I'm currently at the CUNY Human Sentence Processing conference. I'll start blogging the most interesting reports soon, but at the moment I'm too busy conferencing to actually write about the conference. In the meantime, in honor of the conference, I give you this slide from GraphJam:
The focus of lab and blog is language -- what it is, how we understand it, and what we can do with it. At the blog, we discuss research, findings and controversies. At the lab, we try to create new research, findings and controversies.
Games with Words -- both blog and lab -- are maintained by Joshua Hartshorne, a graduate student in Psychology at Harvard University.
The blog and lab were previously known as the Cognition & Language Lab.
The LHC in Real Time
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The Large Hadron Collider continues to set records for the highest particle
energies ever reached (in controlled form on earth that is). Yesterday the
LHC ...
The details do matter
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Consider a protein-ligand binding model. How easy is it to predict the best
and worst binders in terms of affinity? Now, how hard is it to
quantitatively r...
Games with Words in Taiwan
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I've been in Taiwan for two weeks, and further posts of the Tutorial will
probably wait until I get back next week.
I had an excellent two-day visit to Pro...
Cold Dust
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The pink horizontal feature near the bottom of this image is the Milky Way.
Connected to it are giant filamentary structures composed of cold dust color
co...
Gene-culture Co-evolution
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A while ago, I wrote on the hypothesis that humans have essentially stopped
evolving genetically, because of our cultural emphasis on keeping all humans
al...
Alternative Research Blogging Widget(s)
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[image: Research Blogging Badge]Recently John sent me the code for a ResearchBlogging.org
widget that he wanted added to his sidebar. While adding the widge...
Funny advert placement
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I'm sorry to my more serious readers, but I just could not resist when I saw
this. The ad placement next to a story about our work on sexual *versus*asexual...
My failure or his?
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"The wind blew autumn leaves into intercalated lines and arcs of force so
regular you could photograph them for a textbook on Cramer's Rule and the
cross-p...
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