Category Archives: Human Behavior

Teaching the Robot Dog New Tricks – IndustryWeek

Rini Sherony studies how not just cars behave in their environment, but how the environment behaves around cars. As the lead for Toyotas university research collaboration on active safety/advanced driver assistance systems, she studies details like how safety cameras interpret the light reflecting off a particular pattern of grass growing on the roadside (and how to recreate that reading with surrogate grass made of polyurethane-based material and specialized paint). And how drivers and pedestrians behave (sometimes counterintuitively) when they encounter the New York left turn or the Michigan U-turn.

Among her recent projects, Sheronywho is senior principal engineer for Toyotas Collaborative Safety Research Centercollaborated with Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) and others to develop human test mannequins that do a better job of simulating pedestrians walking different speeds and angles. The mannequins, which have a skin readable by lidar and radar cameras during road testing, are modeled on data measurements from human volunteers, including kids.

Sheronys team also recently worked with Virginia Tech to predict the benefits of available automotive safety technology in 2050, when the most advanced safety features available today are projected to finally be in every car on the road. In addition, Sherony is active in committees for developing SAE standards for active safety/ADAS.

The data from CRSCs projects is publicly available, so automakers, policymakers, technology research universities and tech companies can come together to solve problems.

Sherony talked with IndustryWeek about the limits of safety technology now and in the future, the challenges ahead, and how she stumbled upon her new e-scooter research project while dropping her daughter off at college.

Rini Sherony

It looks like you're working on a few projects right noware there things that you want to highlight?

One project that just ended, we looked at, What are the remaining safety issues in 2050, after all the cars on the road are projected to have all the crash avoidance and passive safety systems. Approximately 46% of crashes today would still occur in 2050. Now were looking at the data more in depth, so we can understand why those crashes were not avoided or mitigated. When we understand what happened, then we can develop a countermeasure. Without in-depth understanding, its very difficult to know what you need a sensor to do, what detection, what algorithm.

I just finished another project with MIT--and we made the big data from that project publicly available. It's called the DriveSeg database. The project goal was to develop a kind of segmentation algorithm based on deep learning. So, a camera-based system that when it's running on real road, can separate different classes of objects, on the road but also on the roadsidepeople, bicycles and trees, for instance.That segmentation is really, really important: What is your imminent threat and how will you address that? The big data from that is made available for any researcher to take, and they can train their own internal algorithm if they want to use it.

Then, I just started a project a couple of months ago on e-scooters. I first encountered them when I was dropping my daughter off at college at the University of Michigan a few years ago. They were everywheresome kids were riding two or three on one scooter.

My colleagues and I started thinking, This is going to be a big safety issue because the occupants dont follow any path. They just come in at high speed. Theyre not wearing helmets. After a lot of discussion, we started this research project to understand the behavior. We have to cluster and classify the behaviors because then we can do countermeasures to offset those behaviors. Im doing that project with IUPUI, our long-term collaboration partner. They are doing a major data collection to understand the e-scooter vehicle interaction, the safety issuesso that not only we can develop safety countermeasures, but also convey that information to the regulatory agencies, city planners that allow these e-scooters, and even scooter makers so they can understand what safety issues there are and how they can improve.

Are there any things that youve learned so far about people's behavior around e-scooters?

Definitely one is the crossing scenario. A lot of times with scooters, people do not cross on designated sidewalks or intersections; they just come flying down. And sometimes they just go in the middle of the road. And since their speed is much faster than if you were walking, it's difficult to even know that they are coming, they just come so quickly. So we can totally see that that's going to be one key issue that we have to address on how to countermeasure.

Toyota

Testing e-scooters.

And then, with the MIT project, you're looking at different obstacles on the road.

The MIT project looked at pedestrians, bicycles, other cars, trees and people crossing with strollers and on the side of the road, just to see how you accurately segment them in real-world driving conditions. Especially in the U.S., the number-one fatal crashes are road departure crashes; that means that people depart the road, and then they either impact something on the side of the road or roll. When we analyze the roads where these crashes happen across the entire country, we found out that 40% of the roads don't have good lane markings, or they dont have any lane markings. So, the systems in generalthe first generation of systems, which uses lane markingare not going to be fully effective in all of these scenarios.

Then we needed to understand how we determine the road and roadside objects, so that could be added into the detection feature. You have to test with this real roadside objectsreal from the sensors' perspective, but not a real guardrail or real concrete divider because then it's a safety issue. So you have to create a surrogate which you test so that you know exactly what your performance is and how to improve it.

