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Today marks the 22nd anniversary of the September 11th attacks. In this episode, which I do every year around this time, we introduce you to a hero of that day who should never be forgotten: Rick Rescorla. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/revisionisthistory/support
In This Episode, We Get Tactical About: Friday Debrief How Does Your Power List Look Today? Mediocrity is the Default Position Sheepdog Stories: Hard Core Rick Rescorla Resources + Links: Connect with Kristofor on Instagram | @team_healey Connect with Kristofor on Substack | https://kristoforhealey.substack.com Join us for The Weekend: Bourbon Trail in Lexington, Kentucky September 29-October 2, 2023 | https://www.theweekendbourbontrail.com/ How can Kristofor help you become an indispensable man? https://linktr.ee/krhealey Download a FREE COPY of Indispensable: A Tactical Plan for the Modern Man Buy your copy of the book, here! Shoot us a message on Instagram with your biggest takeaway @team_healey Show Notes: Rick Rescorla was a remarkable figure known for his heroism and dedication, particularly during the tragic events of September 11, 2001. Rescorla's early life saw him join the British Army's Parachute Regiment and serve in Cyprus and Rhodesia. He then moved to the United States, where he joined the U.S. Army and served in the 7th Cavalry during the Vietnam War. Rescorla's service in Vietnam at the Battle of Ia Drang earned him several accolades for bravery and leadership, including the Silver Star and the Bronze Star. After his military career, Rescorla pursued a career in security and became the head of security for Morgan Stanley at the company's offices in the World Trade Center's South Tower. His commitment to safety and security was unparalleled, and he conducted regular evacuation drills, which some employees initially found excessive. However, Rescorla's foresight and dedication to preparedness proved invaluable on the morning of September 11, 2001. When American Airlines Flight 11 struck the North Tower of the World Trade Center, Rescorla immediately took charge of the evacuation process in the South Tower. He directed Morgan Stanley employees and other occupants to evacuate, even though the Port Authority initially advised them to stay put. Rescorla's leadership and cool-headedness saved the lives of more than 2,600 people that morning. Tragically, after helping to evacuate most of the building's occupants, he re-entered the South Tower to search for stragglers and was last seen on the 10th floor. The tower collapsed shortly thereafter. Rick Rescorla's selfless actions and unwavering commitment to the safety of others made him a hero during the 9/11 attacks. His story exemplifies courage, leadership, and the willingness to make the ultimate sacrifice to save lives. We talk about it today! Until next time…out of role!
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: AI researchers announce NeuroAI agenda, published by Cameron Berg on October 24, 2022 on LessWrong. Last week, 27 highly prominent AI researchers and neuroscientists released a preprint entitled Toward Next-Generation Artificial Intelligence: Catalyzing the NeuroAI Revolution. I think this report is definitely worth reading, especially for people interested in understanding and predicting the long-term trajectory of AI research. Below, I'll briefly highlight four passages from the paper that seemed particularly relevant to me. Doubts about the 'prosaic' approach yielding AGI The authors write: The seeds of the current AI revolution were planted decades ago, largely by researchers attempting to understand how brains compute (McCulloch and Pitts 1943). Indeed, the earliest efforts to build an “artificial brain” led to the invention of the modern “von Neumann computer architecture,” for which John von Neumann explicitly drew upon the very limited knowledge of the brain available to him in the 1940s (Von Neumann 2012). The deep convolutional networks that catalyzed the recent revolution in modern AI are built upon artificial neural networks (ANNs) directly inspired by the Nobel-prize winning work of David Hubel and Torsten Wiesel on visual processing circuits in the cat (Hubel and Wiesel 1962; LeCun and Bengio 1995). Similarly, the development of reinforcement learning (RL) drew a direct line of inspiration from insights into animal behavior and neural activity during learning (Thorndike and Bruce 2017; Rescorla 1972; Schultz, Dayan, and Montague 1997). Now, decades later, applications of ANNs and RL are coming so quickly that many observers assume that the long-elusive goal of human-level intelligence—sometimes referred to as “artificial general intelligence”—is within our grasp. However, in contrast to the optimism of those outside the field, many front-line AI researchers believe that major new breakthroughs are needed before we can build artificial systems capable of doing all that a human, or even a much simpler animal like a mouse, can do [emphasis added]. To the degree we take this final comment seriously—that many within the field think that major breakthroughs (plural) are needed before we get AGI—we should probably update in the direction of being relatively more skeptical of prosaic AGI safety. If it appears increasingly likely that AGI won't look like a clean extrapolation from current systems, it would therefore make increasingly less sense to bake the prosaic assumption into AGI safety research. Researchers eyeing brain-based approaches While many key AI advances, such as convolutional ANNs and RL were inspired by neuroscience, much of the current research in machine learning is following its own path by building on previously-developed approaches that were inspired by decades old findings in neuroscience, such as attention-based neural networks which were loosely inspired by attention mechanisms in the brain (Itti, Koch, and Niebur 1998; Larochelle and Hinton 2010; Xu et al. 2015). New influences from modern neuroscience exist, but they are spearheaded by a minority of researchers. This represents a missed opportunity. Over the last decades, through efforts such as the NIH BRAIN initiative and others, we have amassed an enormous amount of knowledge about the brain. This has allowed us to learn a great deal about the anatomical and functional structures that underpin natural intelligence. The emerging field of NeuroAI, at the intersection of neuroscience and AI, is based on the premise that a better understanding of neural computation will reveal basic ingredients of intelligence and catalyze the next revolution in AI, eventually leading to artificial agents with capabilities that match and perhaps even surpass those of humans [emphasis in the original]. We...
