Karner, Karner, S. L. ; Marone, C. 1998
The effect of shear load on frictional healing in simulated fault gouge
Geophys. Res. Lett. Vol. 25 , No. 24 , p. 4561 S. L. ; Marone, C. 1998
The effect of shear load on frictional healing in simulated fault gouge
Geophys. Res. Lett. Vol. 25 , No. 24 , p. 4561
The video discusses the experiment a teacher conducted in her classroom, in which she divided her 3rd-grade class into groups with blue eyes and brown eyes and told them the blue-eyed groups were “the better people in this room,” later changing the rules and saying that brown-eyed kids are better (she started this experiment the day after Martin Luther King, Jr., was shot). It’s an interesting look at stereotyping and social psychology, particularly how quickly groups will change their behavior if they are told they have a superior or inferior characteristic.
Hundreds of online psychology experiments are going on at any given time, many cool and amusing to take part in. They're great for researchers due to the
Monstrosity, once experienced as prodigious, held in awe, fell sway to biomedical experimentation's rational labeling of the freak, but failed to kill off dread, age of anxiety's theme.
Five years ago, around Christmas 2012, I wrote an article about Cynefin, the sensemaking framework. I focused it on software development, because that was the main industry I worked in, and particularly focused on using it to work out which of our requirements were complex, so that we could embrace uncertainty and risk, and avoid…
D. Fradkin, and D. Madigan. KDD '03: Proceedings of the ninth ACM SIGKDD international conference
on Knowledge discovery and data mining, page 517--522. ACM Press, (2003)
G. Gesese, F. Hoppe, M. Alam, and H. Sack. The 19th International Semantic Web Conference ISWC (Demos/Industry), page 84--89. CEUR WS, (2020)event-place: Virtual Conference.