Tag: lifehacks

Menu Danger

Menu littering is a huge problem in New York City. The increasingly competitive takeout and delivery industry hires their delivery guys during off hours to foist menus under the doors of apartment dwellers. It is now routine to come home to a pile of duplicate menus on my door mat — not only annoying but a total waste of paper. Moreover, buildings routinely get fined by the city’s department of sanitation if the menus are left near the front door of the building.

Sleep

the presence of jerks during rest in the gray whale, taken together with our previous data on 3 species of dolphins, allows us to suggest that short episodes of REM do exist in Cetaceans

2007-12-27: Orexin A Narcolepsy?

the absence of orexin A appears to cause narcolepsy. That finding pointed to a major role for the peptide’s absence in causing sleepiness. It stood to reason that if the deficit of orexin A makes people sleepy, adding it back into the brain would reduce the effects

2017-06-28: Whale sleep

Franco Banfi was following this pod of sperm whales when the giants suddenly seemed to fall into a vertical slumber. These massive marine mammals spend 7% of their time taking short (6- to 24-minute) rests in this shallow vertical position. Scientists think these brief naps may be the only time the whales sleep.

2017-10-31: Cocaine 2.0

Recent research has demonstrated the effectiveness of short light pulses to alter circadian phase during sleep in human subjects. 2-millisecond light flashes administered during sleep penetrate the eyelids and change circadian timing without interfering with sleep quality. Due to the properties of the retinal cells that transduce light information to the circadian system, these millisecond light flashes match or exceed the effectiveness of continuous bright light to shift circadian phase. More than 1.5 hours of phase shift can be generated with just over 1 total second of light exposure during 1 hour. LumosTech is developing a smart sleep mask that contains bright LEDs able to emit a range of millisecond light pulses at several frequencies. Light timing is controlled by a smartphone app that uses a proprietary algorithm to calculate the frequency and duration required for shifting circadian phase. The light stimulation is delivered during sleep in conjunction with a mathematical model of circadian phase to advance or delay sleep cycles. The mask contains additional LEDs that provide a red-wavelength dawn simulator to stimulate the release of cortisol; this promotes alertness and enhances mood immediately after wakeup.

2018-07-21: What we know about sleep

Our brain profoundly alters its behavior and purpose, dimming our consciousness. For a while, we become almost entirely paralyzed. We can’t even shiver. Our eyes, however, periodically dart about behind closed lids as if seeing, and the tiny muscles in our middle ear, even in silence, move as though hearing. We are sexually stimulated, men and women both, repeatedly. We sometimes believe we can fly. We approach the frontiers of death. We sleep. Around 2.35 ka BP, Aristotle wrote an essay, “On Sleep and Sleeplessness,” wondering just what we were doing and why. For the next 2300 years no one had a good answer. In 1924 German psychiatrist Hans Berger invented the electroencephalograph, which records electrical activity in the brain, and the study of sleep shifted from philosophy to science. It’s only in the past few decades, though, as imaging machines have allowed ever deeper glimpses of the brain’s inner workings, that we’ve approached a convincing answer to Aristotle.

2020-01-04: Sleep detox

An organized tide of brain waves, blood and spinal fluid pulsing through a sleeping brain may flush away neural toxins that cause Alzheimer’s and other diseases.

2020-11-10: Evening home lighting adversely impacts the circadian system and sleep

nearly 50% of homes had bright enough light to suppress melatonin by 50%, but with a wide range of individual responses (0–87% suppression for the average home). Greater evening light relative to an individual’s average was associated with increased wakefulness after bedtime. Homes with energy-efficient lights had 2x the melanopic illuminance of homes with incandescent lighting. Home lighting significantly affects sleep and the circadian system, but the impact of lighting for a specific individual in their home is highly unpredictable.

2021-05-18: Metabolic sleep

What, then, does sleep do in the absence of a brain? Raizen suspects that at least for some animals, sleep has a primarily metabolic function, allowing certain biochemical reactions to take place that can’t happen during waking hours. It may divert the energy that would be used by alertness and movement into other processes, ones that are too costly to take place while the animal is awake. For example, C. elegans seems to use sleep to enable the growth of its body and support the repair of its tissues. In sleep-deprived hydras, the cell divisions that are part of everyday life are paused. Something similar has been seen in the brains of sleep-deprived rats and in fruit flies. Managing the flow of energy may be a central role for sleep.

