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It took one article from The Athletic's Ken Rosenthal to light Mariners Twitter ablaze. In said article, Rosenthal calls Seattle a team to watch who are "considering trading a starter for a package that would include a hitter of similar age and impact." So what does that mean? Colby and Ty kick around the idea and actually take their best guess at what this hypothetical package could look like. Be sure to follow or subscribe to Locked On Mariners wherever you prefer your podcasts! For questions and other inquiries, email: lockedonmariners@gmail.com Follow the show on Twitter: @LO_Mariners | @danegnzlz | @CPat11 Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors! Gametime Download the Gametime app, create an account, and use code LOCKEDONMLB for $20 off your first purchase. FanDuel Make Every Moment More. Don't miss the chance to get your No Sweat First Bet up to TWO HUNDRED DOLLARS in Bonus Bets when you go FanDuel.com/LOCKEDON. Sleeper Download the Sleeper app and use promo code LOCKEDON and you'll get up to a $100 match on your first deposit. Terms and conditions apply. See Sleeper's Terms of Use for details. Currently operational in over 30 states. Check out Sleeper today! Dave Download Dave today at Dave.com/mlb. You could get up to $500 in 5 minutes or less! No credit check. No late fees. FANDUEL DISCLAIMER: 21+ in select states. First online real money wager only. Bonus issued as nonwithdrawable free bets that expires in 14 days. Restrictions apply. See terms at sportsbook.fanduel.com. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit FanDuel.com/RG (CO, IA, MD, MI, NJ, PA, IL, VA, WV), 1-800-NEXT-STEP or text NEXTSTEP to 53342 (AZ), 1-888-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org/chat (CT), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN), 1-800-522-4700 (WY, KS) or visit ksgamblinghelp.com (KS), 1-877-770-STOP (LA), 1-877-8-HOPENY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY), TN REDLINE 1-800-889-9789 (TN) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
It took one article from The Athletic's Ken Rosenthal to light Mariners Twitter ablaze. In said article, Rosenthal calls Seattle a team to watch who are "considering trading a starter for a package that would include a hitter of similar age and impact." So what does that mean? Colby and Ty kick around the idea and actually take their best guess at what this hypothetical package could look like.Be sure to follow or subscribe to Locked On Mariners wherever you prefer your podcasts! For questions and other inquiries, email: lockedonmariners@gmail.comFollow the show on Twitter: @LO_Mariners | @danegnzlz | @CPat11Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors!GametimeDownload the Gametime app, create an account, and use code LOCKEDONMLB for $20 off your first purchase.FanDuelMake Every Moment More. Don't miss the chance to get your No Sweat First Bet up to TWO HUNDRED DOLLARS in Bonus Bets when you go FanDuel.com/LOCKEDON.SleeperDownload the Sleeper app and use promo code LOCKEDON and you'll get up to a $100 match on your first deposit. Terms and conditions apply. See Sleeper's Terms of Use for details. Currently operational in over 30 states. Check out Sleeper today! DaveDownload Dave today at Dave.com/mlb. You could get up to $500 in 5 minutes or less! No credit check. No late fees. FANDUEL DISCLAIMER: 21+ in select states. First online real money wager only. Bonus issued as nonwithdrawable free bets that expires in 14 days. Restrictions apply. See terms at sportsbook.fanduel.com. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit FanDuel.com/RG (CO, IA, MD, MI, NJ, PA, IL, VA, WV), 1-800-NEXT-STEP or text NEXTSTEP to 53342 (AZ), 1-888-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org/chat (CT), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN), 1-800-522-4700 (WY, KS) or visit ksgamblinghelp.com (KS), 1-877-770-STOP (LA), 1-877-8-HOPENY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY), TN REDLINE 1-800-889-9789 (TN) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What does symmetry and self-similarity between life and intelligence mean for the nature of reality? How are neurones like genes? Today we have the extraordinary Fractal Brain Theory to discuss. After episode #38 about the World as a Neural Network, with Russian physicist and computer scientist Vitaly Vanchurin, i've become more open to a unified theory of universe that reconciles quantum