Frazer Rice

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Frazer Rice

Frazer Rice

@frazerrice

Family Offices, Trusts, UHNW, 📕 🎙️ "Wealth Actually" , Golf/Horror/Comic Book/'80s

New York City 参加日 Ağustos 2008
896 フォロー中3.7K フォロワー
Frazer Rice
Frazer Rice@frazerrice·
Out tomorrow . . .
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Frazer Rice
Frazer Rice@frazerrice·
@johnarnold @CPopeHC And has to face it constituents up close and in the parking lot at Wegmans and at church.
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Chris Pope
Chris Pope@CPopeHC·
It's not an exaggeration to say that a village board will apply more scrutiny and oversight to $25,000 in its budget than the federal government will to $250,000,000 in Medicaid spending.
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Jared Walczak
Jared Walczak@JaredWalczak·
Which historical figures would have come across as massively more ridiculous had X been available in their day?
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Frazer Rice
Frazer Rice@frazerrice·
👀👀👀
Rohan Paul@rohanpaul_ai

Wharton’s latest AI study points to a hard truth: “AI writes, humans review” model is breaking down Why "just review the AI output" doesn't work anymore, our brains literally give up. We have started doing "Cognitive Surrender" to AI - Wharton’s latest AI study points to a hard truth: reviewing AI output is not a reliable safeguard when cognition itself starts to defer to the machine.when you stop verifying what the AI tells you, and you don't even realize you stopped. It's different from offloading, like using a calculator. With offloading you know the tool did the work. With surrender, your brain recodes the AI's answer as YOUR judgment. You genuinely believe you thought it through yourself. Says AI is becoming a 3rd thinking system, and people often trust it too easily. You know Kahneman's System 1 (fast intuition) and System 2 (slow analysis)? They're saying AI is now System 3, an external cognitive system that operates outside your brain. And when you use it enough, something happens that they call Cognitive Surrender. Cognitive surrender is trickier: AI gives an answer, you stop really questioning it, and your brain starts treating that output as your own conclusion. It does not feel outsourced. It feels self-generated. The data makes it hard to brush off. Across 3 preregistered studies with 1,372 participants and 9,593 trials, people turned to AI on over 50% of questions. In Study 1, when AI was correct, people followed it 92.7% of the time. When it was wrong, they still followed it 79.8% of the time. Without AI, baseline accuracy was 45.8%. With correct AI, it jumped to 71.0%. With incorrect AI, it dropped to 31.5%, worse than having no AI. Access to AI also boosted confidence by 11.7 percentage points, even when the answers were wrong. Human review is supposed to be the safety net. But this research suggests the safety net has a hole in it: people do not just miss bad AI output; they become more confident in it. Time pressure did not eliminate the effect. Incentives and feedback reduced it but did not remove it. And the people most resistant tended to score higher on fluid intelligence and need for cognition. That makes this feel less like a laziness problem and more like a cognitive architecture problem.

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Brian Roemmele
Brian Roemmele@BrianRoemmele·
Doctor fixed A severe Scoliosis with Halo gravity traction method in children's (straighten the spine).
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Frazer Rice
Frazer Rice@frazerrice·
If something is different, it’s noticeable.
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Frazer Rice
Frazer Rice@frazerrice·
I’m probably the worst offender on @LinkedIn by trying to posting things I find interesting (and as a PSA for upcoming podcasts). But it’s mostly an evil mix of compliance and committee-driven corporate speak, AI slop, and desperate clout thirst.
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Frazer Rice
Frazer Rice@frazerrice·
Screen reading is best reserved for the check the box “getting credit for reading it”work. Bring back ‘Zine culture. @DaveNadig @CultishCreative
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Frazer Rice
Frazer Rice@frazerrice·
RIA’s are promising to takeover estate planning, the mega-rich have more complicated plans than ever before, and the laws are likely to become more, not less, volatile. And here we are at the precipice of a massive trustee shortage . . . youtu.be/hwQev88A03M
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Matt Foreman
Matt Foreman@ForemanTaxLaw·
@frazerrice I mean, a 1BR in Manhattan for $3,900 is pretty good, let alone near Central Park.
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