I actually robot-fed my kitten from day one, so they basically don’t associate me with food at all, just with cuddles and reprimands.
I actually robot-fed my kitten from day one, so they basically don’t associate me with food at all, just with cuddles and reprimands.
Thank God for double blind peer reviews, warts and all.
Reminds me of a scene from Don’t Look Up
I see no indicators that this was AI. Lots of details, no inconsistency.
That’s not how I remember Finn and Jake 🤨
That looks like text photoshopped on a blank shirt, especially with how flat the text is.
My favorite band. This is one of the more traditional albums in terms of style, but also quite charming. Any similar bands? I can think of Haken and Toehider.
I can say with confidence that at least some call it homocide map, with the evidence you’ve provided. 🧐
Those other two are also just costumed cubicle workers.
Reminds me of this work by Latour. It goes into the tremendous amount of oftentimes political labor that goes into the establishment of new scientific knowledge as paradigmatic:
Also one of the dumbest names ever.
This assumes that the aorta cannot be deformed by the school bus. Cooked penne can be destroyed by a six sided die.
Coke plus Mentos!
Conversely, social scientists tend to compete on how to underdress the most.
In my field it’s often general journal policy, not an individual choice. It’s hit or miss, as it can be easy to guess who the reviewer or author is in a niche field. I personally don’t go out of my way to figure out the author’s affiliation, even if it can be trivial. Regarding self citations, those are usually obfuscated at the review stage. I’d say that a paper is easy to narrow down to a circle of scholars, but it might be the first paper of a research associate, a throwaway paper by a PI, or a paper that aims to engage those narrow specialists. So is a kind of smoke screen.