Neuroskeptic
@neuroskeptic.bsky.social
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neuroskeptic.bsky.social
Vaccines are off the hook for the autism caper. They've got Tylenol in custody now.

Did vaccines point the finger at Tylenol to save their own skin?

Are vaccines a snitch?😡
neuroskeptic.bsky.social
Sensory neurons drive pancreatic cancer progression through neuron-cancer pseudo-synapses pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41005304/ "Hello, is this pancreas?" "Pancreas can't come to the phone right now. This is cancer." ☹️
Reposted by Neuroskeptic
rhamdu.bsky.social
If the great psychologist Roger Shepard were still with us, he might not have been surprised by this. He proposed a helix model for auditory pitch perception, with one octave per turn.
There is something very human about this finding. It's like catching an LLM counting on its fingers.
neuroskeptic.bsky.social
From a Nature piece on bad peer review comments www.nature.com/articles/d41... While most of these are "go away and never review again" tier, I can relate to a couple of these
Reposted by Neuroskeptic
baalhammon.fr
A thousand sci-fi body horror stories writing themselves in my mind as I read this abstract
neuroskeptic.bsky.social
Neuron-to-cancer neurotransmission: lung cancer cells "can form functional synapses and receive synaptic transmission" from neurons pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40931078/ This is creepy
neuroskeptic.bsky.social
The first children born after the introduction of ChatGPT will be 3 years old in a couple of months.

I wonder what children who grow up interacting with LLMs will make of them? Will their intuitions about questions like "are AIs alive" differ from those of us old people?
neuroskeptic.bsky.social
AFAIK, before autism, the only real developmental diagnosis for children was "idiocy" (it went by many other names). Some children with autism probably got that label, but many would not have
neuroskeptic.bsky.social
My pet theory is that it was the introduction of universal education that made the difference.

Once all children had to go to school, it became possible/necessary to notice differences in how individual children behaved, in a way that previously never happened.
neuroskeptic.bsky.social
Many years ago, I was an #autism researcher, and here's a question I've been pondering for a while:

Why was autism discovered when it was?

Autism was, at the earliest, described in 1925 (Sukhareva) or 1940s (Kanner/Asperger) but presumably it always existed.

So why wasn't it recognized before?
neuroskeptic.bsky.social
"My relationship has very good Saturn" - illustrating the perils of self-report measures with nonsensical questions pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40929053/ I like this, but then I am quite Mars
neuroskeptic.bsky.social
In 2001, 73.4% of British men reported masturbating in the past month; by 2012 this was up to to 77.5% pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40932457/ 4.1% of men got more honest
neuroskeptic.bsky.social
A study on female soccer players has been retracted due to "lack of voluntary informed consent" and "excessive physical burden and harm imposed on the participants" pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC... 😧
neuroskeptic.bsky.social
What is the relation between mind and brain?

The mind is like the brain's online persona.

The mind is all intelligent and mysterious, but in real life it's just a blob of neurons living in a cramped skull.
Reposted by Neuroskeptic
valerieblaise.bsky.social
Heh, I just noticed a stupid habit of mine and figured out why I do it: because I’m stupid
Reposted by Neuroskeptic
waynemaddison.bsky.social
Confused writing is usually a symptom of confused thinking. As we struggle to clarify writing, we clarify our thoughts. AI writing aids rob us of that struggle, leaving clean-looking text and thoughts still confused for lack of inspection. Writing is not just a product; it is a diagnostic tool.
neuroskeptic.bsky.social
Agreed. That seems too 'particular' to be a scientific fact.

"The heaviest house cat ever was called Himmy, he weighed 22kg" is trivia, but "the heaviest cat species ever was the smilodon, they weighed 400 kg" is more like science because it's more general
neuroskeptic.bsky.social
True, but sometimes a fact is confirmed by evidence but not considered scientific. e.g. consider "ice floats on water". Most people would say this is just a common sense fact, and not 'science', in my experience
neuroskeptic.bsky.social
I agree, this is a big part of it.
neuroskeptic.bsky.social
What makes a fact a "scientific fact" as opposed to just a fact?

For example, is "most dinosaurs went extinct 66 million years ago" a *scientific* fact? I think most people would say so. But why is that statement any more scientific than "the USA was founded in 1776", which is history not science?
neuroskeptic.bsky.social
"Akin to humans shaking a computer mouse to find the cursor on a screen, we show that head-fixed mice develop an active sensing strategy" www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
www.biorxiv.org
Reposted by Neuroskeptic
datacolada.bsky.social
Colada[128] The Best Audit Study and its interesting shortcoming
datacolada.org/128