2021-11-16: Dreaming against overfitting

All of this begs the question of how the human brain deals with overfitting. Our day-to-day experience can be hugely repetitive, so how does the brain generalize from these singular experiences to other situations?

The human brain prevents overfitting by dreaming. Dreaming evolved specifically to deal with this problem, which is common to all neural networks. If this theory is correct, it answers one of the great unsolved problems in neuroscience: why we dream at all.

2022-08-07: Spider REM Sleep?

When Rößler recorded 34 sleeping spiderlings, she found that their twitches were accompanied by unmistakable eye-tube movements that did not happen during other phases of sleep. “It’s beautiful. I mean, it’s crazy. It immediately makes a sleep researcher think about rapid eye movement sleep”. Dreaming offers an entry point into questions of awareness in other animals: it is difficult to imagine that even a simple dream is possible without something like an ego or an “I” experiencing it, he adds. So if spiders dream, it might mean that we start talking about spiders having something like a minimal self.

2023-09-10: REM sleep is body-mapping

The brain uses REM sleep to “learn” the body. You wouldn’t think that the body is something a brain needs to learn, but we aren’t born with maps of our bodies; we can’t be, because our bodies change by the day, and because the body a fetus ends up becoming might differ from the one encoded in its genome. “Infants must learn about the body they have. Not the body they were supposed to have.”

As a human fetus, you have 9 months in a dark womb to figure out your body. If you can identify which motor neurons control which muscles, which body parts connect, and what it feels like to move them in different combinations, you’ll later be able to use your body as a yardstick against which to measure the sensations you encounter outside. It’s easier to sense food in your mouth if you know the feeling of a freely moving tongue; it’s easier to detect a wall in front of you if you know what your extended arm feels like unimpeded. In waking life, we don’t tend to move only a single muscle; even the simple act of swallowing employs some thirty pairs of nerves and muscles working together. Our sleep twitches, by contrast, are exacting and precise; they engage muscles one at a time. Twitches “don’t look anything like waking movements. They allow you to form discrete connections that otherwise would be impossible.”

The theory turned the rationale for REM paralysis on its head: the paralysis isn’t there to stop the twitches but to highlight them. It’s a process that’s most important in infancy, but this might continue throughout our lives, as we grow and shrink, suffer injuries and strokes, make new motor memories and learn new skills. Blumberg plays the drums, and, when he learns a new rhythm, he wonders whether sleep is involved. “You struggle and struggle for several days, then one day you wake up and start playing and boom—it’s automatic. Did sleep play a role in that? If I had been recording my limb movements, would I have seen something interesting? That keeps me up at night.”

2023-10-22: Dream communication

While they were sleeping, participants were repeatedly asked to frown or smile. All of them responded accurately to at least 70% of these prompts.

Overall response rates were higher for all participants during REM (rapid eye movement) sleep, when the deepest sleep occurs but the brain remains quite active, than during other sleep stages.

Career Planning

A few years ago, a manager of mine gave me the assignment to work on a 5-year career plan. I had never created a career plan before (not even to plot out goals for the coming year), so I was completely unprepared for how and why I should do this. Luckily, she shared her own plan as a guide, but I still agonized through the exercise. Over time I have become aware of how important this was for me to do. Looking and assessing where I was at the time, really thinking about what I wanted to be doing in the future, gave me the tools to make the right decisions to make things happen.

while i totally disdain the “save for your SUV / mortgage / life insurance” plans, there is some great advice in this article by erin malone how to map out your career.
2013-04-29: this is the kind of question most people never ask themselves, instead blaming the man for their life sucking.

What’s the last thing you did to advance your career or improve yourself?
On your 85th birthday, what do you want others to say about your accomplishments?
What would you be doing if paying the bills wasn’t an issue?
What are you passionate about that you’re not pursuing?
What have been your greatest accomplishments so far?
What’s the greatest value that you bring to your work?
What does it mean to you to be satisfied at work?
What’s your personal definition of success?
What about your work energizes you?
Where are you playing it too safe?

