is too late” (which it claims is “every scientist’s most familiar motto”, whatever that means). Yet nowhere at all in the blog post or the paper is any suggestion of what “act” could or should be done to avoid this “die” condition.
The “limitations” section of the article is a bit telling (and at least seemingly honest).
- relies “on the instances of scientific fraud that have been reported” (i.e. someone else has already detected fraud and “acted” on it)
- speculates that there’s a lot more fraud, but has no way to quantify or measure, so it is just speculation
- “temporal changes in detection effort or in the attention paid to different fields may produce spurious trends” (um, okay, so we don’t even know if the data they do have is comprehensive enough)
- “systematic fraudulent activity has always been large but that only now has been detected” (ah, an alternate hypothesis just thrown out there that could invalidate the entire conclusion, but is not explored)
- not actually in the limitations section, but elsewhere it is also noted
I like also how the blog post admits, ‘there is still no standard definition of what a “paper mill” actually is.’ In fact no definition is offered by the blog post or the article, though the term is used constantly. (As though the problems of “paper mills” hasn’t been a known concern for dozens of years already.)
The blog post concludes with “If the model public goods game offers any prognostication”. But the “game” model is one that the author just made up earlier in the post, and arbitrarily setting the rules, boundaries and parameters for. So basically this is saying, “if my [extremely simplistic] made up analogy is true…”
I sympathize with the authors’ concerns, but this article seem to me to have a lot of problems, and not offer much of what was promised. Can’t help but wonder if PNAS picked it up just for flame-bait… which would be ironic.
ragica@lemmy.mlto Science@lemmy.ml•Archaeologists Keep Finding Massive Shoes at an Ancient Roman Fort—and They Have No Idea Why They're So Big2·26 days agoArchaeologist Flint Dibble covered this, interviewing the actual archaeologist who works with this stuff. She definitely has ideas.
ragica@lemmy.mlto science@lemmy.world•Magic mushrooms ‘can improve sex lives in struggling marriages’9·2 years agoSometimes a bandage helps to stop the bleeding.
Sometimes bandages are left on too long and wounds fester.
Bandages can be useful sometimes, but care must still be taken.
ragica@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.ml•Exiled Chinese artist Ai Weiwei: 'Censorship in West exactly the same as Mao's China'113·2 years agoAi Weiwei lived in China most of his life, and was openly critical of the government there. He has been imprisoned before. In his family history, one of his parents was internally exiled. This is a brave person who knows a few things from personal experience and deserves some respect and consideration, even if you disagree.
ragica@lemmy.mlto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Is there a way to hide from your feed the stuff you up/downvoted2·2 years agoVogager has a web app version, if that’s what you mean by front end.
I haven’t tried it but I’ve been thinking about it… Since NextCloud supports s3 storage it would seem its photo apps, such as Memories should work that way?
ragica@lemmy.mlto Technology@lemmy.world•Japan’s moon landing picture might be the space photo of the decadeEnglish17·2 years agoKids these days not playing enough Lunar Lander
ragica@lemmy.mlto Canada@lemmy.ca•Opposition parties call for indefinite pause to MAID expansion for mental illness61·2 years agoTo me this perspective seems to reach the exact opposite conclusion than it should given its premises.
Crickets is a good alternative. Especially when sprinkled on avacado toast.
ragica@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•Israel Rebuts Genocide Charge by Declassifying Cabinet DecisionsEnglish01·2 years agoSeems like a tacit admission at very least that to anyone without access to these internal documents the accusation of genocide is reasonable. Interesting.
ragica@lemmy.mlto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Centralized User Management Like Plex for eBook ServerEnglish1·2 years agoThanks for the link. Yeah, my server is old. COPS is old, but still works great for me. .
Calibre has built in server, but while running server (last I checked) it locks the db so you can’t do much with the Gui, can’t add books etc. Also I’m already running a a web server with php so it’s more efficient just to slap the COPS web app there rather than run yet another server.
ragica@lemmy.mlto science@lemmy.world•Violent video games decrease stress hormones, study finds19·2 years ago“In the non-violent condition, however, participants with higher scores in Machiavellianism had a higher increase in cortisol” - linked study
So people trying to be manipulative bastards in ‘nice’ games increase thier stress? Interesting.
Unfortunately the source study appears to be paywall and not yet on sci-hub, so don’t know what specific games they used. As to how they define Machiavellianism, I assume something toke this:
“In the field of personality psychology, Machiavellianism is a personality trait characterized by interpersonal manipulation, indifference to morality, lack of empathy, and a strategic focus on self-interest.” - Wikipedia
ragica@lemmy.mlto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•A time traveller comes back from 50 years in the future. You have 3 hours with them. What do you do?5·2 years agoAsk why. Then probably work on subversion… because it is seriously doubtful they’ve come back for any good reason.
ragica@lemmy.mlto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Centralized User Management Like Plex for eBook ServerEnglish2·2 years agoSimilarly I use COPS (php calibre front-end)… But with no users or auth. If you can guess the URL you are in! Exciting.
ragica@lemmy.mlto World News@lemmy.world•Protests erupt in Argentina against President Javier Milei’s economic shock decreeEnglish103·2 years agoI don’t actually know anything. But casually to me it looked like a choice between 160% chance of it getting worse and a 300% chance of getting worse. And it’s not very surprising at all in these circumstances many go for the latter for all sorts of reasons (and delusions). But I don’t actually know anything.
ragica@lemmy.mlto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•What's your favorite note-taking application?English1·2 years agoWorks well with nextcloud also.
ragica@lemmy.mlto Firefox@lemmy.ml•New extensions you’ll love now available on Firefox for Android8·2 years agoNote at top of developer web site:
Distribution of Enhancer for YouTube™ temporarily stopped! Due to the countless changes that the YouTube developers have made, Enhancer for YouTube™ is now completely broken for Firefox (partially works for Chromium based browsers) so I had to pause its distribution.
So far I’ve found the Improve YouTube extension does many (but not all) of the things Enhancer did.
ragica@lemmy.mlto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Do you think Lemmy is hurt by having too many dead/low-PPM communities?English8·2 years agoI seem to recall on reddit there were a lot of subs that somehow had mods who modded hundreds of subs, and didn’t participate and weren’t a part of the actual communities. It seemed these people just liked collecting subs. I’d worry that with an automated system people like this (or even bots) will show up, and just start squatting (so to speak) on the mod rights to communities. Time will tell, I guess, with growth.
Company I worked for a dozen years ago, who had many significant clients, already had most of their logos created by randos on Fiverr for pocket change.