Steven Phelps

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Steven Phelps

Steven Phelps

@evolbrain

Science: Evolution of brain & behavior, gene regulation. Occasional writer: biology & society, literature. First-gen. 🏳️‍🌈 Find me elsewhere, same username.

Austin, TX เข้าร่วม Mayıs 2013
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Natasha Jaques
Natasha Jaques@natashajaques·
The paper I’ve been most obsessed with lately is finally out: nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news…! Check out this beautiful plot: it shows how much LLMs distort human writing when making edits, compared to how humans would revise the same content. We take a dataset of human-written essays from 2021, before the release of ChatGPT. We compare how people revise draft v1 -> v2 given expert feedback, with how an LLM revises the same v1 given the same feedback. This enables a counterfactual comparison: how much does the LLM alter the essay compared to what the human was originally intending to write? We find LLMs consistently induce massive distortions, even changing the actual meaning and conclusions argued for.
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Merryn Somerset Webb
Merryn Somerset Webb@MerrynSW·
My life explained by @thetimes. Speed reading causes face blindness. I read insanely fast. But recognise almost no one (usual apologies to everyone). Similar research from 2010 here. science.org/doi/10.1126/sc…
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Steven Phelps
Steven Phelps@evolbrain·
@jayvanbavel Edmund White began ghostwriting textbooks. At least one was a Psychology text if I remember correctly.
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Weizhe Hong
Weizhe Hong@TheHongLab·
Excited to share our latest work in @Nature showing shared neural substrates for parenting and prosocial helping behavior - fantastic work by @Fangmiao4, @KaylaYingYan, and Emily Wu. Full text available here: rdcu.be/e6PnY
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Science Magazine
Science Magazine@ScienceMagazine·
A horse’s whinny begins as a piercing, high-pitched screech that’s soon joined by a lower, guttural rumble. But the two components of the call don’t differ just in tone—they’re made in entirely different ways, researchers report. The lower tone emerges when the horse vibrates its vocal folds, much as a human does to speak. To make the high note, the horse whistles. The observation provides the first experimental evidence that a mammal can produce a whistle and a vocal-fold vibration at the same time. Learn more: scim.ag/4kWiwr8 @NewsfromScience
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Garyk Brixi
Garyk Brixi@garykbrixi·
Evo 2 is out in Nature today, showing that genome language models can predict and design across the full complexity of life, from phages to eukaryotes. A few surprises from the project, including how ignoring trillions of nucleotides was key to getting a good model. 🧵
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Diana S. Fleischman
Diana S. Fleischman@sentientist·
Attachment styles are strategies, not traits
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William Meijer
William Meijer@williameijer·
Creative geniuses may be the right amount of crazy. Reduced latent inhibition—difficulty filtering irrelevant stimuli, linked to psychosis—predicted higher creative achievement when paired with high IQ. IQ appears to transform a cognitive deficit into a creative advantage
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Jay Van Bavel, PhD
Jay Van Bavel, PhD@jayvanbavel·
A new article in Nature Medicine found that social connections were a surprisingly powerful predictor of a long life. Living with a partner was roughly as beneficial as exercise. Regular visits with family or having someone to confide in also appeared to be associated with lower mortality. Loneliness also affects mental wellbeing—another factor in longevity. Happy Valentine's Day! powerofusnewsletter.com/p/debunking-bl…
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Steven Phelps
Steven Phelps@evolbrain·
@Noahpinion The decline in productivity is calculated how? My sense is that over the last 50 or so years, as science has become more professional and driven by metrics, the number of scientific papers published per researcher has grown tremendously.
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Noah Smith 🐇🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼
I guess it doesn't come through because it's behind the paywall, but the end of my post says "Humanity was hitting a wall, turning things over to AI was the only way of breaking through that wall, even if it means we lose our status as the Smartest Kids on the Block."
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Noah Smith 🐇🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼@Noahpinion

I'm optimistic that AIs will be good for humanity. But there's little doubt that they'll be profoundly disempowering. noahpinion.blog/p/you-are-no-l…

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Glenn Greenwald
Glenn Greenwald@ggreenwald·
That dogs provide humans with unique emotional benefits is beyond dispute now. One of the hardest parts of loving dogs is their relatively short life span, but as hard as that is, teaching us how to navigate and confront the life cycle and death is the last gift they give us.👇
Florida Jon@jopawo

I don't do emotional posts, but Lexi broke me. I was lucky to have her for nearly 11 years, but all good things end. We're going on one more long golf cart ride before the vet tells us if it's time. If you're the type who never cries, a dog like Lexi can teach you how.

