Ancestors

Toot

Written by Ben Waber on 2025-02-01 at 04:30

It was pretty gross out today (this picture is from yesterday's run), but while milling about inside I was still able to listen to some talks for my #AcademicRunPlaylist! (1/6)

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Descendants

Written by Ben Waber on 2025-02-01 at 04:30

First was an intriguing talk by Giuseppe Colangelo on the tradeoffs around interoperability mandates and competition concerns in mobile platforms at @Weizenbaum_Institut https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AxtMyId7MYI (2/6) #law #antitrust

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Written by Ben Waber on 2025-02-01 at 04:30

Next was an excellent talk by Charlotte Cavaillé on support for redistribution in the modern age of inequality at the Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs. Cavaillé combines economic inequality data with public surveys from a number of Western countries to develop theories for why many people express beliefs that in aggregate demonstrably lead to worse outcomes. Highly recommend https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-xWHltj4ycU (3/6) #economics #politics

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Written by Ben Waber on 2025-02-01 at 04:30

Next was an interesting talk by Xinyu Liu on robotic manipulation and characterization of small model organisms at the University of Toronto Robotics Institute https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-LxA0G7joTA (4/6) #robotics

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Written by Ben Waber on 2025-02-01 at 04:30

Next was "How Language Began" by Daniel Everett. This book reviews the archaeological evidence around homo erectus, hypothesizing that their rapid migration, biology, technology, and structures are strong evidence of culture and that language must necessarily have been present. The linguistics sections are the best, examining a variety of language types to challenge common assumptions & how language functions.

Full review: https://bookwyrm.social/user/bwaber/review/6461962/s/an-interesting-mix-of-anthropology-archaeology-and-linguistics#anchor-6461962 (5/6) #linguistics #anthropology #archaeology

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Written by Ben Waber on 2025-02-01 at 04:30

Last was "Proust and the Squid" by Maryanne Wolf, who connects neuroscience, archaeology, history, and linguistics to review how reading developed and how it interacts with cognition. I particularly liked the sections comparing different languages, and as someone who reads Japanese daily I was selfishly interested in the unique aspects of that language

Full review: https://bookwyrm.social/user/bwaber/review/6461986/s/an-engaging-but-unconvincing-read#anchor-6461986 (6/6) #linguistics #neuroscience

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