mechanics with general relativity, as Vanchurin's equations seem to offer. So when I was recommended today's guest's Fractal Brain Theory by one of the wonderful listeners, I was curious if a little sceptical given all the psychedelic hype about fractal geometry. So a symmetrical theory of repeating self-similar, self-modifying behaviour in the universe is not so far from the vision of the universe as a thriving, adaptable neural network. And according to today's guest the symmetry directly connects the often divorced worlds of neurones, brains and intelligence with the world of genes, evolution and life. He is multi-disciplinary researcher, computer scientist, musician and author Wai H Tsang. A self-taught thinker in the world of neurology, evolutionary biology, consciousness and philosophy of mind, Tsang is in the unique position of combining these traditions into a single theory of brain, that promises to solve even the hard problem of consciousness. Trained in computer science at Imperial college, he wrote the first version of his Fractal Brain Theory in 2016, in his book of the same name, and it was picked up by quantum consciousness theorist Stuart Hameroff, who invited him to the Science of Consciousness Conference, alongside heavy weights in the field like David Chalmers, Roger Penrose, Sue Blackmore, Donald Hoffman - many who've been on this show already. This recognition catapulted his theory into the field, so it's with great pleasure that I include it on the show for us to compare alongside the theories of many of the giants. What we discuss: 00:00 Intro 07:10 Symmetry explained: Variance and non-variance; change and resistance to change 11:00 Genomes work like tiny fractal brains 12:30 The symmetry between intelligence and life, neurones and genes 13:00 Junk DNA, neurones and boolean algebra 17:45 Dendritic structure, processing and artificial intelligence 19:00 Self-similarity and recursively nested symmetry 21:30 Evolution and ontogenesis algorithm: differentiate, select, amplify 22:15 Fractal Mathematics and Benoit Mandelbrot: Approximate self-similarity 25:45 Binary trees generating life and intelligence 29:00 Mitosis and progenator fields 30:00 Allocentric and egocentric mapping (Nobel prize) 34:40 Goodwin and cell division VS epigenetic mutation/adaptation 36:00 Recursive modification IS intelligence; evolving evolvability 40:15 A new calculus: analytic geometry 47:00 The soft and hard problem of consciousness 51:00 Time symmetric quantum mechanics and problems with causal chains 58:00 David Chalmers: Identity cosmo-psychism critique 01:11:00 Is self-reflective conscious Ai possible? 01:19:30 Penrose: Quantum mechanics is incomplete until we understand the collapse of the wave function 01:21:00 The ethical debate about the future of Ai References: ‘The Fractal Brain Theory' Wai Tsang Wai Tsang You Tube Channel Boolean Algebra David Chalmers, “Idealism and the mind body problem” paper
Does the way our brain work affect the way consciousness works? Holonomic brain theory might suggest that the way we "store" or access memories actually affects the way the universe works... at least from our perspective. haha. can you put up with us not being smart enough to talk about brains and consciousness? Thanks for giving us the chance in your brain. every sunday we stream live video at 715 pm pacific and it replays mondays at 215pm pacific and 815pm pacific only at www.SchrabHomeVideo.com we stream more videos on tuesday days and thursday nights at www.twitch.tv/reallifescifi we also record two extra episodes every week that you can find at www.patreon.com/reallifescifi get some merch at www.teepublic.com/reallifescifi follow us everywhere and connect with us :)
The Imprinted Brain Theory meets the Free Energy Principle. What we have out of that is an explanation for what autism is
Neuroscience coach trainer Ann Betz joins Mark Walsh to discuss using brain science for validation, “neurobunk”, stress, efficiency, states vs stages, triune brain theory, brain scans, gender differences, cultural differences and the extended mind. A clarifying geek out. You can find out all about Ann Betz here: Website www.beaboveleadership.com Socials LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ann-betz-a6b31018/ / Twitter: @beabovecoach Read Ann's articles and books here: www.yourcoachingbrain.wordpress.com / https://www.amazon.com/Integration-Power-Being-Co-Active-Work/dp/178279865X