Link to original articleWelcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: AI researchers announce NeuroAI agenda, published by Cameron Berg on October 24, 2022 on LessWrong. Last week, 27 highly prominent AI researchers and neuroscientists released a preprint entitled Toward Next-Generation Artificial Intelligence: Catalyzing the NeuroAI Revolution. I think this report is definitely worth reading, especially for people interested in understanding and predicting the long-term trajectory of AI research. Below, I'll briefly highlight four passages from the paper that seemed particularly relevant to me. Doubts about the 'prosaic' approach yielding AGI The authors write: The seeds of the current AI revolution were planted decades ago, largely by researchers attempting to understand how brains compute (McCulloch and Pitts 1943). Indeed, the earliest efforts to build an “artificial brain” led to the invention of the modern “von Neumann computer architecture,” for which John von Neumann explicitly drew upon the very limited knowledge of the brain available to him in the 1940s (Von Neumann 2012). The deep convolutional networks that catalyzed the recent revolution in modern AI are built upon artificial neural networks (ANNs) directly inspired by the Nobel-prize winning work of David Hubel and Torsten Wiesel on visual processing circuits in the cat (Hubel and Wiesel 1962; LeCun and Bengio 1995). Similarly, the development of reinforcement learning (RL) drew a direct line of inspiration from insights into animal behavior and neural activity during learning (Thorndike and Bruce 2017; Rescorla 1972; Schultz, Dayan, and Montague 1997). Now, decades later, applications of ANNs and RL are coming so quickly that many observers assume that the long-elusive goal of human-level intelligence—sometimes referred to as “artificial general intelligence”—is within our grasp. However, in contrast to the optimism of those outside the field, many front-line AI researchers believe that major new breakthroughs are needed before we can build artificial systems capable of doing all that a human, or even a much simpler animal like a mouse, can do [emphasis added]. To the degree we take this final comment seriously—that many within the field think that major breakthroughs (plural) are needed before we get AGI—we should probably update in the direction of being relatively more skeptical of prosaic AGI safety. If it appears increasingly likely that AGI won't look like a clean extrapolation from current systems, it would therefore make increasingly less sense to bake the prosaic assumption into AGI safety research. Researchers eyeing brain-based approaches While many key AI advances, such as convolutional ANNs and RL were inspired by neuroscience, much of the current research in machine learning is following its own path by building on previously-developed approaches that were inspired by decades old findings in neuroscience, such as attention-based neural networks which were loosely inspired by attention mechanisms in the brain (Itti, Koch, and Niebur 1998; Larochelle and Hinton 2010; Xu et al. 2015). New influences from modern neuroscience exist, but they are spearheaded by a minority of researchers. This represents a missed opportunity. Over the last decades, through efforts such as the NIH BRAIN initiative and others, we have amassed an enormous amount of knowledge about the brain. This has allowed us to learn a great deal about the anatomical and functional structures that underpin natural intelligence. The emerging field of NeuroAI, at the intersection of neuroscience and AI, is based on the premise that a better understanding of neural computation will reveal basic ingredients of intelligence and catalyze the next revolution in AI, eventually leading to artificial agents with capabilities that match and perhaps even surpass those of humans [emphasis in the original]. We...
