"If it is a problem you expect to see solved soon by the community, it is probably not a line of research worth your time in the first place." https://t.co/MjaCCHI2aE
— Zachary Lipton (@zacharylipton) November 30, 2018
"If it is a problem you expect to see solved soon by the community, it is probably not a line of research worth your time in the first place." https://t.co/MjaCCHI2aE
— Zachary Lipton (@zacharylipton) November 30, 2018
“So you want to be a Research Scientist” by Vincent Vanhoucke @GoogleAI:
— hardmaru (@hardmaru) November 30, 2018
•Your will spend a career working on things that don’t work
•Your work will be obsolete the minute you publish it
•Your entire career will largely be measured by 1 number (H-Index)https://t.co/rDROdZFxs3
When I'm hiring, I start all my interviews the same way. It's a script I've practiced and honed over many years. I pulled it apart to explain the purpose and background of each sentence: https://t.co/VuReE1D3h4
— jacobian (@jacobian) November 30, 2018
Most "disruptive" political organizations in the democratic West have turned out to be sponsored by the Kremlin: far-right parties, far-left parties, WikiLeaks, purveyors of fake news, etc. Standard playbook. https://t.co/hLAQFuv0hH
— François Chollet (@fchollet) November 29, 2018
Anchor Boxes — The key to quality object detection by Anders Christiansen https://t.co/a8tuCJsGt5
— Jeremy Howard (@jeremyphoward) November 29, 2018
"Robust Artificial Intelligence and Robust Human Organizations" https://t.co/L1oCWhHLph
— Thomas G. Dietterich (@tdietterich) November 29, 2018
Every AI system is deployed by a human organization. In high risk applications, the combined human plus AI system must function as a high-reliability organization to avoid catastrophic errors
I simulated some dino-heights from a real Gaussian distribution and rounded these heights to the nearest centimeter. I did this a bunch of different times so you can get a feel of what height distributions we would expect to see. /7 pic.twitter.com/RKMegdA1MK
— David Gerard (@EmpiricalDave) November 29, 2018
However, the dinosaurs in Jurassic Park weren't supposed to be a "natural population" --- their breeding was controlled. So this bell curve was used as a clue that the dinosaurs were mating. /3
— David Gerard (@EmpiricalDave) November 29, 2018
Not the most glaring issue with #JurassicPark, but this plot from Michael Crichton's original 1990 novel looks pretty darn weird. /1 pic.twitter.com/8dQujwIVNf
— David Gerard (@EmpiricalDave) November 29, 2018
Which GENERATION took home the most prize $ from Kaggle competitions this year? #KernelAwards winner @jj_berens finds a simple way to organize age groups and tell meaningful stories from our 2018 survey results. Read the answer to this Q, and many more: https://t.co/AVnBAFTnPz pic.twitter.com/OfavhbBaM8
— Kaggle (@kaggle) November 28, 2018
Good dissection of common pitfalls in precision medicine efforts and the need for more N-of-1 trials https://t.co/qOYAalEkoc @NatureNews by @stephensenn #OA pic.twitter.com/G1hXpcXP5r
— Eric Topol (@EricTopol) November 28, 2018
It's been almost a decade since I had much to say on statistical methods in psychology (only my second paper since 2009) but "the devil and the deep blue sea" is now out at @CompBrainBeh.https://t.co/RRUyk2D7Yy
— Danielle Navarro (@djnavarro) November 28, 2018