So we developed concrete divider, guardrail, a concrete curb and several versions of grass surrogates, which have the same camera radar lidar characteristics as the real objects, and they can be used for testing. I just started an assay group to standardize some of these roadside surrogates. Basically at the end of it, we will come up with a recommended document which will show that if you are going to test with this roadside objects, what the size, length and color should be, and how they will be built.

Testing surrogate grass.

What do you see as the biggest hurdles to get to the next level with the advanced crash avoidance?

We continue to work on improving and adding new features to for road departure. Lane-marking-based systems are in production, but we are adding new features so that in absence of lane marking, you can know when the car is going to depart the road. Then, in addition to that, we're looking into different intersection systems. So intersection also is very critical data--high fatalities and injuries and the intersection crashes are usually very, very complex. In fact, you cannot even have like one category of accident under an intersection. When you analyze all the crash data, you have four or five different variationsyou have to look at each of them.

But another big challenge to all of this is humans, both inside and outside the vehicle. I'm sure you're familiar with the different levels in for the crash avoidance systemssome of them would fall under either Level One or Level Two. And also even on Level Three, which is a much higher level, it still needs human engagement. So when the system needs to hand over, when they're outside their ODD (operational design domain) or when they're just giving warning or in a scenario they're not supposed to work, a human needs to effectively take over immediately and drive the vehicle. And there are a lot of issues with that. Regular drivers, they don't pay attention, they are not engagedespecially when they are not doing all the driving.

Then you see outside the vehicle also a lot of variation of behavior, from pedestrians, bicycles to e- scooters. And the human behavior is so different, even within the same country, even region to region. How somebody behaves in Ann Arbor is not how somebody behaves in Boston.

We have done many data collections at different cities and in the rural Ann Arbor area. And there's such diverse behavior. It is very challenging to have a system work with humans when you have such diverse behavior across the country. And forget about when I'm trying to do globallyit's like a whole other issue.

And that will continue to be a challenge for a while, but that's why a lot of data collection is necessary in real-world driving conditions--to capture all of these behaviors, then data mining, then applying machine learning algorithm-deep learning to kind of recognize different clusters of behavior and train the system so that next time it sees a particular situation, the system is able to recognize that OK, this is potentially a safety situation.

What would be an example of a different behavior from region to region?

For example, on New York roads, there is a very complex left turn. It is at an anglesometimes it has five lanes instead of four--they have a fifth lane only coming from one direction. So all these are monitored, sometimes by light and sometimes by stop signs. To take a turn in there is extremely complex. The car has to know exactly where everybody is, which direction they're going, track them, and decide what's the safest way to do it. Versus in Michigan, we have the wonderful Michigan U-turn, which is not common across many places. So to know that somebody is going to suddenly take a U-turn and come in close proximity is very challenging.

Can you highlight some of the partnerships youre bringing to the table?

The partnerships with different universities that we have are immensely critical to succeed. From Toyota's side, we bring in complex real-world problems we need to solve. From the partner side, they bring in expertise to break down those problems and develop countermeasures. Our universities always say, Hey, we are very good in writing AI algorithms, but we don't know what to use it for. We don't know what problem to solve, but you guys bring some amazing problems. So together working organically, that collaboration, is amazing for me, because you get to work with not only the smart people, but all these young people who are so passionate, who feel so great about working on something which will help improve road safety, will help saving people's lives. They can bring in some amazing out-of-the-box ideas. This collaboration with universitieswith the students, graduate students and professorsit's very, very critical for us to make meaningful results.

Can you think of an example when a student or someone at the university came up with an out-of-the-box idea?

Some of the first projects we worked on with CSRC were with Indiana University Purdue at Indianapolis. One of the first tasks was to develop the pedestrian mannequin which is representative of real people, and it was not easy. So we did have real people come into the lab and scanned them with radar and all the other sensors, but then to develop a mannequin, which not only looks like it, also articulation so when people walk, their hand and legs move in a certain way, so to make the mannequin do that, and accurately, it was very, very challenging. One student took the mannequin home, and he put in his yard and he changed different things to make it move ... It was so realistic his neighbors thought it was an intruder!

Steve the pedestrian dummy has 'skin' that emits a radar signature.

Do you have an idea of how the open-source information is being used? Do you have dialogue with the other organizations that are using it?