On this episode Lisa and I talk about The Split Brain Theory, it will blow your mind.Tell us your thoughts?Join me on Facebook or email at Johncarter@mysteriesandbeliefspodcast.com if you have a story to tell.References:Split Brain Experiment PaperSplit brain debateSupport the show (https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/my/profile)
Jeff Hawkins is the founder of Redwood Center for Theoretical Neuroscience in 2002 and Numenta in 2005. In his 2004 book titled On Intelligence, and in his research before and after, he and his team have worked to reverse-engineer the neocortex and propose artificial intelligence architectures, approaches, and ideas that are inspired by the human brain. His previous book, On Intelligence, was an impressive scientific journey into intelligence as a memory-prediction system for experiences and therefore vastly different than a computer. He compared a human brain’s neuron to two machine neurons: a traditional neural network neuron and his version of a more sophisticated one in the form of hierarchical temporal memory (HTM) cells. Almost 20 years later, he takes this earlier HTM concept to a higher plane and has truly established himself as both a formidable teacher and an ardent student of intelligence. His latest book, A Thousand Brains: A New Theory of Intelligence, is framed in the construct of how the neocortex represents object compositionally, object behaviors, and higher level concepts. The main premise is that every part of the neocortex learns complete models of objects and concepts, and that there are many such models of each object distributed throughout the neocortex that have long range connections (hence the title of the book). https://numenta.com https://twitter.com/numenta https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-EVqrDlAqYo https://www.ted.com/speakers/jeff_hawkins https://ai-med.io/analysis/a-thousand-brains-jeff-hawkins/ HELP ME CROWDFUND MY GAMESTOP BOOK. Go to https://wen-moon.com or join the crowdfunding campaign and pre-order my next book If you haven’t already and you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe to this podcast and our mailing list, and don’t forget, my book, Brexit: The Establishment Civil War, is now out, you’ll find the links in the description below. Express VPN 12 Months 35% off!! - https://www.xvinlink.com/?a_fid=chatter NameCheap - https://namecheap.pxf.io/WD4Xrn Spreaker - https://spreaker.pxf.io/0JmQoL Watch Us On Odysee.com - https://odysee.com/$/invite/@TheJist:4 Sign up and watch videos to earn crypto-currency! Buy Brexit: The Establishment Civil War - https://amzn.to/39XXVjq Mailing List - https://www.getrevue.co/profile/thejist Twitter - https://twitter.com/Give_Me_TheJist Website -
We are getting close to 100 episodes on the show, I wanted to check in with you to give you a few thoughts about what we have learned about mental health, and finding the PURPOSE and depth of having a "happy brain". Heather's email: heather@tlbc.co Instagram: http://instagram.com/happybrainfm Heather's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/heatherparady/ Website: http://tlbc.co/happy-brain RESOURCES: First Happy Brain Episode Mentioned: https://anchor.fm/happy-brain/episodes/Welcome-to-Happy-Brain-er33fi --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Season 15 is in the can, the prophecy stone is in the trash, and our tin foil hats are snug and secure under our skateboard helmets! This season was one of the more balmy ones in recent memory, and we're celebrating it's highs, lows, and even it's sidewayses - because jeez, what were those election wimds? In this episode: relative chill, [REDACTED], you have to believe, sick kickflips, the Wings' incredible cinderella story run, idol board inertia, sharkbait, delicious strategy burrito, coolness ratings, “Alias Fakename” is my real name, fake Beeg Yoshi fans, give Drac back the airplane you cowards, the elections rocked everyone (except the tacos), S16 power rankings. ~shoutouts zone~ eDensity viewer and liquid physics sim Grind Rail Leaderboard Big Yoshi's Lounge Kansas City Breath Mints: Impromptu Plasma Transfer ~~~ Our theme music comes from the wonderful @HokutoHero. We get something wrong, or just have something to add? Send your questions / comments / corrections to InfiniteCitiesPodcast@gmail.com. Follow us on twitter at @CitiesPod, or come say hi to us in discord in the Taco Stand Discord. We are featherwings#3879, WillofChris#6129, KarpskryparN#2963, and Gary#7675, and we are Infinite Cities Blaseball.
