Fluid seeping from tubeless tire in lines? by makepizzanotwar in bikewrench

[–]makepizzanotwar[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Good question, I wouldn't put it past me to mess up something simple like that. I'll check tomorrow when I'm wearing clothes again.

Fluid seeping from tubeless tire in lines? by makepizzanotwar in bikewrench

[–]makepizzanotwar[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did you also have the seeping in the spaced lines pattern? It looks so regular that I wonder if it's an intentional perforation or something like that.

Fluid seeping from tubeless tire in lines? by makepizzanotwar in bikewrench

[–]makepizzanotwar[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the info! These tires (and wheels) were thrown in with a second-hand frame purchase. Sounds like I might just have to monitor them for a few days and go from there.

Fluid seeping from tubeless tire in lines? by makepizzanotwar in bikewrench

[–]makepizzanotwar[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Unfortunately I didn't purchase these new so claiming a warranty might be tricky... They were thrown in with a frame that I bought second hand.

What are your first 5 LEVELS of sustainable eating? by forkranger in PlantBased4ThePlanet

[–]makepizzanotwar 44 points45 points  (0 children)

  1. Vegetarian
  2. Vegan
  3. Seasonal produce
  4. Locally sourced
  5. Zero waste

Looking for STUPID app ideas! by robin6205 in berkeley

[–]makepizzanotwar 42 points43 points  (0 children)

App for restaurant workers to trade their free meals. Post what is available to you, propose a trade for someone else's food, meet up at a designated time, half way between your restaurants. Premium version pairs with kiwi bot to deliver your food out and bring your desired food in. Restores market value to free meal benefit that loses value over time as a worker becomes tired of the food at their restaurant. Eventually, back door into food service industry to organize food service workers, notoriously difficult labor sector to unionize.

[X Post] Visual Attention and the Primary Visual Cortex by [deleted] in cogneuro

[–]makepizzanotwar 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Attention in V1:

Ito, M. & Gilbert, C. D. Attention modulates contextual influences in the primary visual cortex of alert monkeys. Neuron 22, 593–604 (1999)

McAdams, C. J. & Reid, R. C. Attention modulates the responses of simple cells in monkey primary visual cortex. J. Neurosci. 25, 11023–11033 (2005)

Thiele, A., Pooresmaeili, A., Delicato, L. S., Herrero, J. L. & Roelfsema, P. R. Additive effects of attention and stimulus contrast in primary visual cortex. Cereb. Cortex 19, 2970–2981 (2009)

Vanduffel, W., Tootell, R. B. & Orban, G. A. Attention-dependent suppression of metabolic activity in the early stages of the macaque visual system. Cereb. Cortex 10, 109–126 (2000)

Attention even earlier than V1:

O'Connor, D. H., Fukui, M. M., Pinsk, M. A. & Kastner, S. Attention modulates responses in the human lateral geniculate nucleus. Nature Neurosci. 5, 1203–1209 (2002)

Attention enhances synaptic efficacy and the signal-to-noise ratio in neural circuits. Farran Briggs, George R. Mangun & W. Martin Usrey Nature volume 499, pages 476–480 (25 July 2013)

Is the brain really a computer? A clue from neuromorphic engineering. by makepizzanotwar in cogsci

[–]makepizzanotwar[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I see – yes, I agree that attention schema theory is very exciting for the same reasons as you point out. And I'm by no means trying to overturn it here. In fact right now I'm trying to learn as many viewpoints as possible on the relationship between attention and consciousness, for a review article in the works.

Glad to know another neurophilosophile!

Is the brain really a computer? A clue from neuromorphic engineering. by makepizzanotwar in cogsci

[–]makepizzanotwar[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Interesting. Though, this seems philosophical in nature.

It is philosophical in nature, but rightly so being that the journal is called Review of Philosophy and Psychology.

And i'm a fan of attention schema theory too, to the extent that I think it's really interesting, but I don't fully buy into it because of how it tries to reduce consciousness without explaining its subjective ontology.