Oh yes, absolutely. One example is the SAE standard organization group, which I co-chaired with a professor. Other automakers were part of the task forcethere was GM, Ford, Daimler, suppliers. We provided all the details and together with their feedback developed the standards. We also had many meetings with National Highway Transportation Safety Agency, who are also developing testing protocols for some of these methods. They used some of our mannequins for their testing, and for a bicyclists' mannequin we developed, we ended up doing a global harmonization effort with the European standardization organization, EuroNCAP, and their suppliers who are building that. They ended up changing part of their mannequins design because some of the adaptation we did was a lot more realistic to what you see in real conditions--although it was much harder to build it.

So yes, we have worked very closely, not only in the U.S,, but globally with other OEMs, suppliers, with the regulatory agencies to provide this information because we want everybody to learn from it and make the systems better, make the standards better. So overall we can together achieve a lot of crash and injury reduction and make the road safer.

Got a manufacturing candidate for Profiles in Leadership? Contact leadership editor Laura Putre.

Read more here:
Teaching the Robot Dog New Tricks - IndustryWeek

New Canaan Library Presents Webinar with Bonnie Tsui, author of Why We Swim, Joined by Matthew Busse of New Canaan YMCA – HamletHub

New Canaan Library is pleased to present a live webinar on Thursday, October 1 at 7 pm with Bonnie Tsui, author of Why We Swim, an immersive and eye-opening perspective on swimming and on human behavior itself. Ms.Tsui will be joined in conversation by New Canaan YMCA Director of Pool Operations, Matthew Busse. Please register at newcanaanlibrary.org; Zoom sign in information will be provided upon registration.

Why We Swim is propelled by stories of Olympic champions, a Baghdad swim club that meets in Saddam Husseins palace pool, modernday Japanese samurai swimmers, even an Icelandic fisherman who improbably survives a wintry sixhour swim after a shipwreck.New York Timescontributor Bonnie Tsui, a swimmer herself, dives into the deep from the San Francisco Bay to the South China Sea, investigating what seduces us to water, despite its dangers, and why we come back to it again and again. She offers an immersive, unforgettable, and eye-opening perspective on swimmingand of human behavior itself.

Bonnie Tsuihas written forThe New York Times,The New Yorker,The Atlantic,Outside, and other publications.Why We Swimwas named an Editors Choice/Staff Pick byThe New York TimesBook Review and aBoston GlobeandLos Angeles Timesbestseller. Her previous book,American Chinatown, was the winner of the Asia/Pacific American Award for Literature and aSan Francisco Chroniclebestseller. She lives, swims, and surfs in the San Francisco Bay Area.

MattBusseis the director of pool operations at the New Canaan YMCA. He grew up in New Fairfield, Connecticut, a lake town known for having a deeply rooted culture in aquatic recreation. Matt began his time at the New Canaan YMCA in 2019 as the assistant aquatic director. Matt is currently pursuing his masters degree in recreation administration, focusing on non-profit management. He has been a member of the Impact Panel for the Water Safety Task Force for the Commission on Women, Children, and Seniors, where he stressed the importance of safety around water and parents engaging with their children while in water.

Continued here:
New Canaan Library Presents Webinar with Bonnie Tsui, author of Why We Swim, Joined by Matthew Busse of New Canaan YMCA - HamletHub

Letter to the editor: ‘Cuties’ degrades girls and women – Canton Repository

The Repository

With politics, the pandemic and disasters in our lives, we are also dealing with our innocent young girls being demoralized. The explicit TV shows, and now a movie called "Cuties" builds and fuels a fire in lust and degradation to girls, women and our future generations.

It only took one glimpse of the movie showinginnocent young girls, inspired by adults, the lowest form of disrespect of any human being.

No word or words can justify what these young girls are taught by exploiting their bodies. So-called adults thinking only of themselves, desperate for attention and social power. They sacrifice young girls, robbing them of their innocence of having a life in the adventures of childhood. Fueling their ego, by using our most vulnerable; not thinking of the consequences they will cause. Our human bodies are unique, clothed with dignity. When did our conduct of character and respect being a female diminish?

We are not less important. We have gifts of kindness, goodness and love. We learned them as children with moral conduct and behavior. A sweetness in our quality of life.

Instead of women showing more of their bodies, they should be respectful in decency with quality in proper behavior. Virtue in moral excellence. When respecting our bodies, we respect others in speech and attire. Etiquette in social behavior.

As women, we do not have to justify muscular power or strength to earn respect. We should be proud of who we are, carrying on the examples of transitions as role models in behavior and ethical principles.