Our previous Science with Sergio episode was focused on a preprint paper discussing predictive coding and fatigue. This was a pretty dense paper that relied heavily on Bayesian models of cognition. Basically, this means that our brains our constantly trying to predict what is going to happen, and that we are making little updates all the time to what we are doing (and what we are predicting) to make those predictions more accurate. Now, this may sound like some pretty esoteric stuff…and it is! So, for this episode, we figured we’d go to one of the sources and cover Karl Friston’s “free energy principle” for brain modeling. Friston has done a lot to popularize some of these concepts, so we chose his review paper “The free-energy principle: A unified brain theory?” Now, you may be wondering what esoteric models for thinking about consciousness and cognition have to do with exercising. Well, a lot of folks in the fitness space spend a lot of time talking about mindset. Rather than talking about mindset, we at the Legion Strength & Conditioning podcast would like to talk about prediction error and updating our priors. (Sidenote: This is a really great marketing strategy! You should try it!) Any sort of exercise performance is going to be largely mediated by the brain. Want to get less tired? Want to have better technique or learn skills more quickly? Want to learn to intuitively pass your way through workouts. All of these can be better understood through Friston’s free-energy principle, even if it doesn’t translate into immediately actionable fitness advice. Oh and in this episode I wonder what the deal is with positive prediction errors — meaning what happens when we make a significant prediction error, and the outcome is positive. The deal is dopamine. Dopamine is released when you receive an unexpected reward. If you're not already subscribed to our newsletter, head over to www.legionsc.com to get a weekly selection of training tips and our favorite articles. These interviews are posted in video format on YouTube as well. Show Notes: [0:13] Introductions to Karl Friston’s free energy principle and the concept of prediction error [11:31] Better prediction results in fewer errors which results in the opportunity to do more which results in more learning — the virtuous cycle of good prediction [22:40] Thinking about the free energy model in terms of improving technique on a snatch — and two common coaching mistakes [35:02] How does the concept of “athleticism” relate to the free energy principle? [46:52] Ways that organisms reduce free energy: manipulating the external world or updating their models of how things work. And, how does “rate of perceived exertion” relate to all of this? Links and Resources Mentioned: The free-energy principle: a unified brain theory? Free energy principle Bayesian reasoning Homeostasis Information theory Gibbs free energy Dopamine reward prediction error coding Allostatic load Erythropoietin (EPO) The psychobiological model: a new explanation to intensity regulation and (in)tolerance in endurance exercise
We don't always behave the way economic models say we will. We don't save enough for retirement. We order dessert when we're supposed to be dieting. We give donations when we could keep our money for ourselves. Again and again, we fail to act rationally and selfishly — the way traditional economics expects us to. We've seen this during the coronavirus crisis: People selflessly mobilizing to help each other, like the retired Kansas farmer who sent an N95 mask to New York to help a nurse or a doctor. At the same time, though, we've also seen some people do exactly what economic theory assumes they will: Place their own self-interest above everything else. There are those who have even tried to profit from the pandemic, like the man in New York accused of stockpiling N95 masks to sell at an inflated price. Think about this man who hoarded masks and the man who donated a mask. In almost every sphere, our public and economic policies are designed around the assumption that most of us are going to behave like the first man. Legislators pass laws that take aim at transgressors. Regulators and police departments come up with rules that punish lawbreakers. Parents and teachers discipline truants.
This week we go even further into our discussion of Software vs Hardware in the human body.. The Selfish Brain Theory is based on the idea that the brain prioritizes its energy resources with multiple different methods; including nutrient partitioning, modulating food cravings, and fat storage/consumption. Read more about the Theory here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selfish_brain_theory Start your StrongFit journey at strongfit.com Find seminars and workshops at strongfit.com/seminars Get sandbags and apparel at strongfitequipment.com strongfitequipment.eu
Dr. Konrad Kording is a professor at University of Pennsylvania, known for his contributions to the fields of motor control, neural data methods, and computational neuroscience. He runs the Kording Lab, or K-Lab, which focused on computational neuroscience early on and now focuses on causality in data science applications. His lab has made an impact across many fields over time, including Bayesian brains, causal effects in human behavior, and uncertainty in the brain. In this episode, Matt Taylor interviews Dr. Kording over Skype about motor representations in the brain, intentionality, time-warping in neurons, and causality. A video of this episode is available on the HTM School YouTube channel.
Dr. Konrad Kording is a professor at University of Pennsylvania, known for his contributions to the fields of motor control, neural data methods, and computational neuroscience. He runs the Kording Lab, or K-Lab, which focused on computational neuroscience early on and now focuses on causality in data science applications. His lab has made an impact across many fields over time, including Bayesian brains, causal effects in human behavior, and uncertainty in the brain. In this episode, Matt Taylor interviews Dr. Kording over Skype to discuss illusions of perception, how uncertainty might be represented in the brain, and more. A video of their conversation is available on the HTM School YouTube channel.
After a couple episodes of deep neuroscience, co-host Christy Maver takes us back to the business side of things in an interview with Numenta CEO Donna Dubinsky. They discuss the challenge of navigating a dual mission, why she believes it’s important even for non-neuroscientists to understand how the brain works, and where she believes the company is going.