This Sunday marks the 21st anniversary of the September 11th attacks. In this episode, which I do every year around this time, we introduce you to a hero of that day who should never be forgotten: Rick Rescorla. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/revisionisthistory/support
In dieser Folge spricht Anna über ein elementares Thema der Lerntheorie - die Konditionierung. Anna spricht darüber, wie die klassische und die operante Konditionierung funktionieren und was das für das Hundetraining bedeutet. Außerdem beleuchten wir in dieser Folge die verschiedensten Lernphänomene, die mit der Konditionierung zusammenhängen. Egal ob ihr Anfänger der Lerntheorie oder schon richtige Expert:innen seid, in dieser Folge ist bestimmt für jeden was Spannendes dabei!|| Kontakt:dogatlife@gmail.com|| Instagram: @dogaboutlifePatrizia: @fuxliebe Alice: @minniefairytailAnna: @loewenpfoten|| Logo Credits:Katleen Ackers https://katleenackers.de/|| Music Credits:Music from https://www.zapsplat.com|| Quellen:|| Kiesel, Andrea. Koch, Iring. (2012). Lernen - Grundlagen der Lerntheorie. VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, || Pavlov, Ivan P. (1927). Conditioned Reflexes. Oxford: Oxford University Press. || Thorndike, Edward Lee. (1911). Animal Intelligence: Experimental Studies. New York: Macmillan. || Skinner, Burrhus F. (1938). The Behavior of Organisms: An Experimental Analysis. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts.|| Skinner, Burrhus F. (1948). "Superstition" in the pigeon. Journal of Experimental Psychology. 38. pp. 168-172. || Bouton, M.E. (1993). Context, time, and memory retrieval in the interference paradigms of Pavlovian learning. Psychological Bulletin. 114. pp. 80-99. || Ferster, C.B. & Skinner, B.F. (1957). Schedules of Reinforcement. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. || Watson, J.B. & Raynor, R. (1920). Conditioned emotional reactions. Journal of Experimental Psychology. 3. pp. 1-14. || Jenkins, H.M. & Harrison, R. H. (1962). Generalization gradients of inhibition following auditory discrimination learning. Journal of Experimental Analysis of Behavior. 5. pp. 435-441. || Tinkelpaugh, O.L. (1928). An experimental study of representative factors in monkeys. Journal of Comparative Psychology. 8. pp. 197-236. || Colwill, R.M. & Rescorla, R.A. (1985). Post-conditioning devaluation of a reinforcer affects instrumental responding. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes. 11. pp. 120-132. || Kamin, L.J. (1969). Predictability, surprise, attention and conditioning. In B.A. Campbell & R.M. Church (Eds.). Punishment and aversive behavior. pp. 279-296. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts.
Today we have a real treat for you, dear listeners. A real pipe hitting badass named Rick Rescorla, and the only person in history nicknamed "Hardcore" and they weren't a putz. Aside from Hardcore Holly, may his career rest in peace. Anyways, this dude was awesome and while he kept taking work where he was kinda fighting for a bad cause, he left when he realized how shitty it was. Also, you for sure won't see where his story is gonna end up, I know I fucking didn't. Enjoy!
In this episode, let's talk about the importance of an early diagnosis and early interventions. References: American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (5). Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association. Camarata, S. (2014). Early identification and early intervention in autism spectrum disorders: Accurate and effective? International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 16(1), 1-10, https://doi.org/10.3109/17549507.2013.858773 Fuller, E. A., & Kaiser, A. P. (2020) The Effects of Early Intervention on Social Communication Outcomes for Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder: A Meta-analysis. J Autism Dev Disord, 50, 1683-1700. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10803-019-03927-z Itzchak, E. B., & Zachor, D. A. (2011). Who benefits from early intervention in autism spectrum disorders? Science Direct, 5(1), 345-350. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rasd.2010.04.018 Johnson, C. P., & Myers, S. M. (2007). Identification and evaluation of children with autism spectrum disorders. Pediatrics, 120, 1183–1215. Koegel, R., Koegel, L., & Camarata, S. (2010). Definitions of empirically supported treatment. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 40, 516–517. Rescorla, L. (2002). Language and reading outcomes to age 9 in late-talking toddlers. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 45, 360–371. Vivanti, G., Kasari, C., Green, J., Mandell, D., Maye, M., & Hudry, K. (2017). Implementing and evaluating early intervention for children with autism: Where are the gaps and what should we do? Autism Research, 11(1), 16-23. https://doi.org/10.1002/aur.1900 Vivanti, G., Prior, M., William, K., & Dissanayake, C. (2014). Predictors of outcomes in autism early intervention: why don't we know more? Pediatr, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.3389/fped.2014.00058 For more information, head over to Aspect Australia - www.autismspectrum.org.au. Disclaimer: I'm not a professional, just a student with a passion for autism.