Let these young girls be children to embrace their childhoods. Be a trusting adult in each stage in their life. A lifeline in their stages of development.

God bless our youth and all citizens as we go forth in peace and love. And God bless our United States of America.

JEANIE WILSON, CANAL FULTON

Read the original:
Letter to the editor: 'Cuties' degrades girls and women - Canton Repository

CBS Options Year Licensing Deal For Evil, Unicorn To Stream On Netflix – mxdwn.com

Lorin Williams September 23rd, 2020 - 10:38 AM

CBS TV Studios has finalized a deal for its freshman seriesEvilandThe Unicornto stream on Netflix, according to Deadline. For one year, the first seasons of each show will be available to stream on the platform beginning October 1. This will not be an exclusive deal as both series will continue to stream on the networks streaming service CBS All Access, soon to be rebranded as Paramount+.

According to Deadline, CBS is electing this maneuver in attempts to draw new viewership to the two series. Netflix has produced similar success for shows such as The CWsRiverdaleand NBCsGood Girls,with audiences discovering the series after the season one bow. While critics enjoyed bothEvilandUnicorn,the renewed series experienced modest ratings. CBS, which produces both shows, hopes the additional streaming access will boost the titles in wake of second seasons beginning this fall.

Evil, the only genre series on the network, comes from Robert King (The Good Fight, Vertical Limit)and Michelle King (BrainDead, The Good Wife).The series explores the thin line between spirituality and science as an atheist psychologist and Catholic priest-in-training investigate strange occurrences. The twos faith in their beliefs is shaken as they must determine if these afflictions in human behavior are purely mental or demonic. The show stars Katja Herbers (Manhattan, Westworld), Mike Colter (The Following, Luke Cage),Michael Emerson (Lost, Person of Interest), Christine Lahti (Chicago Hope, Law and Order: SVU),and Aasif Mandvi (Avatar: The Last Airbender, Million Dollar Arm).

The Unicornstars Walton Goggins (The Shield, Justified) as a recently widowed father of two who, with the help of family and friends, gets back on his feet and in the dating scene. Created by Mike Schiff (Grounded for Life), Grady Cooper (The Lance Krall Show),and Bill Martin (In with The Flynns), it stands as being one of only two single-camera comedies on CBS, via Deadline.Along with Goggins, the cast includes Omar Benson Miller (CSI: Miami, Ballers),Michaela Watkins (Brittany Runs a Marathon, Casual), Rob Corddry (Hot Tub Time Machine, Childrens Hospital),and Sarayu Rao (I Feel Bad, Blockers).

According to Deadline, CBS boasts some of the most-watched series on Netflix. Neilsen reports state two crime procedurals NCISandCriminal Minds rank among the highest viewed shows on the streaming platform.

Go here to read the rest:
CBS Options Year Licensing Deal For Evil, Unicorn To Stream On Netflix - mxdwn.com

Instagram and indiscretion are on the shame page – northglenn-thorntonsentinel.com

Instagram, Instagram, wherefore art thou, Instagram and why?

I guess it must be good for something.

But not a day goes by that someone isnt apologizing or being shamed, slammed or threatened because of something they posted on Instagram.

Is it worth it to put a comment or photo on Instagram?

People: People are mean. When are you going to learn?

It sounds like you can troll and run. Or leave your fingerprints and start a feud.

Why?

Who needs this? One billion is who.

As of May 2019, Instagram had 1 billion users.

I keep noticing celebrities and others apologizing for or pouting about something on their Instagram accounts.

No one is forced into social media, except, I suppose, by the urgency of peer pressure.

But by now it should be apparent that almost anything posted is likely to be subjected to ridicule, flak, and (a word that social media seemed to spawn) shaming.

Yahoo! must think informing us whenever a personality is shamed is a requisite of good journalism.

And it seems some personalities cant win. Id name them, but it would just be dogpiling, like ballplayers used to do after a walk-off home run. Now they simply gather and hop up and down near home plate.

I dont have any evidence, but I am going to pretend I do and say many of us have taken to the internet as never before during the coronavirus as a source of entertainment as well as information.

There sits a celebrity wearing a mask or not wearing a mask, or scoffing at local no-gathering ordinances, hosting a bash.

Remember barbershops? Before appointments became routine, youd wait your turn and look at magazines and newspapers that youd never see anywhere else. Its where I first saw the National Enquirer. The lurid headlines beckoned me.

