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19 Aug 18:16

this comic was inspired by an earlier draft i wrote and then forgot about writing. it was an empty text file, save for the words "GAMERS: are you the best at games?"

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June 16th, 2014: The teen you give this to doesn't have to be one that lives with you. You can just hand them out on the street, or, say, at next year's E3??

– Ryan

16 Jul 17:17

636 – Tinha 3 Cachorros…

by gomba

Tinha 3 cachorros
Sobrou o “me belisca!”, não pera – ai!

11 Jul 18:35

Photo



11 Jul 18:34

Photo



03 Jul 18:45

Facebooks [wronghands]



Facebooks [wronghands]

03 Jul 17:34

The Beard Stays, You Go

The Beard Stays, You Go

Submitted by: (via Death Bulge)

03 Jul 17:32

Dr. Zoidberg Would Be Mad Creepy in Real Life

Dr. Zoidberg Would Be Mad Creepy in Real Life

Submitted by:

Tagged: futurama , gifs , Zoidberg
27 Jun 17:36

PAÇOPA

by ricardo

27 Jun 17:15

Winners of the 2014 iPhone Photography Awards

by Christopher Jobson

Winners of the 2014 iPhone Photography Awards iPhone competitions
© Julio Lucas. Bradenton, FL United States. 1st Place / 2014 Photographer of the Year.

Winners of the 2014 iPhone Photography Awards iPhone competitions © Jose Luis Barcia Fernandez. Madrid, Spain. 2nd Place / 2014 Photographer of the Year.

Winners of the 2014 iPhone Photography Awards iPhone competitions
© Jill Missner. Ridgefield, CT United States. 3rd Place / 2014 Photographer of the Year.

Winners of the 2014 iPhone Photography Awards iPhone competitions
© Michael O’Neal. San Francisco, CA United States. 1st Place / Animals.

Winners of the 2014 iPhone Photography Awards iPhone competitions
© Coco Liu. Illinois, United States. 3rd Place / Architecture.

Winners of the 2014 iPhone Photography Awards iPhone competitions
© Felicia Pandola. Providence, RI. 1st Place / Nature.

Winners of the 2014 iPhone Photography Awards iPhone competitions
© Juana Chaves. Madrid, Spain. 2nd Place / News & Events.

Winners of the 2014 iPhone Photography Awards iPhone competitions
© Terry Vital. Windham, NH. 1st Place / Others.

Winners of the 2014 iPhone Photography Awards iPhone competitions
© Hector Navarro. Zapopan, Jalisco Mexico. 3rd Place / People.

Winners of the 2014 iPhone Photography Awards iPhone competitions
© Coco Liu. Illinois, United States. 1st Place / Seasons.

Winners of the 2014 iPhone Photography Awards iPhone competitions
© Little Su. New Taipei City, Taiwan. First Place / Sunset.

It’s amazing to see the stories we’re now capable of telling with a device that fits in our pocket containing a camera about the size of a dime (or maybe it’s even smaller now, I’m running out of currency/technology scale comparisons). One of the primary champions of photography taken with iPhones is the iPhone Photography Awards which just announced the winners of their 2014 competition. This is the 7th year of the IPPAWARDS, a global contest for photographs taken only with iPhones. This year includes 54 photographers hailing from 17 countries who competed in 17 different categories. Seen here are the top three winners and some of my own favorites, but you can see much more on their website. (via Tim Cook)

26 Jun 18:19

We Could Watch This Graceful Dragon Animation For Hours

by Lauren Davis

We Could Watch This Graceful Dragon Animation For Hours

Todd Lockwood's animated dragon would surely eat us, because we'd be too busy watching the perfect ripple of its wings to fight it.

Read more...








18 Jun 19:17

[lizclimo]

18 Jun 18:51

Photo

by tepenetroennochebuena


17 Jun 15:14

Is There a Parallel Universe in Which John Oliver is Not Rekt?

16 Jun 19:39

How to deactivate a cat

16 Jun 19:38

akeppleaday: I can’t imagine why Google prefers their FIFA...



akeppleaday:

I can’t imagine why Google prefers their FIFA World Cup Doodles over my well-researched one. Oh well, their loss I guess.

16 Jun 19:36

Monsters of Grok: 'band t-shirts' honoring intellectual greats

by Xeni Jardin

grokk

"Fake band t-shirts for history's greatest minds." (more…)

16 Jun 19:36

This Water-Powered Jetboard Is Almost The Hoverboard You're Dreaming Of

by Eric Limer

This Water-Powered Jetboard Is Almost The Hoverboard You're Dreaming Of

No, Back to the Future hoverboards won't be real anytime soon but there's a damn good substitute. All you need is a board, a speedboat, and a firehose.

Read more...








