[-] dustyData@lemmy.world 104 points 1 day ago

You know, to make money in a gold rush, don't dig, sell shovels.

[-] dustyData@lemmy.world 7 points 1 day ago

Ok, I've actually debated with myself whether to post a comment on this question or not. There is a lot to unpack on this question, and as a matter of fact, Lemmy might not be the most appropriate space to talk about such a complex topic at length. I will try my best to answer in a balanced and rational manner. I'm a psychologist, have read all those experiments and papers, and I can say that maybe there are other points of view and deeper understanding you can approach from on these topics before casting such a wide negative opinion on a whole field of science.

Just to point something out of the gate, psychology is indeed one of the most misrepresented sciences in popular science communication. It is very difficult to explain in lay terms that what we know, experimentally, is from a really recent and young science. Psychology only really took off at the turn of the twentieth century, and just like most sciences, we have changed so much in the past 20 years alone that the public has had a very hard time keeping up with what happens in academia. If you were to scrutinize chemistry back when psychology was barely making its first steps, from today's perspective, you would think they were all wackos. We didn't even had a coherent model of the atom, radiation wasn't even known as a phenomenon and Pluto hadn't been dreamed, much less observed by the human eye. Look at medicine in the 19th century and by today's standard they were all butchers. But the point is that, they weren't malicious. Scientists were still trying to act in good faith with the limited knowledge available at the time, while still trying to expand said knowledge.

As a result, someone like Simon Whistle—who is not a psychologist but educated in business and law, and just a comedy media communicator—is probably working entirely on popular science's musings of already old science papers. Because that's what science does. We change what we affirm to be, probably, the truth as new experiences, ideas and theories are accrued in the collective understanding of reality. So, are there things that psychologist has been wrong about? Yes, absolutely. That's what science is. But changing the general masses ideas about it is an entirely different matter, and it goes at its own rhythm and speed.

One of the barriers is that psychology and human behavior and conscious, as well as subconscious thought, are things everyone has their own experiences and opinions about. Thus processing scientific experiences that clash or contradict an individual's anecdotal observations is challenging. Because, as with any science, nothing can be entirely deterministically predicted. Even physics, which we understand rather well, still has a margin of error and wide possibility for failure on predictions. Reality is simply too complex and has way too many variables for any single event to be predicted with absolute certainty. So, you will find experiences that seem to contradict scientific knowledge from psychology. But the truth is there are actually very few formal scientific laws in psychology.

Just to address your example, there is no prisoner's dilemma rule. It is not even from psychology. It is a game theory thought experiment. As such, it doesn't actually predict at all what people are going to do if placed on such circumstance, it's just an exercise to reason about what would a rational person do on different circumstances. By definition, on a formal prisoner's dilemma, the prisoners are defined to be guilty of some crime. So, I really doubt you were put in a prisoner's dilemma by the cops.

Just to reiterate. No, psychology is not littered with false rules and expectations. The public's perception about psychology is, indeed, littered with misrepresentations that claim that psychology has rules and expectations. Trust me, we don't have none of those you claim that are rules.

Finally, as for diagnosis. There is no per country definitions of mental illness. There are two comprehensive bodies of diagnosis. One is the ICD (International Classification of Diseases) managed by the WHO (World Health Organization) that standardizes and defines criteria for all medical diagnosis internationally. Including neurological, and psychiatric illnesses. Then there's the DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) managed by the APA (American Psychiatric Association) that standardizes diagnosis criteria of only mental disorders that was, until recently, a US only academic endeavor. There is overlap, which may cause this confusion that you seem to have. But they have radically different purposes and uses. Mainly, the DSM does a greater effort to contain psychiatric specific information regarding mental disorders that are not and probably will never be part of the ICD. While the ICD is far more international, comprehensive and integrated standard.

But that said, diagnosis is a very personal thing, think back about the confusion the public had about COVID during the pandemic when we knew so little. Even something as common as the influenza, every person manifest and experiences wildly different levels of severity and combinations of symptoms. For a myriad of variables, factors and reasons, some people die of the flu, some people have a mild nose discomfort for a while and are never aware that they were infected. This is the challenge that doctors, psychologists and psychiatrists face every day. As a teacher of mine liked to say, “the difference between your anecdotal experience and science, is that your anecdotal experience gives you one data point, a scientists ideally works with millions of data points”. You had your one anecdote, a doctor (or any other science based health worker) sees the experience of thousands of patients, and would have read about millions of other's experiences just by the time they finish their basic education.

