Episode 70 β October 6th, 2022 β Available at read.fluxcollective.org/p/70
Contributors to this issue: Dimitri Glazkov, Neel Mehta, Erika Rice Scherpelz, Boris Smus, Ade Oshineye
Additional insights from: Gordon Brander, a.r. Routh, Stefano Mazzocchi, Ben Mathes, Justin Quimby, Alex Komoroske, Robinson Eaton, Spencer Pitman, Julka Almquist, Scott Schaffter, Lisie Lillianfeld, Samuel Arbesman, Dart Lindsley
Weβre a ragtag band of systems thinkers who have been dedicating our early mornings to finding new lenses to help you make sense of the complex world we live in. This newsletter is a collection of patterns weβve noticed in recent weeks.
βOften we are ourselves struck at the strange differences in our successive views of the same thing. We wonder how we ever could have opined as we did last month about a certain matter. We have outgrown the possibility of that state of mind, we know not how. From one year to another we see things in new lights. What was unreal has grown real, and what was exciting is insipid.β
β William James
ππΊ Choose enthusiastic dance partners
Change comes in different shapes. Sometimes itβs like a military action: we have to buck the trends, go where we arenβt wanted, disrupt the status quo. Other times, change is more a dance. We need to collaborate with others to achieve our goal, working together to achieve something that we canβt achieve on our own. Itβs important not to confuse the two. If we bring a conquer-and-control approach to a situation that calls for dancing, weβre going to end up with a failed collaboration as we push away those we need to succeed.
Suppose weβve already identified that weβre in a collaborative situation. Now, we need to choose a dance partner (or a whole group of them). There are always many factors to consider when choosing collaborative partners: are their aligned with ours? Are they using compatible technologies? Would our shared goal have a good cost-benefit tradeoff?
One thing we sometimes forget to consider is enthusiasm. As many of us learned from experiences of our youth, dancing with a reluctant partner is tedious and somewhat embarrassing, whatever their technical proficiency may be. And we may have had the opposite experience too: when dance partners are mutually enthusiastic, they can be pretty impressive, even if they lack skill. Combine the two β technical skill plus mutual enthusiasmΒ βΒ and we can create something amazing.Β
The same holds for collaboration. Partners who are enthusiastic to collaborate can make up for many β although not all β of the shortcomings our partnership might have. Yet we so often neglect to take these simple guidelines into account, especially in a work setting.
Next time you are choosing partners for a collaborative project, take the time to consider how well you get along with your potential collaborators. Double down on the areas where you see positive signals. And if youβre forced into a partnership without mutual enthusiasm, spend some time building the relationship to see if you can build it up. If you can, it will pay off in spades.
π£οΈπ© SignpostsΒ
Clues that point to where our changing world might lead us.
ππ€ COVID might have driven a seasonal flu strain to extinction
Thanks to travel restrictions, quarantines, and increased public health measures, 2020βs flu season was βall but canceled.β A potential victim was the B/Yamagata strain of the seasonal flu, one of the 4 common strains. Researchers detected this strain over 51,000 times back in 2018, but just 43 times last year and 8 times so far this year β and experts think these might just be βerroneous detectionsβ from past flu vaccinations. If B/Yamagata really did disappear, itβd show that the βpopulation bottleneckβ of COVID-19 crashed the genetic diversity of the seasonal flu.
ππΉ Someone modernized the graphics of a β93 video game with an AI image synthesizer
The first fighting game with fully 3D polygonal graphics was Segaβs Virtua Fighter, launched in 1993. One artist decided to βremasterβ the game with the image synthesis model Stable Diffusion. The artist used Stable Diffusionβs βimg2imgβ tool, which takes in an original image and a text prompt and outputs a new, AI-generated image. The result was a bunch of realistic-looking versions of the retro characters, though it took a lot of trial and error to craft prompts that worked well.
ππ Walgreens is using robots to fill prescriptions amidst a pharmacist shortage
The US is currently facing a pharmacist shortage thanks to staffing shortfalls and COVID-19 stretching pharmacists thin with tests and vaccinations. To save pharmacistsβ time, Walgreens has unveiled a network of medication-filling centers, where robotic arms automatically sort pills and place them into bottles. The company says the new tech could cut pharmacistsβ workloads by 25% and free them up for higher-value tasks like vaccinations and patient outreach.
ππ Moth larvae are able to break down plastic bags, say scientists
Wax worms are usually considered a pest; theyβre the larvae of moths that infest beehives. But when one scientist-slash-beekeeper found wax worms chewing through a plastic bag, researchers began investigating. They found that enzymes in the wormsβ saliva are able to break down polyethylene, which makes up 30% of plastic production and is frequently used in plastic bags. This reaction happens at normal temperatures and pH, raising hopes that it could be used in plastic recycling projects.
ππ¨ The owner of a $10 million Frida Kahlo drawing burned it & sold it as NFTs
During an exhibition at his home in Miami, an art collector took a page from Frida Kahloβs diary (a painting he claimed was valued at $10 million), put it in a martini glass, and set it on fire. The goal was to promote the 10,000 NFTs heβd created of the artwork; proceeds would go to charity. The Mexican authorities werenβt amused, though, saying that βthe deliberate destruction of an artistic monument constitutes a crime.β
ππ The White House drafted an βAI bill of rightsβ
The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy released a new Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights to guide the development of AI products. It describes five βprotectionsβ that all Americans should be entitled to, including freedom from algorithmic discrimination, the ability to opt out of AI algorithms (when appropriate), and agency over how your personal data is used. The document doesnβt focus on specific policies or enforcement mechanisms, preferring instead to lay out a high-level vision to guide future rulemaking.