En el momento del ataque a las Torres Gemelas, él estuvo hasta el último segundo organizando la evacuación de la de la Torre Sur. Ayudó a la mayoría de los 2600 trabajadores de la Morgan Stanley a salir del edificio, pero no pudo rescatar a todos, incluido él mismo. No fue la única persona que sacó lo mejor de sí ese día, pero es uno de los más conocidos. Produce 👨🚀 Dani CarAn Edita 🧢 Crioff Casus Belli Podcast es un Podcast de la 🏭 Factoría Casus Belli. Casus Belli Podcast forma parte del sello 📀 Ivoox Originals. 📡Estamos en: http;//podcastcasusbelli.com 👉https://podcastcasusbelli.com 🗨️Twitter, como @casusbellipod 👉Facebook, nuestra página es @casusbellipodcast https://www.facebook.com/CasusBelliPodcast 👉Telegram, nuestro canal es @casusbellipodcast https://t.me/casusbellipodcast Y nuestro chat es https://t.me/aviones10 ⭐¿Quieres proponernos algo? También puedes escribirnos a 📧 info@podcastcasusbelli.com Si te ha gustado, y crees que nos lo merecemos, nos sirve mucho que nos des un like 👍, si nos escuchas desde la app de Ivoox. Y también que comentes. Que no mordemos 😉 🎵 La música que acompaña al pódcast es Ready For the War de Marc Corominas Pujadó, bajo licencia Creative Commons https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/3.0/ . Y el resto de música está amparado por la licencia privada de Epidemic Music, Jamendo Music o de SGAE de Ivoox. ⚛️ El logotipo de Casus Belli y de la Factoría Casus Belli están diseñados por Publicidad Fabián publicidadfabian@yahoo.es 🎭 Las opiniones expresadas en este programa de pódcast, son de exclusiva responsabilidad individual. Que cada palo aguante su vela. Muchas gracias por escucharnos, y hasta la próxima. Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
Bill commemorates the 20th anniversary of 9/11 by highlighting the heroic acts of Rick Rescorla on that day. Bill tells his story them follows it with an interview with Rick’s wife Susan. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
On this special episode of the Bill Bennett show, Bill commemorates the 20th anniversary of 9/11 by highlighting the heroic acts of Rick Rescorla on that day. Bill tells his story them follows it with an interview with Rick's wife Susan. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Today is the 20th anniversary of the September 11th attacks. As we have done on this day since this podcast began, in this episode we introduce you to a little-known hero of that day who should never be forgotten: Rick Rescorla. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/revisionisthistory/support
Disaster resilience is the ability of individuals, communities, organizations, and states to adapt to and recover from hazards, shocks, or stresses without compromising long-term prospects for development. According to the Hyogo Framework for Action, disaster resilience is determined by the degree to which individuals, communities, and public and private organizations can organize themselves to learn from past disasters and reduce their risks to future ones, at international, regional, national, and local levels.Disaster resilience is part of the broader concept of resilience – ‘the ability of individuals, communities and states and their institutions to absorb and recover from shock while positively adapting and transforming their structures and means for living in the face of long-term changes and uncertainty.In conceptual terms, vulnerability and disaster resilience are closely related. Some see vulnerability as the opposite of disaster resilience, while others view vulnerability as a risk factor and disaster resilience as the capacity to respond. Katie BelfiWeb - https://www.katiebelfi.com/Facebook -https://www.facebook.com/katie.belfi.7LinkedIn -https://www.linkedin.com/in/katie-belfi-esq-cem-9790a317/Todd De VoeWebsite - https://toddtdevoe.com/Website- www.crisis-cafe.comSpeak N Spark-https://bit.ly/3sTVUfrLinkedIn - https://bit.ly/3sVHL1gEM WeeklyWebsite - https://bit.ly/3jj5ItlTwitter - https://bit.ly/31z8MeXFacebook - https://bit.ly/3dMlbRPLinkedIn - https://bit.ly/34mXyfzYouTube - https://bit.ly/2FQDhWdSister ShowsEM Student Web - https://bit.ly/2Hw0sFxTwitter - https://bit.ly/31z8MeXFacebook - https://bit.ly/3dMlbRPLinkedIn - https://bit.ly/34mXyfzYouTube - https://bit.ly/2FQDhWdThe Business Continuity ShowTwitter - https://bit.ly/3ojEIO2Facebook - https://bit.ly/2Tjqv5HLinkedIn - https://bit.ly/34mXyfzYouTube - https://bit.ly/3mePJyGSponsors Disaster Tech-https://www.disastertech.com/NDEM Expo-https://www.ndemevent.com/en-us.htmlDoberman EMG-https://www.dobermanemg.com/The Readiness Lab-https://www.thereadinesslab.com/
The debate about whether AI are really human is a key feature of Battlestar Galactica, so this week we discuss the history of real-world AI, the philosophy behind AI personhood, and the ways in which computers “dreaming” mimics human behavior. . Resources: Anyoha, R. (2017) “History of AI.” Rescorla, M. (2020) “The Computational Theory of Mind.” Cole, D. (2020) “The Chinese Room Argument.” Wilkin, H. (2017) “Computers Dreaming.” Music: "Dance Robot ACTIVATE" by Loyalty Freak Music. [All views expressed are our own and do not represent the opinions of any entity with which we are affiliated.]
Check out JC's Kids Book HERE Check out all of our projects at PGttCM.com Music as always is by DB Spitzer Songs this episode are 'Oleander Crush' and 'Stabbed in the gravel pit'. Ask a friend and Rate/Review/Subscribe: Podbean Amazon Apple Stitcher Facebook Our Patreon Contact DB for stickers!