Dachshund abducted by aliens, becomes their leader.

Who isnt fascinated by the behavior of others?

The behavior of others is credited with the genesis of an expression.

What was he thinking?

Jay Leno famously asked Hugh Grant, What were you thinking?

If none of us made bad choices, wed have no news, no documentaries, no films, no literature, and fewer attorneys.

Human behavior frequently exasperates me. But a persons weight loss or gain or plastic surgery has never caused me to berate or belittle them online.

One study showed that graffiti is progressive. Someone tags a wall and it gives others permission to do the same.

Likewise, shaming.

There was a back-and-forth debate online about a photo posted by a woman you may know that showed her, fully clothed, with her husband, fully clothed. It was criticized because of the location of her husbands hand on her body.

There are far racier hamburger commercials, but for certain conservatives it was highly inappropriate and deserving of backlash.

I am not on social media. Good thing. If I were I can only imagine.

Dont you own a comb?

Looks like youve discovered donuts.

Kids (remember Art Linkletter) say the darndest things. So does everyone else. Some of us even do the darndest things.

Craig Marshall Smith is an artist, educator and Highlands Ranch resident. He can be reached at craigmarshallsmith@comcast.net.

Link:
Instagram and indiscretion are on the shame page - northglenn-thorntonsentinel.com

Grief and Geology Both Take Time in The Book of Unconformities – The New York Times

Rocks allow the contemplation of scale deep time, in McPhees words. They allow Raffles to tell the story of Manhattan, for example, from its very formation a jeweled paradise, with its fat veins of minerals. They also testify to a particular seam of human history, one of resource extraction, rapacity and systematic abuse. An unconformity is the geological term for a discontinuity in the deposition of sediment, in Raffless words. Put another way, its a physical manifestation of a gap in time. The stones in this book tell strikingly similar stories stories whose contours we might know, but whose details and particular, individual impacts have been lost or blunted.

Theres a trend for nonfiction to make large claims of how some phenomenon or another makes us human language, cooking, navigation, even animals. Raffles, however, traces how influence works in the opposite direction, how human behavior transforms the natural world. Theres no narrative here that is not also an account of human avarice. In one chapter, Raffles travels to Svalbard, a Norwegian archipelago whose beaches comprise a grisly memento mori, covered with blubberstones gravel mingled with rendered fat, vestiges of the mass killings of seals and whales.

How lucid this book sounds in summary. In fact, Raffles is serenely indifferent to the imperatives and ordinary satisfactions of conventional storytelling. Character, coherence, a legible and meaningful structure these are not his concerns. The organization of the book feels profoundly random. There are no attempts to suture together the various stories, no attempts to enact something learned by the author. The photographs accompanying the text are dim and blotchy, and Raffles favors slabs of prose unbroken by punctuation. I intend all this as praise.

The epigraph, lines from Seamus Heaney, prepares us: Compose in darkness. / Expect aurora borealis / in the long foray / but no cascade of light. There is no great dawning of understanding; clarity arrives in sudden shafts and any coherence is for us to supply. Raffles makes us sift for meaning; how do they connect, these juxtaposed narratives about Indigenous history, whaling, his sister Frankis photographs of women at work?

Were called to engage in that signal human activity: interpretation. What intuition the book requires, what detective work and what magic tricks it performs. Stones speak, lost time leaves a literal record and, strangest of all, the consolation the writer seeks in the permanence of rocks, in their vast history, he finds instead in their vulnerability, caprice and still-unfolding story. In Svalbard, he regards the jagged coastline one wreck companionably observing another. He quotes the painter Anselm Kiefer: A ruin is not a catastrophe. It is the moment when things can start again.

The rest is here:
Grief and Geology Both Take Time in The Book of Unconformities - The New York Times

Relationship Between Video Games and Gun Violence Is Not What You Think – CSUF News

Concerns about the link between video gaming and gun violence may be overestimated, according to new research from Ofir Turel, professor of information systems and decision sciences at Cal State Fullerton.

Turel's research found that American adolescents ages 13-17, who game at low to moderate levels (a few minutes to 2.8 hours per day), are less likely to bring guns to school, compared to those who do not play video games. Presumably, lower levels of gaming can instead help protect adolescents by keeping them occupied with games rather than obtaining guns.

"There has been an ongoing and unresolved debate on the potential role of video games in driving aggressive, including gun-related behaviors," said Turel. "I sought to take a different look at the issue, by taking a balanced view, and pointing to the preventative role of games, in addition to their (small) potential to be associated with aggressive behaviors."

