César García-Díaz

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César García-Díaz

César García-Díaz

@cesagar

Social scientist | Modeling complexity. I build computational models to decode social dynamics, organization behavior, and systems change.

Bogotá, D.C., Colombia Beigetreten Ekim 2009
1.1K Folgt369 Follower
Javi Padilla
Javi Padilla@elpady·
No habéis visto a un batería con esta precisión. De Jonathan Moffet, Michael Jackson decía lo siguiente: «Mi bajista se equivoca, Mi teclista se equivoca, Yo, a veces, me equivoco… Jonathan Moffet nunca se equivoca». Con ustedes, Smooth Criminal
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César García-Díaz
César García-Díaz@cesagar·
@EspinosaRadio Depende de la disciplina; p. ej. en una revista top de administración (e.g. ASQ, AMR, etc) el lapso de tiempo entre envio y publicación puede ser ~2.5 años.
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Espinosa
Espinosa@EspinosaRadio·
¿Cuál es el promedio de artículos que un académico puede escribir, anualmente, en una publicación científica? Gracias.
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AI Highlight
AI Highlight@AIHighlight·
🚨BREAKING: Two researchers from UPenn and Boston University just published a paper that should be uncomfortable reading for every CEO automating their workforce right now. The argument is straightforward. Every company replacing workers with AI is also eliminating its own future customers. Laid off workers stop spending. Enough of them stop spending and nobody can afford to buy anything. The companies that fired everyone end up selling into an economy with no purchasing power left. Every executive can see this. The math is not complicated. But here is why nobody stops. If you do not automate, your competitor does. They cut costs, lower prices, take your market share, and you collapse anyway. So every company automates knowing it is collectively destructive because the alternative is dying alone while everyone else survives. The researchers proved this is a Prisoner's Dilemma playing out in real time. The numbers are already moving. Block cut nearly half its 10,000 employees this year. Jack Dorsey said AI made those roles unnecessary and that within the next year the majority of companies will reach the same conclusion. Salesforce replaced 4,000 customer support agents with AI. Goldman Sachs deployed a coding tool that lets one engineer do the work of five. Over 100,000 tech workers were laid off in 2025 and AI was cited as the primary driver in more than half those cases. 80% of US workers hold jobs with tasks susceptible to AI automation. The researchers tested every proposed solution. Universal basic income does not change a single company's incentive to automate. Capital income taxes adjust profit levels but not the per-task decision to replace a human. Collective bargaining cannot hold because automating is always the dominant strategy. They also identified what they call a Red Queen effect. Better AI does not solve the problem, it accelerates it. Every company chases faster automation to gain market share over rivals but at the end everyone has automated equally, the gains cancel out, and the only thing left is more destroyed demand. The one thing the math says could work is a Pigouvian automation tax. A per-task charge that forces companies to account for the demand they destroy each time they replace a worker. The conclusion is that this is not a transfer of wealth from workers to owners. Both sides lose. Workers lose income. Companies lose customers. It is a deadweight loss with no market mechanism to stop it on its own.
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Jay Van Bavel, PhD
Jay Van Bavel, PhD@jayvanbavel·
“Have humans passed peak brain power?” We’re rapidly losing the ability to think deeply. This fantastic article explains how technology, from smartphones, social media to artificial intelligence is making us dumber. "Long-running surveys reveal that the share of U.S. adults who struggle with basic reading or math has risen markedly over the past decade, while the percentage of 18-year-olds who report difficulty thinking and concentrating jumped in the same period. A Financial Times article about these findings proposed a shocking but relevant question: “Have humans passed peak brain power?” Many of these declines in cognitive skills became notable starting in the mid-2010s, exactly the period when smartphones became ubiquitous and the digital attention economy exploded in size. An increasing amount of research implies that this timing is no coincidence. A meta-analysis released last fall showed that consuming short-form video content, as delivered by apps like TikTok and Instagram, is associated with poorer cognition and reduced attention, and the results of a clever experiment from 2023 found that the mere presence of participants’ smartphones in a room significantly reduced their ability to concentrate. The growth of A.I. has brought new cognitive concerns. A study from January, based on surveys and interviews with more than 600 participants, revealed a “significant negative correlation between frequent A.I. tool usage and critical thinking abilities.” Another recent study, which tracked the brain activity of research subjects who were writing with the help of large language models, found that “brain connectivity systematically scaled down with the amount of external support.”" We need to stop filling our minds with the equivalent of digital Doritos. We made physical fitness and a healthy diet into a national movement, we should do the same for our brains. nytimes.com/2026/03/27/opi…
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Thierry Ways
Thierry Ways@tways·
"Engin­eer­ing is fun­da­ment­ally a prob­lem-solv­ing pro­cess. Law is fun­da­ment­ally about win­ning an argu­ment. The first demands prac­tical intel­li­gence, the second reduces decisions to a kind of per­form­at­ive ration­al­ity." spectator.com/article/why-en…
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Brad Stulberg
Brad Stulberg@BStulberg·
A massive new study on peak performance included 34,000 international top performers: Nobel laureates, renowned classical music composers, Olympic champs, and the world’s best chess players. It shows early specialization is a trap, and the road to greatness is long and varied.
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Anthony Bonato
Anthony Bonato@Anthony_Bonato·
In honor of Taylor Swift's 36th birthday today, here are 36 Taylor series
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César García-Díaz
César García-Díaz@cesagar·
@IterIntellectus Sure. While peer review is not perfect, it is the best safeguard available. Or would you prefer unreviewed research—for example, studies guiding medicine or public policy? What is your proposal?
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vittorio
vittorio@IterIntellectus·
academia has failed because of peer review peer review selects for consensus instead of truth. new findings get rejected by reviewers who built careers on the old model. replication crises happen because incentives reward publication instead of verification the system is working exactly as designed, to protect established positions from challenge
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Adam Grant
Adam Grant@AdamMGrant·
It's time to remove laptops from classrooms. 24 experiments: Students learn more and get better grades after taking notes by hand than typing. It's not just because they're less distracted—writing enables deeper processing and more images. The pen is mightier than the keyboard.
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