Category: Uncategorized

  • Brain Stages

    Recent research points to multiple stages of a brain as it goes through life. From The Guardian:

    The study, based on the brain scans of nearly 4,000 people aged under one to 90, mapped neural connections and how they evolve during our lives. This revealed five broad phases, split up by four pivotal “turning points” in which brain organisation moves on to a different trajectory, at around the ages of nine, 32, 66 and 83 years.

    This seems to be new information, especially about the latter stages. But I remember reading Joseph Chilton Pearce (author of Crack in the Cosmic Egg) in Evolution’s End about brain ages. He suggested a pairing of neurons just before birth, then again about 2, and again at puberty, and finally as a teen. He also suggested many people did not partake in that last one, which depended on environmental factors such as relation to the mother and interaction with other people.

    In each of these phases many neurons (that were’t being used) died off, and ones that were used received more myelin to insulate and increase the electric stimuli.

    So I went back and looked at some reviews of his books. I remembered them stimulating, with fondness. Now I see that he was a bit of a crank, and perhaps out of his depth on the neurological front. He did like Carlos Castaneda, like I did, who turned out to be great fiction.

    I’m going to look at some other authors of my highschool/college era to see if they were equally wacky.

  • Last post for TokyoKevin

    This is Kevin Ryan from Tokyo.

    I retired a couple of years ago.
    I am not using this domain very much any more.

    Another Kevin Ryan is running for the US Senate from Illinois, my home state too. He could sure get a lot more use out of it, so I am giving it to him.

    So this site will go dark in a couple of days. Kevin the Senator hopeful may put it to use, so the content will change.

    I may resurrect the content here at tokyokevin.com next week, if I decide there is a need.

    Thank you everyone for all your attention. I hope you enjoyed the ride. I certainly did.

    Cheers!

  • Attention Grabbing by Mr. Beast

    Mr. Beast of YouTube fame is expanding his empire with a new game show. This is a review of the show, complete with a short history of how Mr. Beast got there. A good lesson for where are attention is being guided. Take back control, folks.

  • Reasoning and/or AI?

    Mike Caulfield blogs about reason and reasoning and surprisingly doesn’t care how AI got there, and who is still doing the work. Google and Perplexity have launched Deep Research engines, AI help for regular research. He talks about SOK (State of Knowledge) and the next step up SSOK (Statements about SOK), which often include references to the knowledge (links or quotes from other work).

    “A question sometimes comes up at this point — well, look at all the work you had to do when you verified this. Isn’t it actually you who is doing the reasoning?

    This question doesn’t really understand cognition well. In a sense, it’s always me doing the reasoning.”

    Is it really research if the cognitive process is being somewhat replaces with AI? I think it is. It just becomes quicker, and more a filter than an engine itself. Worth thinking about.

  • Cool Biomass Visualization

    Multi-step explanation of how much living stuff is on earth (biomass) and then compares that to man-made stuff (technomass). Eye opening. Via Kottke.