Blake Richards is Assistant Professor and Associate Fellow of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR). Author of the papers, “Toward deep learning with segregated dendrites” and “The Persistence and Transience of Memory,” Blake answers questions about how deep learning models can incorporate segregated dendrites, whether loss functions pertain to the neocortex and what it means to identify as a theoretical neuroscientist.
Alex Vaughan is a scientist and entrepreneur, founder of MapNeuro, Inc. He’s been working at Zador Lab on groundbreaking new ways of tracking neurons and mapping them. In this episode, Alex talks about the molecules in your brain and how they control you. he describes how viruses are used as a delivery mechanism for brain mapping barcodes. You’ll also find out how your brain is like a subway.It’s not easy to map the brain, but we’re starting to understand how, thanks to many fields of science contributing to our current technological toolset. Listen in to figure out how all fields of science are connected, and how business and science can be used together to better understand the brain and intelligence.
Podcast host Christy Maver interviews Francisco Webber, CEO and Co-founder of Cortical.io. Cortical.io is a strategic partner of Numenta that specializes in natural language understanding. In this episode, Francisco talks about the spark that started it all for him while watching a YouTube video of our Co-founder, Jeff Hawkins, the advantages of their patented semantic folding methodology over other machine learning, statistical-based approaches, and the many natural language use cases the company addresses.
Yes, you know what ADHD does to your attention. But did you know that part of your distractibility might just be because you're ... human? New research out of Princeton says distraction was an evolutionary benefit and our ability to cycle the spotlight of attention actually serves to keep us safe. Today on the show, we’re talking about the research, and Pete brings three tools that purport to rewire your brain through sound! Links & Notes Thank you for supporting The ADHD Podcast on Patreon! — https://patreon.com/theadhdpodcast Here’s Scientific Proof your Brain was Designed to be Distracted Brain.fm Behind the Brain: Theory & Algorithms — White Paper Focus@Will Noiz.io
New to Numenta? Bit of a beginner in brains? Then this episode is for you. In their 20 minute conversation, Numenta On Intelligence Podcast hosts Christy Maver and Matt Taylor break down the top 5 things you need to know about Numenta, including key resources to learn more and how you can get involved.
In Part 2 of this two-part interview, Numenta Co-founder Jeff Hawkins and host Matt Taylor have an in-depth discussion on how HTM sequence memory builds object representations in space through movement.
In this in-depth interview with Numenta Co-founder Jeff Hawkins, host Matt Taylor dives deeply into concepts of location and object representation in the neocortex. In Part 1 of this 2-part interview, they discuss location, unique spaces, object compositionality & behavior, movement and learning, sequence memory, and the definition of “space” itself.
In this episode, Numenta's Matthew Taylor and Christy Maver introduce the Numenta On Intelligence podcast. Whether you're a scientist, engineer, hobbyist, programmer, or somebody interested in discovering new things about your brain, this podcast is for you! Tune in to the Numenta On Intelligence podcast.
This week we're joined by very special guest Rose Eveleth (host of the Flash Forward podcast) to discuss lobotomies, doors, deceptive filmmaking, and our growing suspicion that everyone is a host. Have your own Westworld theory? Email it as a voice memo to outwest@theoutline.com! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Adam Waytz and Malia Mason, authors of the HBR article "Your Brain at Work."
Conversations and Disputations: Discussions among Historians
Institute of Historical Research Biology, Brain Theory and History Stoical bodies and intense emotions Dr Hera Cook (Birmingham) The 'turn to affect' in the social sciences has increasingly involved the incorporation of insights from biology...
Conversations and Disputations: Discussions among Historians
Institute of Historical Research Biology, Brain Theory and History What can Historians learn from biology? Dr Lisa Blackman (Goldsmiths) The 'turn to affect' in the social sciences has increasingly involved the incorporation of insights from...
Conversations and Disputations: Discussions among Historians
Institute of Historical Research Biology, Brain Theory and History Introduction to Biology, Brain Theory and History Professor Joanna Bourke (Birkbeck) The 'turn to affect' in the social sciences has increasingly involved the incorporation ...
Conversations and Disputations: Discussions among Historians
Institute of Historical Research Biology, Brain Theory and History Why are we asking this question now? Professor Roger Cooter (UCL) The 'turn to affect' in the social sciences has increasingly involved the incorporation of insights from bio...