It's not rocket science. Four very simple steps that you can use to learn anything. Now, this is easy to talk about in theory, but it's more fun to talk about in practice. So one of the things that I've wanted to learn how to ...
Now, 21 billion hours, it's a lot of time. It's so much time, in fact, that the number one unsolicited comment that I have heard from people all over the world since I gave that talk, is this: Jane, games are great and all, but ...
even afraid to talk to me. 甚至不敢和我说话。 One government scientist, a friend of mine, 我的一个朋友在政府从事科研工作, we’ll call him McPherson, 我们叫他麦克弗森, was concerned about the impact 政府政策对他的研究产生了一定影响, government policies were having on his research 如今加拿大...
So if there are two things I'd like you to remember from this talk and take home, think about afterwards, they are: first, more broadly, science is always updating. Research comes along, new evidence that may contradict or even disprove previous work. In this case, the Dunning-Kruger eff...
Spock, but first let me share my experience on the role of emotions in science, and one story in particular kept me thinking about it for the last couple of years. I'm working in research on organic light-emitting diodes, so-called OLEDs. This is how you might know them, as new ...
TED TalkBackground: Evidence-based practice (EBP) is key to improve outcomes and requires health care professionals to appraise research findings. Interpreting statistical findings can be daunting for nursing students.doi:10.1097/NNE.0000000000000949Stillwell, Susan B....
don't know. Now, people on the radio, especially on NPR, are much more aware that they're going on the record, and so they're more careful about what they claim to be an expert in and what they claim to know for sure. Do that. Err on the side of caution. Talk should not be...
Here's what my research says: 20 hours. That's it. You can go from knowing nothing about any skill that you can think of. 从一开始学,水平极差到比较入门,需要多长时间?理想状态,当然是越短越好。那么,到底需要多久呢?我的研究结果是:20小时。没错。你可以从什么都不懂的菜鸟,到学会任何一种技能...
James Watson has led a long, remarkable life, starting at age 12, when he was one of radio's high-IQ Quiz Kids. By age 15, he had enrolled in the University of Chicago, and by 25, working with Francis Crick (and drawing, controversially, on the research of Maurice Wilkins and Rosali...
Much better for everybody to go off by themselves, generate their own ideas freed from the distortions of group dynamics, and then come together as a team to talk them through in a well-managed environment and take it from there.