His theory proposed that video gaming and bringing a gun to school have a U-shaped association rather than a linear one. Previous research theorized that the more time spent playing video games, the more gun-related behaviors a person would exhibit, and vice versa, but results were inconsistent.

Using secondary data from 2012-17 national surveys of eighth- and 10th-grade students collected during class time at middle and high schools, he divided the sample of 51,322 students into two three-year sets (2012-14 and 2015-17) and performed statistical analyses on both for replication and validation purposes.

While Turel's findings suggest that the protective effect of gaming wears off at much higher levels of gaming (over five hours a day) and may then be associated with having aggressive, gun-related behavior, further research is needed to solidify this relationship.

He hopes that "... others study video games and aggressive behaviors in both experimental and natural settings and manage a control for many social and personal factors beyond the ones I used in my study, such that we eventually get a better understanding of if and how video games might relate to offline aggressions."

Read Turel's research in "Videogames and Guns in Adolescents: Preliminary Tests of a Bipartite Association," recently published in the journal Computers in Human Behavior.

Both data sets aboveshow the "U"-shaped relationship Turel hypothesized, suggesting gaming has a protective effect on thoseplaying less than five hours a day relative to those who don't game at all.

Contact: Karen Lindell,klindell@fullerton.edu

Continue reading here:
Relationship Between Video Games and Gun Violence Is Not What You Think - CSUF News

How a tiny company paved the way for Big Tech and big problems – Christian Science Monitor

Sixty years ago, a little-known company called the Simulmatics Corporation claimed credit for helping elect John F. Kennedy president by inventing a computer program that could predict human behavior.

Simulmatics a portmanteau of simulation and automatic used bulky IBM computers to vacuum up punch cards full of data on slivers of the electorate and then spit out predictions about what voters might do. The Kennedy campaign followed Simulmaticss recommendation to address anti-Catholic prejudice head-on, something the candidate might have done anyway.

The publicity-savvy company used the buzz generated about its Kennedy campaign to get hired by Madison Avenue advertising firms. Then, as the 1960s took a darker turn, Simulmatics tried to guide counter-insurgency programs abroad and predict race riots at home.

To historian Jill Lepore, Simulmaticss creators are the long-dead, white-whiskered grandfathers of contemporary tech titans like Facebooks Mark Zuckerberg and Googles Sergey Brin, and the origin of the data analytics and algorithms that dominate our lives. At least, thats what Lepore argues in her latest book, If Then: How the Simulmatics Corporation Invented the Future.

Lepore, a Harvard professor and prolific New Yorker staff writer and book author, stumbled upon this missing link in the history of technology while researching a 2015 article on the use of data science in elections.

The challenge in writing this book is that, as Lepore admits, Simulmatics wasnt terribly effective during its decade or so in existence. The real Simulmatics Corporation was a tiny, struggling company, its technicians bumbling, its accounts disastrous. It soared and then it sank, like a helium balloon, Lepore writes.

Ad agencies quickly developed their own simulations to rival Simulmatics. The companys efforts to help The New York Times instantly analyze election results in 1962 proved disastrous. Simulmaticss contracts with the U.S. government in Vietnam ended with accusations of mismanagement and fraud.

Nevertheless, Lepore argues that Simulmaticss long-term influence extended well beyond its modest impact at the time, helping invent the data-mad and near-totalitarian twenty-first century, in which the only knowledge that counts is prediction.

Simulmatics certainly generated plenty of press thanks to its founder Ed Greenfield, a Madison Avenue ad man Lepore describes as a flimflam man and huckster who sold nothing so well as himself.

The idea that political campaigns could use technology to manipulate voters tapped into public anxiety about how new-fangled computers might take over the world. Eugene Burdick, for example, wrote a 1964 political thriller that used Simulmatics as the model for a sinister company that meddled with the presidential election using IBM computers.

Lepore devotes the first third of her book to introducing a cast of fascinating characters central to the Simulmatics. Burdick is one; he was a dashing Stanford political science professor and a prolific author who was once featured in Ballantine Ale ads wearing a scuba suit.

Burdick also did some work for Greenfield before becoming a fierce critic of his efforts to predict and manipulate voter behavior. His better-known dystopian novels, The Ugly American and Fail-Safe, both got turned into movies, and he would probably merit his own biography.

