Nov. 15th, 2008

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Woohoo, my posting page is working again.  On Wednesday, I was going to post about how this grad student and I had a really cool study idea, but discovered that "perceived speed of time passing" is actually a really complex variable, with individual and environmental factors and possibly with different underlying processes depending on the size of temporal unit involved.  And now we have to catch up on this whole area of the literature in time to redesign the experiment by the IRB deadline, which would be fun except that I don't actually have time.  Ironic, no?  And in the process of doing that, I discovered that the other experiment I was planning had already been done, and I now need to revise that proposal to be a not-already-done follow up.  But my posting page wasn't working on Wednesday, so I didn't post about that.  I also didn't post about how my beta beta reader thinks The Jester's Child needs another scene, which is why I haven't sent it to my beta readers yet.  I need to reread it and decide if I want to go ahead and add something or if I need a triangulation beta reader first.

Please excuse random and mostly nonexistent cut tags.  I can't get them to work tonight, except for the one in the middle--no idea why.

Psychonomics is in Chicago this year.  This would be extremely convenient, except that it means I have to commute in.  Since my usual Psychonomics schedule runs from 8 or 9 AM till after midnight this is not much fun.  I have been missing morning talks and am still wiped.  I came home early today and have been cocooning.  Please excuse me if my prose is therefore clunkier than usual, or even (gasp!) accidentally ungrammatical.  But there have been many cool things, including a talk by Daniel Kahneman.  If Kahneman is not a household name in your household, he won a Nobel Prize for reinventing economics based on the fact that actual people are not perfectly rational actors.  He sounds like a Nobel Prize winner.  He is in that strata of intelligence, high above the level at which you no longer understand what someone is saying but can tell it's brilliant, and well into the place where everything he says is clear and cogent and you have no idea why it wasn't obvious to you before.  I am not as smart, and am exhausted, so I will simply try and lay out some of his points semi-coherently.

There are two kinds of happiness/well-being.  There is in-the-moment, experienced happiness--how do you feel right now?  And there is remembered happiness--how you evaluate an event, or your life as a whole, looking back at it.  These two things are not necessarily closely correlated.  There's a lot of experimental evidenced for that.  For example:
 
 
 
 
Cut tag, dammit... )

 Other cool, non-Kahneman-related things:

-very late dinner with the Source Monitoring crowd on Thursday.  We had dramatic readings of a new chapter on the topic.  This was funnier than it sounds, as it included not-overtly-rude-but-it's-good-to-have-tenure descriptions of a competing theory, and Obama-style exhortations to our better (experimental design) selves.  There were also competing blitz-style presentations of data, and I got mocked for my complaints about an effect that won't go away.  (I think it's a reasonable complaint.  If I can't make it go away, it means I don't know what causes it.  But I got no sympathy.)

-very late dinner with my advisor's lab and myriad descendants/cousins on Friday night.  Less intellectual, as Russian Tea Time has vodka flights.  (I didn't have them myself, just observed the discussions about whether you could change the apparent taste of the supposed coriander-flavored vodka through the power of suggestion.)  Many people were threatened with karaoke.

-An extended session this morning on Psychology and Law, going well beyond the usual findings about unreliable eyewitnesses.  One particularly good talk about jury interpretations of legal instructions.  This was really frightening, especially the direct-quote triple-negative sentence explaining the guidelines for imposing the death penalty, which I need to get ahold of as an illustration of why writing clarity matters.

-My undergraduate cognitive students came to the noon poster session and got to see actual cutting edge research and the general glamour of cognitive psychology.  (For once, I'm not being sarcastic about this.  The Chicago Hilton has glamour spilling out of its pores.  Gilt-encrusted conferences rooms with trompe l'oeil paintings and bas relief ceilings.)  On Monday I will find out if they understood anything.

-An extended session this afternoon on linguistic relativity and the Whorf Hypothesis.  Very cool findings about the influence of language on numbering ability, drawn from the Piraha, MIT undergraduates, Nicaraguan homesigners, and some 7-year-olds who've memorized a really useful mental imagery technique that lets them add 10 three-digit numbers in under ten seconds.  Everyone but the seven-year-olds either relies on language to keep track of exact amounts above 3, or can't keep track of exact amounts above 3 because their language has no words for it.  And the seven-year-olds, of course, originally learned the concept of counting from language, they just have a more efficient way of doing it now.

Sleep now.  Tomorrow I have talks on Emotion and Cognition, followed by a date with S at the Field Museum.  Followed, probably, by Not Cleaning the House.

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