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Comment Re:Why not just wait? (Score 1) 133

Item response theory is the idea behind most adaptive standardized tests like the GRE. The basic premise is that an individual's underlying ability (as approximated by their GRE score) is being estimated after each question, and subsequent questions can test the soundness of that estimate. Each question is associated with a probability that a person with a certain underlying ability X will answer correctly, and so getting a hard question wrong is evidence that your ability is lower than that needed to answer the hard question correctly. As the test goes on, the estimate of the underlying ability becomes more precise (it narrows in on a smaller range of possible ability levels), and that is why the swings in difficulty get smaller as the test goes on. Usually, the duration of the test is set so that the precision of the estimate lies within a certain acceptable range. Most people have an incorrect understanding of how this works, and so they get overly anxious about the hard questions (as if they carried more weight). It's true that getting them wrong leads to a lower estimate of their ability, but that's precisely the point-- if the test-taker truly had the ability to answer the question, they would have gotten it right.

Comment Re:Brain Recorder (FMRI, PET scanners) (Score 1) 810

Hallucinations, by definition, are perceptual experiences that aren't caused by an external stimulus. They too are associated with brain activity in the appropriate sensory areas. For example, see this paper by Ffytche et al. (1998), which describes activity in various parts of visual cortex during visual hallucinations. So even if you do detect activity in some sensory area, you wouldn't be able to rule out an internally-generated cause. Detecting activity would merely confirm that the perceiver's brain is acting as if it is perceiving something...
Government

Wiretap Whistleblower, a Life in Limbo? 521

Newsweek has an interesting report on Thomas M. Tamm, the individual who blew the whistle on the Federal Government's warrantless wiretaps. The piece takes a look at some of the circumstances leading up to the disclosure and what has happened since. "After the raid, Justice Department prosecutors encouraged Tamm to plead guilty to a felony for disclosing classified information — an offer he refused. More recently, Agent Lawless, a former prosecutor from Tennessee, has been methodically tracking down Tamm's friends and former colleagues. The agent and a partner have asked questions about Tamm's associates and political meetings he might have attended, apparently looking for clues about his motivations for going to the press, according to three of those interviewed."
Mars

Simulation of the Mars Science Laboratory Sky Crane 195

An anonymous reader points us to Gizmodo for a fascinating video of NASA's Sky Crane. "When I read that the UFO-looking Mars Science Laboratory's aeroshell would use a floating crane — called Sky Crane by NASA — to softly land the rover on Mars, I couldn't believe it. Now, watching this hyper-realistic NASA simulation, I still can't believe how the whole thing works. I don't know about you, but the whole operation mesmerizes me to no end."

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