Another main character is Ithiel de Sola Pool, who before joining the company, developed the theory of social networks that came to undergird all social media companies. Pools work for Simulmatics made him a magnet for anti-war protestors before he emerged as a prophet to technological utopians. Lepore credits Pool with writing the founding political theory of the Internet.

Unfortunately, too much of the book is focused on introducing the cast, like a heist movie where the portion of the film devoted to assembling the team to pull off the job gets more screen time than the crime itself.

The book is also weighed down by Lepores efforts to use Simulmatics to tell the entire history of the 1960s from Kennedys Camelot era through the anti-war movement. Simulmatics was largely a bit player in most of these events, and the general history often reads like filler.

Get the Monitor Stories you care about delivered to your inbox.

Lepore, to put it mildly, doesnt buy into data analytics hype. As a historian, she is understandably dismissive of Big Techs obsession with predicting the future at the expense of the past. [T]omorrow is not all that matters, Lepore writes. Nor is technology, or the next president, or the best dog food. What matters is what remains, endures, and cures.

Seth Stern is an editor at Bloomberg Law.

Original post:
How a tiny company paved the way for Big Tech and big problems - Christian Science Monitor

Editorial: Bet on Biden to stand up to climate change – The Columbus Dispatch

Staff Writer| The Columbus Dispatch

With the West Coast ablaze and the Gulf Coast drowning, Mother Nature is making a persuasive argument for climate change to play a decisive role in the upcoming presidential election.

Never mind the old adage that you cant do anything about the weather. Scientists have been warning for decades about devastation linked to human activity; they say a public policy focus on carbon emissions can, and must, make a difference.

There may be no issue that presents a clearer choice between President Donald Trump and his challenger, former Vice President Joe Biden.

Trump is a staunch science denier who has spent much of his 3 1/2 years in office undoing about 100 climate regulations enacted in previous administrations.

Biden is ramping up rhetoric on the environment, labeling Trump a climate arsonist and touting his $2 trillion four-year plan with a goal of producing 100% clean energy by 2035.

We need a president who respects science, who understands that the damage from climate change is already here and that unless we take urgent action, itll soon be more catastrophic, Biden said in a Monday speech.

For his part, Trumps plan is to wait and hope things get better on their own.

"It'll start getting cooler. You just watch," the president told a panel of California state officials Monday outside Sacramento.

They had just described West Coast wild fires that have claimed dozens of lives, destroyed thousands of homes and businesses and charred millions of acres. Out-of-control blazes once more common in California are now leveling towns and threatening suburbs in Oregon and Washington as well.

"I wish science agreed with you," Wade Crowfoot, Californias natural resources secretary, responded to Trump.

Confirming his credentials as a denier, Trump answered, "I don't think science knows, actually."

Meanwhile, Hurricane Sally soaked coastal areas of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama in a week that saw five active cyclones all churning in the Atlantic Ocean at the same time something that has happened only once before, in 1971.

Voters should review the most recent State of the Climate report released in August by the American Meteorological Society. The National Centers for Environmental Information is responsible for creating this 30th annual report, drawn from contributions by more than 520 scientists in 60 countries around the world.

The report for 2019 highlights many indicators of a warming planet; among them:

Record high levels of greenhouse gases including carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide.

Near record high global surface temperatures, which puts 2019 among the three warmest years since record-keeping began in the mid-1800s, with July 2019 as the hottest month recorded and each of the past six years being the warmest six years recorded.

Sea surface temperatures as the second-highest recorded, just below highs set in 2016 with a strong El Nino influence.

Record global sea level, setting a new high mark for the eighth year in a row, driven by melting glaciers and ice sheets.

Above average tropical cyclones, with 96 named tropical storms during the storm seasons of the Northern and Southern Hemispheres, compared with an average of 82 from 1981-2010, and with five of them reaching the highest level of Category 5 intensity, where wind speeds exceed 155 mph.

These are among the data that scientists cite in support of consistent conclusions that Earths climate is being impacted by human behavior and that changing our behavior can help mitigate the damage.

Critics like to say that Trump tries to greenwash his record on the environment, claiming contrary to the evidence that he is the number one environmental president since Teddy Roosevelt.

HuffPost reported Sept. 8 that Roosevelt protected more than 230 million acres of federal land by establishing five national parks, 18 national monuments and dozens of national forests and wildlife refuges. Trump, by comparison, has weakened protections for 35 million acres and protected just 37,000 acres, HuffPost said.