Check out JC's Kids Book HERE Check out all of our projects at PGttCM.com Music as always is by DB Spitzer Songs this episode are 'Oleander Crush' and 'Stabbed in the gravel pit'. Ask a friend and Rate/Review/Subscribe: Podbean Amazon Apple Stitcher Facebook Our Patreon Contact DB for stickers!
Rick Rescorla, Hero of 9/11 and decorated legend of Battle of Ia Drang Valley. Jeff and Duane France (Host of Head Space and Timing Podcast) honor the service and sacrifice of Rick Rescorla in this episode. IN THIS PARTICULAR EPISODE YOU WILL LEARN: The life and military history of Mr. Rick Rescorla How Rick Rescorla used his impressive history as a decorated officer to foresee the risk and necessary security protocols for the World Trade Center and how his leadership and audacity saved the lives of almost 3000 souls. Duane and Jeff talk about leadership and courage and how Rick Rescorla has earned the respect and honor he has with them both. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/changeyourpov/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/changeyourpov/support
This week our guest is Andrew Rescorla. Andrew is the co-founder of Urban Greens, an indoor hydroponic herb farm in the Twin Cities, MN. Andrew talks about the development of his business from a small aquaponic farm in an attic to now multiple farms.You can find out more about Urban Greens at: https://www.urbangreensmn.com/
Joe Rizzo brings you baseball. Riz and Jeff "Dawg" Healy did the show on Facebook Live (https://www.facebook.com/groups/DiamondDiehards), and while they were able to work in baseball, they mostly talked about what September 11 meant to them, including stories of how they watched the terror, what they did and how they felt in the moment as New Yorkers. For what usually is a baseball podcast, the emotions of the hosts were clear, especially for Dawg, who served in the Army. The guys recounted from a baseball standpoint how important the famed Mike Piazza home run was in giving the Mets a tearful win over the archrival Braves in the return game. And the details of President George W. Bush's amazing ceremonial first pitch of the 2001 World Series at Yankee Stadium. They recalled the immediacy of the change in the American way of life and noted the galvanized unity of American citizens that commenced as they watched the Towers get attacked an eventually fall. Riz also left a gem to the end as a reward for those who hang around and listen all the way through (commercial-free). The guys continue to do more shows live, and are looking to move forward to also get it on YouTube, Twitch and other outlets, so keep an eye out for that and give us feedback. We want to know what you prefer! The Veteran of the Day was US Army Col. Rick Rescorla, who died inside the Word Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. Rescorla first served in the British military before coming to America in the 1960s and making a career in the Army. He was director of security for Morgan Stanley, for whom he created and applied the evacuation process that helped most of the company's 2,687 employees in the buildings get out. He's the soldier pictured on the jacket cover of the book "We Were Soldiers Once… And Young," which was the basis for Mel Gibson's movie, "We Were Soldiers." The Chatter Links: Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/DiamondDiehards DD Twitter: https://twitter.com/DiamondDiehards DD Instagram: https://instagram.com/DiamondDiehards Riz Twitter: https://twitter.com/RearNakedChoke Riz Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/joerizzomma/ Dawg Twitter: https://twitter.com/JeffHealy8
Today is the 19th anniversary of the September 11th attacks. In this episode, we introduce you to a hero of that day who should never be forgotten: Rick Rescorla. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/revisionisthistory/support
Pete, Chris, Joey, and CK lay down a bonus episode about a true American hero, Rick Rescorla, a decorated Vietnam war veteran who saved 2,700 people at the World Trade Center on 9/11/01. It's the 19th anniversary of that fateful day and the guys do it justice. Pete recalls his time in the Army and the 7th US Cavalry.Rick's incredible life story is discussed, from his childhood in Cornwall, to his fierce "hardcoire" fighting days on the battlefield, to his ultimate mission on September 11th in the south tower. It's an inspirational discussion about a man who gave his life to save so many others.Music by Low Twelve.Find out more about Rick Rescorla.Brought to you by Spellbound FX and Art - a dark and disturbing artwork. Visit their website for an amazing online catalog and support underground indie artists.Follow Joey's Goremonger page for updates on his music and his distro, FTA Records.Go to Murder Metal Mayhem to listen to our show!Like us on Facebook, Follow us on Twitter, and Subscribe to our YouTube channel.Join the 666 Club and become a Patreon supporter of the show. Only $3 a month for bonus content, VIP access, discounts on merch and more!Go to PeteAltieri.com to buy Pete's books and get the latest on what he's doing writing horror stories and novels!
