George, 

 

We haven’t heard from you since that marvelous party two years ago.  The memory 
of that party has kept me going through this covid debacle.  “Normalcy” is my 
mind is defined by being able to do that sort of thing again.  Perhaps a year 
from now. 

 

What have you been doing?   

 

Nick 

Nick Thompson

 <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]

 <https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/> 
https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

From: Friam <[email protected]> On Behalf Of George Duncan
Sent: Thursday, November 21, 2019 3:28 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>
Subject: [FRIAM] Fwd: Upcoming 60 Minutes broadcast

 

This "60 Minutes" segment should be of interest to many FRIAM folk.

George Duncan

Emeritus Professor of Statistics, Carnegie Mellon University
georgeduncanart.com <http://georgeduncanart.com/> 

See posts on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram

Land: (505) 983-6895  

Mobile: (505) 469-4671

 
My art theme: Dynamic exposition of the tension between matrix order and 
luminous chaos.

 


"Attempt what is not certain. Certainty may or may not come later. It may then 
be a valuable delusion."


>From "Notes to myself on beginning a painting" by Richard Diebenkorn. 


"It's that knife-edge of uncertainty where we come alive to our truest power." 
Joanna Macy.

        

 

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Marcel Just <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >
Date: Thu, Nov 21, 2019 at 2:16 PM
Subject: Upcoming 60 Minutes broadcast
To: Just, Marcel <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >

 

Dear colleagues,


  I wanted to let you know that "60 Minutes" is scheduled to broadcast a 
segment on Sunday Nov. 24 that describes the research that my colleagues and I 
have been doing.
  They refer to our work as "mind-reading." What it actually consists of is 
measuring brain activity with fMRI, and from that pattern of activity being 
able to tell what the person is thinking about.
  The 60 Minutes program will probably focus on some of the practical 
applications of this method. For example, this method makes it possible in the 
work with David Brent to tell whether a person has been thinking about suicide, 
which is very useful in psychiatric applications. It also makes it possible for 
us to see the activation pattern for very advanced abstract scientific 
concepts, like "dark matter", which looks the same in the brains of all 
faculty-level physicists.
  Normally we don't notify anyone about press coverage of our research but this 
broadcast will probably describe the work in a way that everyone can 
understand. In the past, the 60 Minutes team has done an outstanding job of 
first learning about the research themselves and then communicating it clearly 
in their program. Lesley Stahl is the interviewer.
   60 Minutes has posted a short preview of the segment on their website if you 
would like to see a sample ahead of time:
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/mind-reading-scientists-decode-human-thoughts-and-emotions-using-mri-and-computer-analysis-60-minutes-2019-11-20/
If you are busy this Sunday evening but are interested in seeing the full 
segment, it will probably be available on the 60 Minutes web page after the 
broadcast at:
https://www.cbsnews.com/60-minutes/


Best regards,
Marcel

 

-- 

Marcel Just
D.O. Hebb University Professor of Psychology
Director, Center for Cognitive Brain Imaging
Psychology Department
Carnegie Mellon University
Pittsburgh, PA 15213
email: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
tel: 412-268-2791; fax: 412-268-2804
CCBI website: http://www.ccbi.cmu.edu

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