Archives for the ‘results’ Category

Your toes too please

By Dillon Niederhut • Nov 19th, 2008 • Category: Honors Thesis, Research, results

Discovery is hosting this huge self-help-through-neuroscience convention in Philly this week.  Gazzaniga will be there, and it will be free, so if you can make it there by 7p this Thursday it would be pretty cool to meet him.  Levitin will also be there, and apparently he’s got a new book out.  Personally, I felt […]



I have two new loves

By Dillon Niederhut • Nov 17th, 2008 • Category: Honors Thesis, Research, results

The first is Steve Novella, for this post where he uses the logic of science to tear apart accupuncture.  I do love good science.
The other is this quote from Eric Ambler, which is the most poetic intro I’ve yet found for my research:
” With most persons, recognition was based on the perception of vague, half-observed […]



I’ll give you a hint: it’s not because I care about William or Henry

By Dillon Niederhut • Nov 15th, 2008 • Category: Honors Thesis, News, Research, results, spss

So after four hours of analyzing my data with SPSS… I discovered that I have a hot mess.  I wish I had more to say, but the truth of the matter is that it’s just a counting game now.  What with there being only two and a half weeks of class left, we don’t really […]



There is no hard drive

By Dillon Niederhut • Sep 2nd, 2008 • Category: General Technology, Research, The Research, computer, descartes, dualism, pajamas, participant, results, spss

I went to the lab today to pull some data off of SPSS (Statistical Package for the Social Sciences: like Excel, but engineered for data about people).  I actually have a copy, but it’s the student copy that I got for my psych stats class.  And by student copy I mean worthless copy.  It won’t […]



Instead of summer doldrums, he found himself in the midst of hurricane season

By Dillon Niederhut • Aug 16th, 2008 • Category: General Technology, Research, participant, results, significance

Which is my way of saying, via pathetic fallacy, that I’ve gotten very busy (science majors can know literary terms too).
Breakdown of summer research results:  we are reasonably confident that something is happening.  Like I said earlier, the effect size is small, but it’s consistent across all the stimuli.  Furthermore, if we eliminate one participant, […]



Blogging at 0 dark hundred

By Dillon Niederhut • Jul 31st, 2008 • Category: General Technology, Howard Bloom, Research, gened, memes, memetics, nature, popular science, results

To begin: some preliminary stuff from my summer research.  I haven’t gone through the tests yet (and I still have some data to enter), but it looks like we are not going to get a lot of significant results for what I’ve done so far.  The effect we are getting  is 3 to 4 times […]