Alexandra is a quirky, curious, ambitious, and high-energy Master's student at Concordia University. Groundbreaking research is happening everywhere all the time, and Alexandra's lab is no exception. She's studying the role of dopamine in learning using optogenetics - or the manipulation of genes using light! On today's episode we discuss everything from neutransmitters to models of Pavlovian conditioning to exposure therapy and context. What are Serotonin and Dopamine? What are the benefits of studying rats? And how does it all relate to finding a crisp $50 bill on the side of the road? Answers to these and more on episode 5 of Abstract! For the foundational paper on plateau curves AKA. the Rescorla-Wagner Model, see Rescorla & Wagner, 1972. You can reach Alexandra on Twitter: @alex_usypchuk Here's one of her publications in Nature Neuroscience: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41593-019-0574-1 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/abstractcast/message
De afgelopen honderd jaren waren tumultueus. Dat zou je kunnen zeggen over elke honderd jaar, maar als één man zoveel nare gebeurtenissen meemaakt, dan durven wij dat wel te stellen. Desalniettemin hield Rick Rescorla zijn hoofd omhoog en deed hij alles om mensen te beschermen en te redden. En zijn naam allitereert ook nog zo lekker.
در اپیزود دوم رادیو چیستا، نگاهی میاندازیم به اسطوره خلقت مصر باستان، یکی از چهار اسطوره باستانی دنیا. میبینیم که مصریان ریشه و ماهیت واقعیت جهان رو در کجا میدیدند و تفکرشون چه شباهتی با تفکر مسیحی داره. نقش زبان و واژگان در زندگی ما چیه؟ آیا ادراک و شناخت ما با واقعیت بیرون منطبقه؟ یا اینکه همه چیز فقط یه توهمه؟ خالق: سهراب مصاحبی گویندگان مهمان: سمن اویسی، کیانرخ نعمت گرگانی با تشکر از همکاری پرارزش: آرمان شادبخش و با تشکر از سبیل های نیچه! موسیقیهای استفاده شده (به ترتیب): 1. Isis / Derek Fiecher 2. Echoes of Ancient Egypt / Michael Levy 3. My Planet / Kako Band 4. Right Where It Belongs / Nine Inch Nails 5. Parvaz Kon / Jamshid Najafi منابع علمی به کار رفته: * Crane, T., & French, C. (2015, Dec 31). The Problem of Perception. Retrieved May 05, 2020, from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/perception-problem/ * Dilman, I. (2016). Wittgenstein's Copernican Revolution: The Question of Linguistic Idealism. Springer. * Guyer, P., & Horstmann, R.-P. (2015, Aug 30). Idealism. Retrieved Apr 30, 2020, from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/idealism * Harris, C. (n.d.). Language and Cognition. Retrieved Apr 20, 2020, from Boston University Website: https://www.bu.edu/psych/charris/papers/Encyclopedia.pdf * McManus, D. (2003). Wittgenstein and Scepticism. Routledge. * Perlovsky, L., & Sakai, K. (2014). Language and Cognition. Frontiers in Behavioural Neuroscience, 8. * Pham, L. (2016). Nietzsche on Language and Our Pursuit of Truth. The Expositor: A Journal of Undergraduate Research in theHumanities, 6, 58-69. * Rescorla, M. (2019, May 28). The Language of Thought Hypothesis. Retrieved Apr 25, 2020, from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/language-thought/ * Robbins, S., & Judge, T. (2017). organizational behavior (17th ed.). New York: Pearson Education. * Thornton, S. (n.d.). Solipsism and the Problem of Other Minds. Retrieved Apr 15, 2020, from Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy: https://www.iep.utm.edu/solipsis * هارت, ج. (1383). اساطیر مصری. در جهان اسطورهها (ع. مخبر, مترجم, ص. 333-440). تهران: نشر مرکز. حمایت مالی از پادکست حمایت غیرمالی از پادکست شنوتو کستباکس تلگرام توییتر ایمیل
On this episode, Eric Hultgren talks with Morgan Rescorla CEO of Best Financial Credit Union about how we should be thinking about our finances right now along with the changes to auto insurance that is happening in Michigan in July. Facebook Website
Deux figures héroïques, ordinaires et relativement méconnues, en France du moins: Harriet Tubman (1822-1913) Rick Rescorla (1939-2001) Pour aller plus loin: Portrait de Rick Rescorla Synthèse historiographique sur l’Underground railroad Musique de fin: I will survive, version prof / coronavirus, par Michael Bruening
Michael and I discuss the philosophy and a bit of history of mental representation including the computational theory of mind and the language of thought hypothesis, how science and philosophy interact, how representation relates to computation in brains and machines, levels of computational explanation, and we discuss some examples of representational approaches to mental processes like bayesian modeling.
