Chris Martin
@chrismartin76.bsky.social
1.9K followers 3.7K following 830 posts
Psychology. Education. Happiness. Piano. #GeorgiaTech #Atlanta #Emory #WandM #Davidson
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Reposted by Chris Martin
donmoyn.bsky.social
The elimination of USAID is a moral atrocity and all involved made a choice to enable, and then lie about, ending the lives of some of the most vulnerable people in the world.
MAE SOT, Thailand (AP) - Mohammed Taher clutched the lifeless body of his 2-year-old son and wept. Ever since his family's food rations stopped arriving at their internment camp in Myanmar in April, the father had watched helplessly as his once-vibrant baby boy weakened, suffering from diarrhea and begging for food.
On May 21, exactly two weeks after Taher's little boy died, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio sat before Congress and declared: "No one has died" because of his government's decision to gut its foreign aid program. Rubio also insisted: "No children are dying on my watch."
That, Taher says, "is a lie."
Reposted by Chris Martin
adamcsharp.bsky.social
As today is World Octopus Day I’ll again mention that a Spanish equivalent to “like a fish out of water” is como un pulpo en un garaje. It means “like an octopus in a garage.”
Reposted by Chris Martin
johnholbein1.bsky.social
Have you considered using LLMs to code open-ended survey responses?

This looks like a must read for you!

"An Empirical Investigation into the Utility of Large Language Models in Open-Ended Survey Data Categorization"

osf.io/preprints/so...
chrismartin76.bsky.social
This still leaves the question of Indian American success. It's plausible that the introduction of British civil service exams created enough of a meritocratic culture to differentiate the Indian subcontinent.
chrismartin76.bsky.social
This finding is important because scholars who push the hyper-selectivity argument, like Jennifer Lee, receive plaudits for their work. Moreover, people who bring up the culture argument are often maligned.
chrismartin76.bsky.social
by ChangHwan Kim shows strong evidence in favor of the hypothesis. It shows that Asian American achievement was high in the 1940s when there was no hyperselective immigration.
Utilizing the full-count 1940 Census linked to the full-count 1930 Census, this study investigates the Asian American Achievement Paradox in 1940. This is the first systematic test of competing AAAP hypotheses using data prior to the 1965 Act. Our results reveal that, contrary to conventional wisdom in this area of research (Lee and Zhou 2015), the AAAP is not a new phenomenon originating from the influx of hyper-selected Asian immigrants in the late twentieth century. Instead, the AAAP is a century-old phenomenon with a previously unknown rich complexity. This study provides several important empirical findings. First, the contextual selectivity of Asian immigrants accounts for the AAAP to varying degrees depending on how educational outcomes are measured. In terms of average years of schooling and high school graduation, contextual selectivity accounts for a third of the Asian American advantage over 3+ generation Whites. As for attainment of a bachelor’s degree, contextual selectivity explains most of the advantages. One caveat is that Asian Americans’ educational advantage compared to other immigrant groups remains unchanged or becomes even stronger after controlling for contextual selectivity.
chrismartin76.bsky.social
Does Asian American success emerge from Confucian values in Japan/Korea/China? This hypothesis has been controversial, and sociologists are rewarded for "falsifying" it, but a new paper (1/n)
journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10....
Abstract: Asian Americans, even those from lower socioeconomic backgrounds, achieve extraordinary educational outcomes, defying the expectations of the well-established status attainment theory that family background is strongly associated with educational attainments. This phenomenon is known as the Asian American Achievement Paradox (AAAP). Positive selectivity of Asian immigrants and cultural accounts are two competing explanations, but they are rarely disentangled empirically due to the high collinearity between immigrant selectivity and culture. This study offers a modified version of cultural explanations, clarifies the distinctions between competing explanations based on the same criteria, and tests them by investigating the educational achievements of second-generation Asian Americans using the full-count 1940 Census matched to the 1930 Census. During this period, Asian immigrants were not hyper-selected, so the entanglement of immigrant selectivity and culture is less of a concern. The results are largely consistent with the cultural explanation, revealing the AAAP to be a century-old phenomenon with a previously unknown complexity. The transmission of culture from the society of origin is further evident in that the AAAP is limited to East Asians and does not apply to Filipino Americans, even though contextual selectivity in education is similar across Asian ethnic groups in 1940.
chrismartin76.bsky.social
But it’s also true that now it’s like Mussolini
chrismartin76.bsky.social
They are historical in the sense that’s it’s always a Republican president and Republican staff who who commit multiple felonies. Except George HW Bush who was relatively clean.
chrismartin76.bsky.social
Is machine learning just a bunch of regressions in a trench coat?
Reposted by Chris Martin
jacobtlevy.bsky.social
It’s very bad to turn any major news organization into a branch of The Bari Weiss Press, but even after the last eight months it turns out I’ve still got some anger available for the defilement of CBS news in particular.

Conservatives were supposed to care about, you know, conserving great things.
Reposted by Chris Martin
davidgilbert.bsky.social
Over the weekend, Trump's deputy chief of staff for policy Stephen Miller repeatedly attacked judges, calling them part of an "organized terrorist attack" on the US government....

On Saturday, the home of a judge who ruled against Trump, went up in flames

time.com/7323442/sout...
House of South Carolina Judge Criticized by Trump Administration Set Ablaze
Authorities are investigating a fire at the home of a South Carolina judge who had reportedly received death threats in what could be the latest incident of political violence across the country.
time.com
chrismartin76.bsky.social
The person he killed off was kind of a sap though.
chrismartin76.bsky.social
Cold as ice. - at Georgia Aquarium
chrismartin76.bsky.social
There’s the 12 labors of Hercules and then there’s this
chrismartin76.bsky.social
I was just talking to my wife a couple of weeks ago about this bodybuilding bit.
chrismartin76.bsky.social
I had to look this up because I wasn’t aware it was happening and I suppose at least one party has not blocked me.
chrismartin76.bsky.social
It makes me happy to see a message like this as though I’ve reached the end of the Internet
Reposted by Chris Martin
billkristolbulwark.bsky.social
Normal person who’s become vice president of the United States, and at a very young age: I’m grateful to this land of opportunity.

JD Vance: I’m resentful that others are seeking opportunities in this country, and I’m going to invent excuses to attack others for lacking gratitude.
Reposted by Chris Martin
kevinmkruse.bsky.social
When you drag a woman by the hair, beat her and force her to kiss your flag, that’s how you tell the world you are the Good Guys
jordanuhl.com
Absolutely heinous.
Reposted by Chris Martin
lindaholmes.bsky.social
This is great work. Great. And you know what? A librarian might not know all this off the dome, but they would absolutely help you find out.
itsthebrandi.bsky.social
The LA Public Library research librarian explaining what is going on with Charli and Taylor is outstanding work

www.instagram.com/reel/DPXZIUa...
chrismartin76.bsky.social
Yes, it's a shame that MTV isn't what it used to be. It just occurred to me that Kanye may have some of what MJ had due to his eccentricity.