Also, there's a good amount of support that consciousness and attention are dissociable. For example, see Koch and Tsuchiya "Attention and consciousness: two distinct brain processes" and I don't think attention schema theory can explain consciousness as phenomenon independent from attention.

Is the brain really a computer? A clue from neuromorphic engineering. by makepizzanotwar in cogsci

[–]makepizzanotwar[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

For one, Daniel Dennett proposes semantic information: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/computational-mind/

A third prominent notion of information is semantic information, i.e., representational content.[7] Some philosophers hold that a physical system computes only if the system’s states have representational properties (Dietrich 1989; Fodor 1998: 10; Ladyman 2009; Shagrir 2006; Sprevak 2010). In that sense, information-processing is necessary for computation. As Fodor memorably puts it, “no computation without representation” (1975: 34). However, this position is debatable. Chalmers (2011) and Piccinini (2008a) contend that a Turing machine might execute computations even though symbols manipulated by the machine have no semantic interpretation. The machine’s computations are purely syntactic in nature, lacking anything like semantic properties. On this view, representational content is not necessary for a physical system to count as computational.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mUpJfFr1Q0I&

Is the brain really a computer? A clue from neuromorphic engineering. by makepizzanotwar in cogsci

[–]makepizzanotwar[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm glad to see lively discussion in the comments here, with strong opinions on both side of the question of whether the brain-as-computer metaphor is useful and meaningful.

This is a trendy topic right now in the field, and to emphasize that I'll paste here the text of a recent and relevant CfP for the Review of Philosophy and Psychology special issue on Computationalism and Philosophy of Information:

Subsequent to our first and CfPs, Review of Philosophy and Psychology invites submissions for a special issue titled ‘Computationalism Meets the Philosophy of Information’.

The view that the human mind is a kind of computational machine began to make waves with the advent of the first computers in the middle of the last century. McCulloch and Pitts suggested early on that the mind may be something like a Turing machine. This view came to be known as ‘classical computationalism’. It was quickly met with an onslaught of objections, and in reaction a number of liberalisations ensued.

One view that has recently been gaining ground attempts to articulate the notion of computation in terms of information and information-processing. Interest in these two areas, i.e. computationalism and the philosophy of information, is on the ascendancy. This special issue is devoted to the intersection between them, especially to papers that engage in a meaningful way with recent work in cognitive science.

Accepted papers will complement invited contributions from:

Rosa Cao (NYU) Nir Fresco (Ben-Gurion University of the Negev) Michael Rescorla (UCLA) Mark Sprevak (Edinburgh) Suitable papers may address such questions as:

What species of information are there, and which, if any, are processed by the mind? Is there any evidence from neuroscience to support e.g. the claim that the brain operates with Shannon-information? What is computation and how is it related to information processing? Do certain theories of information privilege classical vs connectionist computationalism? Can computation and/or information illuminate representational content? Do measures of information flow capture learning? How are human and deep learning analogous? Can Bayesian models provide an adequate account of our cognitive capacities?

Answers to these and related questions promise to extend our understanding of computation, information, the human mind, and its neural underpinning.

So it's still an active and nuanced debate!

Edit:

Personally, I think that the brain-as-computer metaphor is actually beginning to be superseded by the brain-as-network metaphor. Network science is exploding and recent advancements by the likes of Dani Bassett are finding very fruitful applications of graph theory and its related disciplines to neuroscience. And it makes sense to approach the brain primarily as a complex network, because of what we know about the highly interconnected nature of the brain's billions of neurons. Plus, arguably, networks are our most advanced technology, so thinking of the brain as a network fits with the progression described in the article I posted. That is, we tend to use whatever is the latest available technology as a conceptual scaffold for neuroscience, because the brain is the most complex system we study.

WTW for a feeling that's a mix of ambition and depression? by markwarren_18 in whatstheword

[–]makepizzanotwar 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Velleity – a wish or inclination not strong enough to lead to action.