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Girls Wired To Fear Dangerous Animals 224

Foot-in-Mouth writes "New Scientist reports that girls are more "primed" to fear spiders and snakes, compared to boys. Infant boys and girls were shown pairs of images, a fearful and a happy object (such as a spider and a flower), measuring the boys' and girls' dwell times on the images. And in another similar test, normally happy objects (such as a flower) were given a fearful face and fearful objects were given a happy face. The results of these two tests suggested to the researcher that girls are not wired to fear spiders, for example, but rather girls are wired to more quickly learn to fear dangerous animals. The researcher, David Rakison at CMU, 'attributes the difference to behavioural differences between men and women among our hunter-gatherer ancestors. An aversion to spiders may help women avoid dangerous animals, but in men evolution seems to have favoured more risk-taking behaviour for successful hunting.' This reminds one of men's obsession with video games. Will game designers use this information to tweak video games for gender, either to make the games more or less frightening?"

Comment Re:Tripe (Score 1) 1164

Dawkins' web site is the one who made the inference that some/most/all (take your pick) inane posts are the result of students taking the course, which is highly unlikely (given the size of the University and the class size). He then used that to make the argument that we have one more reason to ignore / discount / ridicule posts coming from ID supporters because they're just trying to complete certain course requirements. Then Slashdot picked up the story and ran with it as though we should all be morally outraged at such a thing.

I'll agree that the comment link you posted is inappropriate and, well, pretty dumb--especially if you are trying to convince someone of your position. But I'd encourage you to take a look at the comments on the Dawkins site that are attached to the article. Most of them are a complete dismissal of ID supporters, along with some name calling: "IDiots," "Cretinsts," etc. That's not going to further your cause either.

Comment Tripe (Score 2, Informative) 1164

This whole story is ridiculous tripe. Consider the source: the article comes from Richard Dawkins' web site; hardy an unbiased source on this particular topic. So what we have here is a story from one side of the argument complaining about a course at a university whose topic is APOLOGETICS. When studying apologetics, you learn how to defend a particular position (see definition two at dictionary.com here). What better exercise for learning a skill like that than to go out there and defend a particular position publicly? Certainly ID gets attacked enough by Darwinists (many of them ad hominem or straw man attacks--examples of which can be found in posts above this one) that people shouldn't get too upset when ID proponents start defending their position.

Why assume the students are going out there and randomly "making posts" but not contributing to the discussion? Maybe the professor grades the posts specifically on the quality of the discussion, with the 10 or more posts in a single back-and-forth discussion being worth more than trolling 10 different web sites. Who knows? We don't, and certainly Dawkins doesn't. Either way, it seems that this is a very appropriate exercise when learning something like apologetics. Certainly making blanket judgments and name calling doesn't move this issue forward at all. Nobody's going to be persuaded by a flippant dismissal of their position without giving any reasoning.

Comment We did it (Score 1) 409

We had our child's cord blood banked with CBR (http://www.cordblood.com). We are very happy to not have had to use it, and the ongoing cost ($100/yr) is pretty low.

One thing that helps keep the cost down: you get a free year if you refer somebody else to them. And there are other things they've done that we didn't expect: they send my daughter stuff from time to time (children's books, etc.). So you don't feel like you're throwing your $100 down a hole every year, and I think most of the initial cost has to do with the courier they send to collect the blood after the birth.

On the off chance that something happens and she needs the stem cells, it's nice to know we have them stored. Yes, the chance is small (thankfully), but who knows where the research will take us?

I'm reminded of that picture of a rat with a human ear on its back from a year or so ago. Accidents happen. You do what you can as a parent to provide for your children as best as you can. I'm happy to pay $100 bucks a year to give my daughter a chance that I didn't get--even if it's a long shot. And if you live in the US, you get way more than that back in taxes per child, so to me, it's not much of a sacrifice.

The Media

Submission + - odd severance clause

Anonymous Coward writes: "There's been discussion here before about 'non-compete' clauses in hiring, and I've seen various non-disclosure clauses as part of layoffs, with some kind of severance package provided as consideration for that non-disclosure. But this morning, after my wife was escorted from her newspaper job, she brough home a severance agreement that contained something I'd never seen before: Several paragraphs of legalese essentially prohibits her from seeking future employment with the company! There are several people being laid off, and she was told this was a standard form. Has anyone else heard of this? What would be the reason for this — if they really don't want any of the laid off people to apply for jobs in the future, couldn't they simply ignore those resume's? We are talking to a lawyer, of course, but I'd be interested in hearing from the /. crowd as well."
Music

Submission + - One million CC albums downloaded with BitTorrent

lkratz writes: "Jamendo, a free music community, has distributed freely and legally more than one million albums using the popular peer to peer technology BitTorrent. The music is Creative Commons Licensed and is coming from everywhere in the world. Inspired by Chris Anderson's theory, this online music platform helps volunteered artists promote themselves in search engine like mininova or torrentz.

Music is free, but supporting these artists is ok too !"
Robotics

Submission + - Numenta - Has Artificial Intelligence Arrived?

hellbreaker writes: "Read/Write Web has an article about Numenta, asking if the revolution has come, if we have actually come up with something that we can dub as "artificial intelligence". You may know the creator from his book On Intelligence: Jeff Hawkins. For now, it looks like we're hedging our bets, notably that the article says that there are not quite yet any ethical questions regarding creating an intelligence creature, or anything like that. Go to the Numenta home page and you can download binaries and source code. Try it out. What could it hurt? (Famous last words?)"

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