Rick Rescorla served as a British paratrooper but after coming to the United States he joined the U.S. Army, and was a veteran of Vietnam. His heroism at the battle of Ia Drang is immortalized in "We Were Soldiers Once...And young." Rescorla served 27 years in service to our nation, retiring in 1990. After the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, Rescorla took on a security leadership role for Morgan Stanley, the largest tenant in the World Trade Center.Rescorla trained the tenants of the skyscrapers how to respond in an emergency and on September 11, 2001, his efforts paid off. An evacuation that took two hours back in 1993, took less than 12 minutes on 9/11. Thousands of lives were saved. Rescorla was not among them as he stayed inside until everyone else got out.In this podcast, Rescorla's Morgan Stanley colleague Bill Van Scoyoc discusses the legacy of Rick Rescorla and walks us moment by moment through the harrowing events of 9/11.
The stories that move us very often have little to do with the actions of the heroes themselves but more to do with why they did them. In other words, it's about the character of the characters. Well, Rick Rescorla was quite a character. We hope you find his life of valor worth listening to because there's more than one tale! Each week, Mike and Dave take turns telling inspiring stories from past and present that they consider a tale of valor. Grab a drink, tell a friend and we'll see you on the hill! Join the conversation on Instagram at http://www.instagram.com/tovpod
I'm Stat, and this is Chilled. Listen in as I tell the story of Rick Rescorla, and how he saved over 2,000 people during the events of September 11, 2001 in New York City. If you wish to support Chilled, please leave a 5-star rating and review on iTunes, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts. Follow Chilled on Instagram @ Chilled_Podcast and please tune in weekly every Tuesday wherever you listen to podcasts. If you wish to directly support the growth of the show, please visit us at Patreon and consider giving a small monthly donation. I will be donating 10% of everything earned over $1,000 to charity. Email me at statchilledpodcast@gmail.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/chilled-with-stat/support
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yril Richard Rescola was Paratrooper, a Vietnam Veteran, and the man who was responsible for saving nearly 2,700 lives on 9/11. After the first tower was hit at the world trade center, the PA system told everyone to stay at their desk. Rick ignored the order and evacuated the building. The last time anyone saw him, was when he was running upstairs to save the last few employees. We celebrate him once again! Twitter: https://twitter.com/Whineabouthis1
Today is the 18th anniversary of the September 11th attacks on the World Trade Center. In this episode, we introduce you to a hero of that day who should never be forgotten: Rick Rescorla. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/revisionisthistory/support
A bonus episode of the Head Space and Timing podcast commemorating the events of 9/11/01. In this show, we share an episode of the Changing Hearts and Minds podcast where Duane and the CHM Host, Green Beret Jeff Adamec, talk about one of the many heroes of that day
Cyril Richard Rescola was Paratrooper, a vietnam veteran, and the man who responsible for saving nearly 2,700 lives on 9/11. After the first tower was hit at the world trade center, the PA system told everyone to stay at their desk. Rick ignored the order and evacuated the building. The last time anyone saw him, was when he was running upstairs to safe the last few employees.
An interactive discussion between Dr. Ponsky and Dr. Rescorla about the management of ovarian tumors in pediatric patients. Dr. Frederick Rescorla is surgeon-in-chief at Riley Children's Hospital, Anna Olivia Healey Professor of Pediatric Surgery at Indiana University School of Medicine, and COG germ cell committee member. Intro track is adapted from "I dunno" by grapes, featuring J Lang, Morusque. Artist URL: ccmixter.org/files/grapes/16626 License: creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
An interactive discussion between Dr. Ponsky and Dr. Rescorla about the management of ovarian tumors in pediatric patients. Dr. Frederick Rescorla is surgeon-in-chief at Riley Children's Hospital, Anna Olivia Healey Professor of Pediatric Surgery at Indiana University School of Medicine, and COG germ cell committee member. Timestops: 00:00:00 Introduction 02:17:12 Case 1: Ovarian cystic mass with solid components 04:09:16 Overview of ovarian tumors 05:18:22 Workup of Case 1 08:02:10 Operative technique 11:06:21 Exploring retroperitoneal lymph nodes 12:40:13 Ovarian Salvage 14:20:07 Case 2: Large ovarian cystic mass in adolescent 16:59:00 Operative technique 18:23:23 Case 3: Solid ovarian mass in adolescent 20:27:09 Preoperative workup 21:10:02 Surgical approach 23:41:06 Chemotherapy 24:01:05 Cryopreservation 24:31:14 Case 4: Ovarian torsion 26:31:15 Role of oophoropexy 28:42:13 Follow up after torsion without a mass 29:11:22 Outcomes 31:57:20 Conclusion Intro track is adapted from "I dunno" by grapes, featuring J Lang, Morusque. Artist URL: ccmixter.org/files/grapes/16626 License: creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