16 Jun 19:34

Willpower Depletion vs Willpower Distraction

Submitted by Academian • 59 votes • 20 comments

I once asked a room full of about 100 neuroscientists whether willpower depletion was a thing, and there was widespread disagreement with the idea. (A propos, this is a great way to quickly gauge consensus in a field.) Basically, for a while some researchers believed that willpower depletion "is" glucose depletion in the prefrontal cortex, but some more recent experiments have failed to replicate this, e.g. by finding that the mere taste of sugar is enough to "replenish" willpower faster than the time it takes blood to move from the mouth to the brain:

Carbohydrate mouth-rinses activate dopaminergic pathways in the striatum–a region of the brain associated with responses to reward (Kringelbach, 2004)–whereas artificially-sweetened non-carbohydrate mouth-rinses do not (Chambers et al., 2009). Thus, the sensing of carbohydrates in the mouth appears to signal the possibility of reward (i.e., the future availability of additional energy), which could motivate rather than fuel physical effort.

-- Molden, D. C. et al, The Motivational versus Metabolic Effects of Carbohydrates on Self-Control. Psychological Science.

Stanford's Carol Dweck and Greg Walden even found that hinting to people that using willpower is energizing might actually make them less depletable:

When we had people read statements that reminded them of the power of willpower like, “Sometimes, working on a strenuous mental task can make you feel energized for further challenging activities,” they kept on working and performing well with no sign of depletion. They made half as many mistakes on a difficult cognitive task as people who read statements about limited willpower. In another study, they scored 15 percent better on I.Q. problems.

-- Dweck and Walden, Willpower: It’s in Your Head? New York Times.

While these are all interesting empirical findings, there’s a very similar phenomenon that’s much less debated and which could explain many of these observations, but I think gets too little popular attention in these discussions:

Willpower is distractible.

Indeed, willpower and working memory are both strongly mediated by the dorsolateral prefontal cortex, so “distraction” could just be the two functions funging against one another. To use the terms of Stanovich popularized by Kahneman in Thinking: Fast and Slow, "System 2" can only override so many "System 1" defaults at any given moment.

So what’s going on when people say "willpower depletion"? I’m not sure, but even if willpower depletion is not a thing, the following distracting phenomena clearly are:

  • Thirst
  • Hunger
  • Sleepiness
  • Physical fatigue (like from running)
  • Physical discomfort (like from sitting)
  • That specific-other-thing you want to do
  • Anxiety about willpower depletion
  • Indignation at being asked for too much by bosses, partners, or experimenters...

... and "willpower depletion" might be nothing more than mental distraction by one of these processes. Perhaps it really is better to think of willpower as power (a rate) than energy (a resource).

If that’s true, then figuring out what processes might be distracting us might be much more useful than saying “I’m out of willpower” and giving up. Maybe try having a sip of water or a bit of food if your diet permits it. Maybe try reading lying down to see if you get nap-ish. Maybe set a timer to remind you to call that friend you keep thinking about.

The last two bullets,

  • Anxiety about willpower depletion
  • Indignation at being asked for too much by bosses, partners, or experimenters...

are also enough to explain why being told willpower depletion isn’t a thing might reduce the effects typically attributed to it: we might simply be less distracted by anxiety or indignation about doing “too much” willpower-intensive work in a short period of time.

Of course, any speculation about how human minds work in general is prone to the "typical mind fallacy". Maybe my willpower is depletable and yours isn’t. But then that wouldn’t explain why you can cause people to exhibit less willpower depletion by suggesting otherwise. But then again, most published research findings are false. But then again the research on the DLPFC and working memory seems relatively old and well established, and distraction is clearly a thing...

All in all, more of my chips are falling on the hypothesis that willpower “depletion” is often just willpower distraction, and that finding and addressing those distractions is probably a better a strategy than avoiding activities altogether in order to "conserve willpower".

20 comments
13 Jun 19:25

First Dates Are Even Weirder When You're Superman

First Dates Are Even Weirder When You're Superman

Submitted by: (via neilaglet)

Tagged: superman , web comics
13 Jun 17:57

annabellehector: How to babysit.



annabellehector:

How to babysit.

13 Jun 17:41

*Fixed



*Fixed

13 Jun 17:40

Photo



13 Jun 15:56

Photo







13 Jun 15:54

¿Tienes hambre? - Visto así, es lo más fácil del mundo


13 Jun 15:54

Everybody hates everyone, World Cup

Damiani.guilherme

Secando o Brasil.



Everybody hates everyone, World Cup

13 Jun 15:51

Unfriendly

by Doug

Unfriendly

Here’s more city living.

13 Jun 15:44

Photo



13 Jun 15:44

Complaining

by Wes + Tony

It takes a big raincloud to admit he's wrong.

All complaining does is make you sound like an un-fun asshole who no one wants to talk to. Unless you’re complaining about not having a fun video to watch about alien corpses! Because THAT gets you THIS VIDEO I just made:

T

13 Jun 15:37

Alan Watts.



Alan Watts.

13 Jun 15:26

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