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AdamMarblestone's profile
Adam Marblestone
Adam Marblestone
Adam Marblestone
@AdamMarblestone

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Adam Marblestone

@AdamMarblestone

Technologist, Scientist

adammarblestone.org
Joined February 2009

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    1. David Chapman‏ @Meaningness 17 Nov 2019
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      In everyday activity, you can almost always SEE or HEAR what to do next. The possibilities are inherent in the perceptual environment. Formal notation is a collection of tricks for making the same possible in abstract realms. It’s all our brains can do. https://meaningness.com/metablog/rational-pcr …pic.twitter.com/ZbCShOXASt

      10 replies 72 retweets 326 likes
    2. michael_nielsen‏ @michael_nielsen 17 Nov 2019
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      Replying to @Meaningness

      michael_nielsen Retweeted michael_nielsen

      A related story from Fermi:https://twitter.com/michael_nielsen/status/1098098218565390337 …

      michael_nielsen added,

      michael_nielsen @michael_nielsen
      Note taking is curiously underrated. pic.twitter.com/0qqvr5rXwt
      Show this thread
      3 replies 2 retweets 40 likes
    3. David Chapman‏ @Meaningness 17 Nov 2019
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      Replying to @michael_nielsen

      Something I’ve been incoherently wondering about in recent years is the extent to which my peculiar cognitive style rests on a peculiar memory control unit. It seems to be much more content-addressable than most people’s, supporting some sort of fuzzy match.

      1 reply 1 retweet 17 likes
    4. David Chapman‏ @Meaningness 17 Nov 2019
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      Replying to @Meaningness @michael_nielsen

      I’m not particularly good at memorizing facts, but there’s vast quantities of conceptual stuff in there from every field imaginable, and it constantly throws up more-or-less relevant things I read decades ago and hadn’t thought about since.

      2 replies 0 retweets 14 likes
    5. michael_nielsen‏ @michael_nielsen 17 Nov 2019
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      Replying to @Meaningness

      Associative across-the-board pattern matching seems relatively more common, at least among my acquaintance. Still a niche group, though. Curiously, I'd say - very speculatively - it's anticorrelated with output.

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
    6. michael_nielsen‏ @michael_nielsen 17 Nov 2019
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      Replying to @michael_nielsen @Meaningness

      Ie, if I think of two people, A and B, who seem similar in many regards intellectually, but A is far more associative/generative-across-the-board, then A is (weakly) less likely to produce lots of output. This may be an availability bias error on my part.

      2 replies 0 retweets 3 likes
    7. michael_nielsen‏ @michael_nielsen 17 Nov 2019
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      Replying to @michael_nielsen @Meaningness

      Returning to your original (implied categorization), my guess as to why this happens: it has to do with the heuristics one uses when learning new things. Person X will apply a lot of heuristics to analyze in ways that go outside a field, while...

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
    8. michael_nielsen‏ @michael_nielsen 17 Nov 2019
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      Replying to @michael_nielsen @Meaningness

      Person Y tends to keep their analysis relatively field specific. In particular, they don't actively search for and then develop wilder associations. All total speculation on my part.

      2 replies 0 retweets 1 like
      Adam Marblestone‏ @AdamMarblestone 17 Nov 2019
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      Replying to @michael_nielsen @Meaningness

      I wonder if some simply have “systems consolidation” dialed up higher than others, or something generic about memory like that: https://web.stanford.edu/~jlmcc/papers/KumaranHassabisMcC16CLSUpdate.pdf … Alternatively, if it relies much on our external prosthetics, what we google for or note down...

      9:46 AM - 17 Nov 2019
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      • michael_nielsen
      0 replies 0 retweets 1 like

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