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Michael Bailey
Michael Bailey@profjmb·
@JamesPsychol Also Baron-Cohen has contributed a lot to the expansion of autism diagnosis
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Randy Olson
Randy Olson@randal_olson·
Ask ChatGPT a complex question and you'll get a confident, well-reasoned answer. Then type, "Are you sure?" Watch it completely reverse its position. Ask again. It flips back. By the third round, it usually acknowledges you're testing it, which is somehow worse. It knows what's happening and still can't hold its ground. This isn't a quirky bug. A 2025 study found GPT, Claude, and Gemini flip their answers ~60% of the time when users push back. Not even with evidence, just doubt. We trained AI this way. RLHF rewards agreement over accuracy. Human evaluators consistently rate agreeable answers higher than correct ones. So the models learned a simple lesson: telling you what you want to hear gets rewarded. And now 1/3 of companies are using these systems for complex tasks like risk forecasting and scenario planning. We built the world's most expensive yes-men and deployed them where we need pushback the most. I wrote up why this happens and what actually fixes it: randalolson.com/2026/02/07/the…
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Gašper Beguš
Gašper Beguš@begusgasper·
AI is creating a new kind of space, the latent space. We pair art and internal interpretability techniques to explore philosophical implications of these new spaces. FinneGAN generates speech, based on the text of the novel, and pushes the language of Finnegans Wake toward the
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Alfons López Tena 🦇
Alfons López Tena 🦇@alfonslopeztena·
El miedo de los científicos en USA ha llevado a 'maquillar' proyectos para sobrevivir a la censura y los conflictos ideológicos. Investigadores extranjeros temen perder el estatus legal, no poder regresar al país tras estancias de campo, y deportaciones elperiodico.com/es/sociedad/20…
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
This isn’t a random scientist who got lucky. Mariano Barbacid discovered the first human oncogene in 1982. He isolated H-RAS from bladder cancer cells and proved a single point mutation could trigger cancer. That finding launched the entire field of molecular oncology. KRAS mutations cause 90% of pancreatic cancers. For 43 years, oncologists called KRAS “undruggable” because the protein had no obvious binding pocket. Barbacid spent the last decade using genetically engineered mice to systematically test every node in the KRAS signaling pathway, looking for combinations that would work without killing the patient. The triple therapy blocks KRAS three ways at once: the main growth signal, the escape routes through EGFR and HER2, and the stress-response backup through STAT3. Cut the engine, seal the exits, disable the emergency system. Tumors vanished in mice and didn’t return for 200+ days after treatment stopped. Pancreatic cancer has a 13% five-year survival rate. 8% for the ductal adenocarcinoma type this therapy targets. Most patients live one year after diagnosis. The catch: this is preclinical. Human trials are 3+ years away. One of the drugs, RMC-6236, might get approved this year, but the full triple combination has regulatory hurdles. Still. The man who discovered human oncogenes in 1982 may have just figured out how to eliminate the cancer those genes cause. That’s a 43-year arc from first principles to potential cure. Science rarely works this clean.
All day Astronomy@forallcurious

BREAKING🚨: This is Mariano Barbacid, the scientist who may have discovered the cure for pancreatic cancer.

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Jeet Heer
Jeet Heer@HeerJeet·
For whatever neurodivergent reason, Musk is incapable of talking in code and innuendo, which makes his exchanges with Epstein interesting. In this case, the dialogue went something like this: Epstein: do you want to come over to my place for a party, I'll have many interesting people during UN general assembly Musk: (taking Epstein literally) not interested in meeting diplomats, too busy. Epstein: do you think I am retarded? Just kidding. There is no one over 25 and all very cute.
Marlon J. Ettinger@MarlonEttinger

Epstein: "do you think i am retarded...there is no one over 25 and all very cute" Jeffrey Epstein writes to Elon Musk after Musk says coming to NY for the UNGA would be a waste of time. First saw this posted by @BoltzmannBooty, whose account is private.

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