There's a very useful idea for thinking about the history of research and discovery that I call "the velocity of discovery".
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I find this line of thought extremely helpful when I'm finding it tough to find a research problem I'm really excited about. I can't move as fast as the overall frontier of opportunity moves, and shouldn't try to. It's better to figure out where the wave really ought to be.
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That is, work on discovering really important problems that rely on my strengths & interests, a long time before others do, & doing something about it. I'll be unfashionable, even incomprehensible, much of the time. But also more likely to work on what matters than chsing fashion
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And, sometimes, it means just being patient, not trying to force it, and jumping on an unimportant problem out of some mistaken desire to be busy or to do what is fashionable.
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A missed tweet, just before "No offense": 10 years later you look like a genius who foresaw deep learning becoming huge. But maybe you were a product of good luck: lots of people take many combinations of classes, & a few will by chance take combinations that later look prescient
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Brenner also used the wave metaphor. He says it is optimal to be 1/2 wavelength away from the crest. :)
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Space development was unfashionable in 1975.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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