SUMMARY: Rick Rescorla, Hero of 9/11 and decorated legend of Battle of Ia Drang Valley. Jeff and Duane France (Host of Head Space and Timing Podcast) honor the service and sacrifice of Rick Rescorla in this episode. IN THIS PARTICULAR EPISODE YOU WILL LEARN: The life and military history of Mr. Rick Rescorla How Rick Rescorla used his impressive history as a decorated officer to foresee the risk and necessary security protocols for the World Trade Center and how his leadership and audacity saved the lives of almost 3000 souls. Duane and Jeff talk about leadership and courage and how Rick Rescorla has earned the respect and honor he has with them both. LINKS AND RESOURCES MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: Find links to this episode's content here: Order Duane France's New Book: Head Space and Timing: Veteran Mental Health from a Combat Veteran Perspective http://rickrescorla.com/articles/a-tower-of-courage Follow Duane France: https://www.facebook.com/duane.k.france Duane's Twitter Questions or requests for info can be sent to my links below or my email jeff@changeyourpov.com Follow Jeff on these Social Media Sites: https://www.facebook.com/JeffreyAdamec/ https://twitter.com/JeffAdamec Give back to Veterans who give back to Veterans! Hey, It's Jeff! Thanks for listening! Thank you for listening! I want and encourage your feedback and opinions? Leave a note in the comment section or you can leave me a message at jeff@changeyourpov.com If you enjoy the show I sure hope you'll subscribe and download a bunch of episodes on iTunes. All these shows are free to download and listen to and we don't ask for donations or anything to create this show. But if you'd like to totally make our day... we would be forever grateful if you would be so kind as to leave an honest review on iTunes. If you are new to reviews and need a little help, you can go to LEAVE A REVIEW and we will walk you through that step-by-step. Thank you in advance for doing that! – plus, we read each and every one of them! Please share this episode with your friends and family!
Mitch and Andrew break down threats to our food supply with the man with the best title in the world: Pepsico's Senior Manager for Global Food Defense, Jason Bashura. From the Dalles salad bar salmonella to the Michigan salad bar mouse poisonings, from Ikea's horsemeat to the scariest Mexican food in Kansas, we cover where food defense has been, where it's going, and why we may never be able to drink iced tea again. Props to the FDA for the new "Final Rule for Mitigation Strategies to Protect Food Against Intentional Adulteration". Okay, it could use a sexier name, but it's awesome. Finally - we inaugurate the Dukes of Hazards campaign to reinstate the Rick Rescorla National Award for Resilience - Men of Cornwall stand ye steady! �
Stout, Steven – Cue Competition in Pavlovian Conditioning - In recent decades researchers in the field of Pavlovian conditioning have focused on how conditioned responding to a target conditioned stimulus (CS) is affected by the presence of non-target CSs. A common observation is that target and non-target CSs compete for control over conditioned responding in the sense that their response potentials are in-verse1v correlated. In the three and a half decades since the theoretical model of Rescorla and Wagner inspired a wealth of research into cue competition, investigators have uncovered a number of interesting empirical regularities. Unfortunately, the dissemination of these regularities to a wider community outside associative learning circles has been obscured by the tendency of Pavlovian investigators to discuss their research in a heavily theory-laden language. The purpose of this tutorial is to introduce undergraduates to the field of cue competition who have been otherwise put off by constructs sue: as positive and negative associations, memorial representations, and comparator processes. In particular, I will consider what happens to conditioned responding when non-target CSs are presented before, interspersed among, or after the target CS-US pairings, and whether those non-target CSs are discrete or contextual. Conditions under which cue competition, or its opposite, cue facilitation, are observed will be discussed.
There will be a lot of thoughtful posts in the blogosphere about the seventh anniversary of September 11. Here, I want to tell just one story of a man who we got to know thanks to Matt Burden and his Someone You Should Know series at Blackfive. Here is Matt’s tribute to Rick Rescorla, "Rick was a British (Cypress and Rhodesia) and American (Viet Nam) war hero. He retired as a Colonel in 1990. Decades later, after 9/11, I had no idea that Rescorla had everything to do with denying Al Qaeda a huge victory. I wasn’t surprised that Rick had saved 2,700 people that day, and then paid the price with his life when he went back into the tower for stragglers. He knew, KNEW, it was coming down. And he went anyway… Tenacious, strong, and leading all the way to the end."
There will be a lot of thoughtful posts in the blogosphere about the seventh anniversary of September 11. Here, I want to tell just one story of a man who we got to know thanks to Matt Burden and his Someone You Should Know series at Blackfive. Here is Matt’s tribute to Rick Rescorla, "Rick was a British (Cypress and Rhodesia) and American (Viet Nam) war hero. He retired as a Colonel in 1990. Decades later, after 9/11, I had no idea that Rescorla had everything to do with denying Al Qaeda a huge victory. I wasn’t surprised that Rick had saved 2,700 people that day, and then paid the price with his life when he went back into the tower for stragglers. He knew, KNEW, it was coming down. And he went anyway… Tenacious, strong, and leading all the way to the end."