2016-10-04:

Designing Your Life is one of the most popular courses at Stanford. Taught by Bill Burnett and Dave Evans, the class teaches how you can use design thinking and techniques to shape your life and career.

gear

Here are my recommendations for cool stuff. I include any books, tools, software, videos, maps, gadgets, hardware, websites, or gear that are extraordinarily handy or useful for individual and small groups. The best items are those that open up new possibilities. I depend on friends and readers to suggest things. Generally I try something out first if I can. I only recommend things I like and I ignore the rest.

subscribed.

Offline schmoozing

I have done it. I’m now officially without a computer at home. Why? Because I feel it’s time to spend more of my spare time offline. The first few days have been hard, I admit. I certainly am addicted to the internet, and computers, and when I came home in the evenings I was like: ok, now what? I hadn’t yet found a good use of my newfound spare time. With no tv or computer to slack in front of, I was forced to entertain myself in new ways. I decided to use the opportunity to apply some of the schmoozing lessons I learned online the last 2 years to my offline environment. There a lots of old and new friends to meet. In related news I will probably have a mobile again, because I was being told repeatedly that trying to get hold of me had become exceedingly difficult. Without a computer at home I tend to agree 🙂 ps. If you send me email late at night or over the weekend, don’t expect an immediate response. I will deal with your email first thing in the (workday) morning, a fresh cup of coffee in my paws 🙂

Personal CMS

Mitch Kapor (ex Lotus) is building a personal CMS with Andy Hertzfeld (ex Apple). Very interesting architecture, and with these people behind it has a high chance of seeing the light of day.
2004-10-15: Google Desktop Search brings my vision of a personal cms (for lack of a better term at the time) a step closer. As I am writing this, outlook express is synchronizing my 2 IMAP stores to the local disk so that the indexer may pick them up. this gives me at least access to my existing emails while the wait for thunderbird support continues. I’ll start using slogger to save all my Firefox sessions permanently to disk and see how it goes. (Don’t forget to filter out 127.0.0.1 or you’ll have a nice little feedback loop with slogger picking up your desktop search pages, storing them, desktop search indexing them, etc)
Using adblock aggressively should help to keep the signal to noise ratio of those saved pages as high as possible.
I wonder where SharpReader keeps it’s local copy (currently 23841 posts) and if this facility gives me a way to search through posts that have expired.
I will try to get a good-sized gmane nntp feed in through outlook express to see if it gets picked up as well.
I also noticed that my Trillian chat logs are not being picked up even though they are text files. maybe it is just a file locking issue, but it still makes me wonder why AOL chat logs are singled out in the preferences.
Of course, once you have full-text search over most of your digital footprints (which now seems within reach), you begin to wonder what else you could do. correlating information (what sites was i visiting while I had that IRC conversation?), visualizing connections (show me other mentions of the term “projectx” over time), bayesian techniques (show me sites I might find interesting based on my accumulated data). Eventually we will all be using MyLifeBits.
2005-05-17: For those who already freaked out over the minor changes the google toolbar makes on their site (only if you specifically trigger it, a fact that was conveniently swept under the rug), what will they make of this? personal content management? the writable web? another step towards Xanadu?

Platypus is a tool for modifying web pages and then saving those changes so that they’ll be repeated the next time you visit the page. Changes are made by selecting an element on the page and then hitting a key to use one of the commands below. To save your changes so that they’ll be applied the next time you visit the same web page, hit Save (Ctl-S). This will bring up a window containing a GreaseMonkey script. Install this script and you’re done!

2018-08-12: Memory is central to problem solving and creativity.

In this essay we investigate personal memory systems, that is, systems designed to improve the long-term memory of a single person. In the first part of the essay I describe my personal experience using such a system, named Anki … The second part of the essay discusses personal memory systems in general. Many people treat memory ambivalently or even disparagingly as a cognitive skill: for instance, people often talk of “rote memory” as though it’s inferior to more advanced kinds of understanding. I’ll argue against this point of view, and make a case that memory is central to problem solving and creativity.