Percieved coersion and psychiatry: A primer that frames the issues of patient rights (v.s. coersive psychiatry) as a question of impression management by clinicians (deceptive psychiatry) rather than as a framework of privellaged rights for psychiatric occupations and deprivation of rights from their subjects.
Caplan’s the Danger of Economics—most of which I think he’s wrong about, but I appreciate that he’s discussing topics and subtopics that I’m interested in.
Recent redditing about anxiety and toxaplasma here got my researching:Given that Amantadine actually kills the pathogen associated with depression, whereas causitive agents are not associated with most types of depression, could it be that Amantadine can cure and not merely treat depression and/or bipolar or other mood disorders (and speculatively due to research on associations with schiz.) and even psychotic disorders? Unfortunately the low sample size of the only available study, the unfashionability of bringing infectious disease and mental health silos together, and the lack of a follow up study for the longer term, or even cases studies contacting participants in the last study if they had remissed is going to hold back those answers. I wonder why the malaria drug makers don’t enter this psych pahrma industry themsleves
codified of the ‘honour code’ of two American gangs
I don’t know. I’m taking that argument from authority and posting it, in part, to remind myself to reprocess the ideas when I’m better prepared to receive them.
The following link trail conditioned my interpretation:
Zero-Knowledge Proof is a very new, very speculative field with few if any academic research—plus, it is currently plagued with the trusted accumulator issue (you have to trust the very first “user”), scalability issue and, more intrinsic to the procedure, issues with wholly obscured economy, which prevents detecting a bug/exploit until it is much too late. Also, ZKP is considered doubtful.
Where the author here hyperlinks to the above article with ‘doubtful’
The blogpost you linked to is explaining, in detail, with a worked example, that zero-knowledge proofs are possible. The only thing in it that even slightly matches the reddit guy’s view is the sidenote near the beginning pointing out that just because someone claims a cryptosystem is zero-knowledge, doesn’t mean they’re actually right, or that the cryptosystem is secure.
Statistics
The relationship between sample size and power. Or if you’re lazy...
Should I assume log e or log 10?
wash-out period between treatments in cross-over RCT’s
So you want to draw inferences about an individual from a group?
Sampling from dynamic populations
Relationship between number of participants and number of clusters
Refugee health
An investigation of culturally competent terminology in healthcare policy finds ambiguity and lack of definition.
Mental health literacy among refugee communities: differences between the Australian lay public and the Iraqi and Sudanese refugee communities.
Refugee mental health bibliography
Refugee research techniques bibliography
Refugee work and occupation bibliography
Twine—UNHR data on refugees
Psychiatry
Rosenhan experiment
Current decision tools to determine if non consensual mental health treatment is used
Percieved coersion and psychiatry: A primer that frames the issues of patient rights (v.s. coersive psychiatry) as a question of impression management by clinicians (deceptive psychiatry) rather than as a framework of privellaged rights for psychiatric occupations and deprivation of rights from their subjects.
Coercive psychiatry, human rights and public participation—an article identifying the factors underlying the persistance of human rights abuses in mental health care in Australia in spite of formal enquiries.
Evidence-based Health policy
http://policymakers.evidencemap.org/#/category/36
Psychotherapy
http://www.omicsonline.org/open-access/A-Systematic-Review-of-Potential-Mechanisms-of-Change-in-Psychotherapeutic-Interventions-for-Personality-Disorder-2161-0487.1000133.pdf http://www.cochrane.org/CD003388/DEPRESSN_psychological-therapies-chronic-post-traumatic-stress-disorder-ptsd-adults
Psychometrics
Item design:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Factor_analysis
Survey design:
https://fluidsurveys.com/university/tips-for-avoiding-respondent-bias/
http://fluidsurveys.com/university/survey-priming-question-order-giving-survey-bias/
http://fluidsurveys.com/university/maximize-response-rates-minimize-bias-proper-survey-structure/
http://www.psych-it.com.au/Psychlopedia/article.asp?id=98
Misc
Ring signatures are the future of the anonymous cryptocurrencies? Zero knowledge proofs are probably impossible
Caplan’s the Danger of Economics—most of which I think he’s wrong about, but I appreciate that he’s discussing topics and subtopics that I’m interested in.
Recent redditing about anxiety and toxaplasma here got my researching:Given that Amantadine actually kills the pathogen associated with depression, whereas causitive agents are not associated with most types of depression, could it be that Amantadine can cure and not merely treat depression and/or bipolar or other mood disorders (and speculatively due to research on associations with schiz.) and even psychotic disorders? Unfortunately the low sample size of the only available study, the unfashionability of bringing infectious disease and mental health silos together, and the lack of a follow up study for the longer term, or even cases studies contacting participants in the last study if they had remissed is going to hold back those answers. I wonder why the malaria drug makers don’t enter this psych pahrma industry themsleves
codified of the ‘honour code’ of two American gangs
experiential avoidance](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Experiential_avoidance), social role valorisation and learned optimism
limits of computation. I wonder if this is telling about human cognition too?
chambers of commerce and the wiki
https://nz.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20091115064617AAbKDuZ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organisation_for_Economic_Co-operation_and_Development
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etiquette_in_Australia_and_New_Zealand
learn to ask questions better
look at predictive modelling, econometrics and math finance
illocutionary acts
Try asking what your potential partners like sexuall, clinically or casually. It can come out of nowhere, that’s how you can escalate!
how ea ventures evaluate projects
Energy, momentum, focus
Robert Green’s sick articles on getting jobs and not living in the present
http://www.irobotsoft.com/
http://her.oxfordjournals.org/content/16/6/671.full
https://unlock.vodafone.com.au/voila/handsetunlock/self-service.html?method=selectService
https://soundcloud.com/ania-julia/here-lucianremix-ac
https://www.reddit.com/r/agoristliving
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agorism
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agora_(online_marketplace)
https://www.reddit.com/r/AgMarketplace/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Policy_analysis
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_feasibility_analysis
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brain_transplant
How does that post show ‘Zero knowledge proofs are probably impossible’?
I don’t know. I’m taking that argument from authority and posting it, in part, to remind myself to reprocess the ideas when I’m better prepared to receive them.
The following link trail conditioned my interpretation:
Where the author here hyperlinks to the above article with ‘doubtful’
The blogpost you linked to is explaining, in detail, with a worked example, that zero-knowledge proofs are possible. The only thing in it that even slightly matches the reddit guy’s view is the sidenote near the beginning pointing out that just because someone claims a cryptosystem is zero-knowledge, doesn’t mean they’re actually right, or that the cryptosystem is secure.
Thank you for your assessment! Glad I posted that.