[-] dustyData@lemmy.world 9 points 1 day ago

Corporate doesn't just want a lot of money, they want all of the money.

[-] dustyData@lemmy.world 2 points 2 days ago

It's not all the French, mostly just Parisians.

[-] dustyData@lemmy.world 2 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

The horrible implication by your previous comment's logic and this link is that Europe should drop all languages except Russian. Or, if only EU countries apply, everyone should speak German, as it's obviously the predominant language. Also, this link absolutely destroys your idea that “they aren't unique cultures”, there are at least 120+ distinct cultures in Europe, just by languages alone. This is like looking at Japan and thinking that they must be Americans because they eat KFC on Christmas.

[-] dustyData@lemmy.world 25 points 2 days ago

Using fomo and marketinp to force people into debt for a phone. Definitely the moral and sensible choice.

[-] dustyData@lemmy.world 192 points 2 days ago

Where's the "Apple is the only tech giant that respects your privacy" crowd? Just because your data isn't being publicly auctioned doesn't mean they aren't harvesting it and infringing on your privacy.

[-] dustyData@lemmy.world 1 points 4 days ago

Well, you see, damaging the souls of students is kind of the point. Undamaged souls aren't submissive, and thus make bad wage slaves.

[-] dustyData@lemmy.world -1 points 4 days ago

Almost everywhere in the world they charge for the ambulance ride. Except, some countries have state funded providers with super low subsidized prices or even free. And the private providers have to compete with that which keeps prices affordable. So using an ambulance is not a bankruptcy inducing event.

[-] dustyData@lemmy.world 63 points 5 days ago

I think it is a reference joke to when YouTuber Linus from linus tech tips expressed remorse for having formerly used the "hard R" during a podcast, mistaking it for the word "retarded". The video of it, including the panic and awkward clarification that ensued, went viral on tech circles as cringe inducing amusement and proof of Linus's social ineptitude.

[-] dustyData@lemmy.world 8 points 5 days ago

Quite accurate since the US judiciaries are like kings, inmune, rule for life and get to write and struck down laws with the flimsiest "precedent" arguments. All they're missing is appointment via bloodline, but the sponsorship line seems to have taken its place.

[-] dustyData@lemmy.world 7 points 6 days ago

More important. Than taking notes is what are you gonna do with them. This conditions how, where, and with what you take notes.

If you're never gonna look at them again and just generally use it to think, brainstorm, or remember things better. Then it doesn't matter where, just use whatever is immediately available to you.

If it needs to be later referenced, shared, archived or processed into finished products for personal projects or work, there are several options. Note taking apps, text editing software, plugins for different editors. Each will do things different and will link differently to different work pipelines.

My current pipeline is notes either on the phone or on a notepad. Then I clean and process said notes on OneNote (don't judge, work pays for it and it is the only one available). Where they are more structured, tagged, detailed, hyperlinked or whatever else it takes. That's where I also take notes for meetings or training and study sessions.

Finally, I use those notes for writing reports, minutes, and presentations. Which are then sent to the actual institutional archive.

Me and all my colleagues erase old notes once they're no longer relevant for data protection, so we don't use the archive features of ONote. But the encrypted sharing and sync is very useful for collaboration and to save your work in case of hardware failure.

On my personal life I have permanent places of data storage, and take notes with whatever I happen to have at hand. Samsung notes, paper, notepads, whatever. Data always end up either being deleted or sent to a more permanent place. Just like with cameras, the best tool is the one you have at hand when you need it.

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The games industry sucks (www.youtube.com)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by dustyData@lemmy.world to c/games@lemmy.world

Same title as the video. Game dev writer Alanah Pierce offers her POV on the recent layoffs from Epic Games.

This is one of the few industries that consistently and continuously posts record profits while also firing everyone who put in the work to make the success possible.

-1
submitted 2 years ago by dustyData@lemmy.world to c/linux@lemmy.ml

I don't mean system files, but your personal and work files. I have been using Mint for a few years, I use Timeshift for system backups, but archived my personal files by hand. This got me curious to see what other people use. When you daily drive Linux what are your preferred tools to keep backups? I have thousands of pictures, family movies, documents, personal PDFs, etc. that I don't want to lose. Some are cloud backed but rather haphazardly. I would like to use a more systematic approach and use a tool that is user friendly and easy to setup and program.

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dustyData

joined 2 years ago