ππ Crypto traders launched a fantasy NFT-trading league
The NFT market has collapsed this year, with daily trading volumes down 97% since January. So, one crypto founder launched a fantasy league to help down-on-their-luck NFT traders relive βthat sweet adrenaline rush of flipping JPEGs.β Players can use play money to buy simulated versions of real NFTs. Their mock portfolios will βappreciateβ if the NFTsβ prices go up in the real markets, just like in stock market simulators.
πβ³ Worth your time
Some especially insightful pieces weβve read, watched, and listened to recently.
Scott and Scurvy (Idle Words) β Probes the fascinating question of how scientists in the early 1900s were ignorant as to what caused scurvy, even though the cause had been definitively proven back in 1747. Uses the story to argue that technological progress can paradoxically cause us to regress in other fields; that we often create theories that fit some data points but mis-diagnose the cause of the problem; and that societal knowledge, once attained, isnβt necessarily permanent.
Eighteen Pitfalls to Beware of in AI Journalism (AI Snake Oil) β Two AI researchers share examples of how major publications over-hype the potential of artificial intelligence. These include using profound-seeming phrases to describe mundane AI actions; uncritically repeating AI companiesβ PR statements; or limiting valid criticism to a βskeptics sayβ framing that paints it as uninformed.
The Boom-Bust Cycle of Baby Names and Dog Breeds (Vice) β Uses the cyclical popularity of baby names and dog breeds to explore βfrequency-dependent selection,β where the rate of a trendβs spread depends on how popular it currently is. Popularity drives viral spread to a certain extent, but when somethingβs too common, people shift away from it. This nonlinear boom-and-bust pattern shows up not just in cultural traits but also in biological evolution, politics, linguistics, and the spread of (mis)information.
I Should Have Loved Biology (James Somers) β Recalls how little the writer enjoyed learning biology, which, despite its interestingness as a field, felt like a βlifeless recitation of names.β What if, instead of focusing on seemingly arbitrary facts, biology was taught historically, by acquainting students with real biological questions and the scientific processes biologists used to answer them? What if it gave students the opportunity to put themselves in the scientistsβ shoes and wonder? What if it involved more inspiring and beautiful illustrations and explorable explanations?
An Injection of Chaos Solves Decades-Old Fluid Mystery (Nautilus) βΒ Describes a puzzling phase transition in fluids that long baffled scientists: certain βweirdβ fluids suddenly become extremely viscous as soon as they start moving beyond a certain speed. Explores how researchers simulated this chaotic behavior on a small scale before turning to full-scale phenomena.
Big Gods and Big Societies: A Closure (Cliodynamica) β While discussing scholarship around the βBig Godsβ question, Peter Turchin argues that the βdirected acyclic graphβ approach to analyzing societal trends is unable to prove causality, since it omits any information about time. Instead, he describes the βdynamic regressionsβ framework for analyzing causality using temporal information; it can also account for feedback loops, unlike DAGs.
The One Parenting Decision that Really Matters (The Atlantic) β Shares results from a large-scale study of children's success outcomes as a function of many variables. It found that the effect of βnatureβ on a child is far stronger than βnurture,β but one parenting factor stands above the rest: the geographic location of the childhood home. See The Opportunity Atlas for more details.
π΅οΈββοΈπ Lens of the week
Introducing new ways to see the world and new tools to add to your mental arsenal.
This weekβs lens: dandelions and elephants.
Some ideas fit easily into tweets that spread with ferocious intensity (like memes). Others take a long time to fully grasp and spread slowly (like quantum physics or organic chemistry). Memes are short-lived, but they replicate and evolve and replicate again, never quite going away once released into the wild. Quantum physics and orgo seem to be completely different: they are rigorous and robust, and they improve gradually, generally with significant effort.
This difference is captured in the (rather poorly named) r/K-selection theory. The idea is from ecology but translates well into other realms with evolutionary dynamics. According to the theory, all organismsβ evolutionary strategies fall somewhere on a spectrum between two extremes: r-selection and K-selection.
An r-selection strategy focuses on rapid replication: make copies of yourself as quickly as possible and mutate freely from generation to generation. It tends to be effective in highly unstable environments. If individuals cannot keep up with the changes they experience within their lifespan, itβs better to let sheer numbers and the evolutionary algorithm do the adaptation. Dandelions are an example of a plant thatβs adopted this strategy: multitudes of tiny seeds are blown across wide areas. They take root and rapidly produce another generation of seed pods.Β
K-selection, meanwhile, focuses on quality over quantity. Itβs a strategy best suited for a population already at carrying capacity. The various species who share an environment are typically strong competitors in their crowded niches, with limited free resources available. To obtain these resources against competitors, adaptation needs to happen within each individualβs lifespan. Organisms that follow this strategy tend to live longer lives, nurturing and teaching their few offspring. Elephants are one such species: big, long-living, and protective of their calves.
To alleviate the terrible naming problem (βwhich one is r? which oneβs K?β), weβll name this lens after the archetypes from above: dandelions and elephants.Β
Ideas that are like dandelions are short, viral, blink-and-theyβre-gone. Ideas that are like elephants are robust and strong, well-established, and improved incrementally, with very few genuinely new ideas as offspring. On the spectrum between these extremes, every idea is a little bit of both. In volatile, uncertain, complex, and ambiguous (βVUCAβ) environments, dandelions will tend to flourish. In more stable and close-to-equilibrium settings, elephants rule.Β
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