Works the other way too. I find it weird that invite is a noun when invitation works perfectly well
@amcgregor
Professor of Psychology at Durham University, UK. I research learning and how it relates to human and animal navigation, spatial representation, cognition and animal behaviour. I use cognitive and behavioural neuroscience methods.
Works the other way too. I find it weird that invite is a noun when invitation works perfectly well
More importantly, when did sunset become a verb?
Along with Johnβs cousin, Fast Eddie, weβve nearly known the greats
We are pleased to announce the joint winners of the Presidentβs Poster Commendation Prize for the EPS London 2025 meeting are Artie Graham and Levi Kumle.
Congratulations to Artie and @levikumle.bsky.social!
eps.ac.uk/presidents-c...
It does suck. We used to have the former and it was great. Now we have a helpdesk and rarely see someone to come and help do something.
We should just reply βregression to the meanβ whenever universities boast about their rankings
Patrick Haggard and co-authors have some nice results related to this. www.pnas.org/doi/abs/10.1...
Devastating news that Eleanor Maguire has passed away. She was my mentor for many years. She was a wonderfully thoughtful and kind person and a brilliant scientist. Her research inspired so many of us and her legacy of incredible discoveries will continue to inspire far into the future.
RIP Eleanor
One stimulus
Thatβs amazing! Your face is a picture. Thereβs probably a meme of you already.
I tried zotero and Mendeley but both seemed too hard to start from scratch. I use endnote. Itβs fine. I can put all my pdfs there and read them and make notes. Making reference lists is easy
Universities do not exist to 'train', produce 'skills' or generate 'impact'. They exist to create new knowledge and teach about it. Any assertion to the contrary is in error, and is destroying everything it touches.
I hope heβs searching his name and finds this
Get you, Laurence Llewelyn-fucking-Bowen
Stick Mozartβs Requiem on drunk β¦.
A very sad day for music and the arts in Newcastle. J.G.Windows has closed permanently. www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
Not a criticism of you - the literature understands βsimpleβ in this context. I think it needs a firmer pushback from associative learning field in general to get people to understand better
Yes, but what we mean by simple isnβt just S-R learning and behaviourism, and thatβs the perception the associative learning suffers from. So a powerful mechanism ends up being ignored.
Itβs always associative learning!
My only issue is the βsimpleβ bit, because associative learning produces really clever behaviours. People need to stop thinking itβs a simple mechanism.
β¬οΈ This is the answer.
Sorry, that should say all vertebrates are chordates
Oh yes! I think some things like hagfish are officially chordates but not vertebrates, but most vertebrates are chordates
Teleosts tend to lay eggs externally, but sharks retain them internally.
Admittedly itβs 30 years since my zoology degree, but my memory is that lampreys, sharks and rays (cartilaginous), and teleosts (bony), are all generally classed as fish, but obviously there are big differences between them. Swim bladders, scales, gill covers and skeletons all differ
Life is a continuum. Our classifications are artificial. It just depends what our definitions are
Theyβre cartilaginous fish, whereas things like cod and guppies are bony fish. Both are types of fish
Youβve got to drink through the tiredness. Itβs the professorial way