Biden also takes some flak from environmentalists, but mostly for not going as far left as some in his Democratic Party would. But as he worked for party unity following a contentious primary season, Biden has stepped up proposals for addressing climate change and is selling his plan as economic development.

The former vice president vows to create 1 million jobs with carmakers and suppliers by transforming the federal fleet of vehicles from gas to electric and building 500,000 electric vehicle charging stations along the nations highways. Biden also sees job growth in cleaning up abandoned oil and gas wells and polluted industrial sites.

The Trump record on the environment is best assessed by his actions, not his words. He went against allies and domestic pleas to take the United States out of the Paris agreement on climate change, is opening the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil and gas exploration, has reduced restrictions on air and water pollution and has moved to repeal about 100 environmental regulations.

Most telling, he has called climate change a hoax his code word for just about anything that threatens his personal and family business interests.

Biden sides with scientists around the world in calling out the harmful effects of continuing to rely on carbon-based fossil fuels and offers a plan to invest in a future fueled by cleaner energy.

The differences between the Republican president and former Democratic vice president on the environment are stark, and Trump is on the wrong side of this issue.

Originally posted here:
Editorial: Bet on Biden to stand up to climate change - The Columbus Dispatch

Let Your Hair Down: The presence of toxic masculinity The Daily Free Press – Daily Free Press

We live in a world cluttered with outdated ideas of how men and women should be. Society often resorts to pasting labels onto different kinds of people in an attempt to simplify human behavior and make uncomplicated explanations for things that are often difficult to understand.

We see this time and time again: people create categories and rules about how others should look and act so that they themselves feel more comfortable.

This allows individuals to live in an untouched reality that molds itself solely to their opinions and affirms only their beliefs a reality they can control, make sense of and define in their particular terms. Meanwhile, they remain firmly unreceptive to new ideas or experiences alternate to their own.

Toxic masculinity is a direct product of this phenomenon, and rests on a rigid, fixed construct of how men should look, think and act. It is rooted in the notion that emotions are weaknesses, men must maintain an appearance of hardness, violence is an indicator of power, and sex and brutality are measurements of conquest and worth.

Toxic masculinity suggests that traits like stamina, resilience and ambition belong exclusively to the male gender. It claims other characteristics, such as self-awareness and empathy, are feminine and therefore unimportant and feeble these are ideas fully wrapped in gender stereotypes and sexism.

It should be noted that masculinity alone is not a problem, but toxic masculinity absolutely is. Without context, the term toxic masculinity can initially sound insulting, even a little aggressive. Far too often, it is completely misunderstood as an assertion that all men are naturally violent.

Toxic is not meant to denote masculinity or any other kind of self-expression. The phrase is used to analyze a form of gendered behavior that results from repressive ideologies of what it means to be masculine in society.

Although heterosexual males can take credit for the development of this dangerous brand of masculinity, it is not exclusive to the heteronormative community. The effects of toxic masculinity span across all kinds of contexts, including the gay community.

Due to the identity boxes that categorize heterosexual men, queer men are subject to an overwhelming list of stereotypes defining how their sexuality should look to others.

A common example of this can be seen through one of the double standards that separates bisexual women from bisexual men. While women who have sex with both men and other women may be approached with a level of acceptance and are often viewed as just experimenting, queer men often battle an assertion that they must be fully straight or gay.

This comes from a place of associating hyper-femininity with homosexuality among men.

The traditional gender construct that fuels toxic masculinity makes no space for men to also experiment. It suggests that if men are attracted to both women and men, they are simply gay or confused. Society often rejects the concept of bisexual men in its entirety, yet accepts that of women this is heavily rooted in the hyper-sexualization of females.

These culturally appropriate versions of manliness and sexuality are extremely problematic. They can feel absolutely suffocating for those who do not fall directly in alignment with those standards. The traditional masculine ideology denies people the freedom to actually explore what it means to be male.

Each of us is much more than just one single thing. In terms of sexual beings, the way we view ourselves is dependent on our own individual journeys and relationships with ourselves and the world around us it is no ones concern, nor place, to say what that should look like.

Toxic masculinity demands conformity at the risk of judgment. When it comes to self-identity, there is nothing more personal, undefinable and individualized than our sexuality. Just like all the aspects that piece together our sense of self, sexuality is flexible, evolving and self-conceptualized.

Here is the original post:
Let Your Hair Down: The presence of toxic masculinity The Daily Free Press - Daily Free Press