I have come to find no one in the AI community knows of the Muzak human factors research. Most never heard of Muzak. Some discover just Yerkes-Dodson law after my symposiums. There is so much to this research exceedingly useful today. “Silence is the loudest noise”—1922https://twitter.com/BrianRoemmele/status/1123570023836962817 …
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Replying to @BrianRoemmele
So interesting that you were able to get access to those studies. Those interested in Muzak (going well beyond the stereotypes that the company name invokes) will enjoy this 2006 deep dive in the
@NewYorkerhttps://is.gd/lYztt91 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @jamesvlahos @NewYorker
James, thank you! I really appreciate it! I loved this New Yorker peice. You know to rescue so much corporate research I have dived 100s if dumpsters in my life. Still do it. Did one dive 3 months ago. Thank god people choose not to shred.
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Replying to @BrianRoemmele @NewYorker
Wow, really? I am majorly impressed.
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"Grey literature rescue" can be super valuable: look at history of tobacco, climate change litigation. A lot of grey literature from tech companies disappears forever. Funding a rescue project would be a great idea.
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Fred, indeed! Today I have 3 storage areas the size of truck garages holding 1000s of pounds of corporate research that would have been lost forever. Almost none is on the Internet. Even young bankrupt companies are dumping research. I dive the dumpster to save it.
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