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@d_dise

絵描きのTRPGゲーマー。よろしくお願いします。 画像の無断転載・AI学習禁止。 https://t.co/ecGbGgeG1c

شامل ہوئے Kasım 2009
1.4K فالونگ496 فالوورز
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D
D@d_dise·
ちょっと人外描きたい症候群でお題が欲しくなったので、 フォロワーさんの推しモンスター描きます。 落書きの範疇なのでそこまでクオリティは上げないです。 ポケモン、ドラクエ、Bloodborne、SCP、CoCなど、参考画像が見つかるものなら幅広くOKです。 お気軽にリプください~。
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荒川直人
荒川直人@nao_arakawa·
何これ怖い。 >コロンビア大学の心理学者が証明したところによると、脳が何かをGoogleで検索できると知った瞬間、静かにそれを覚えることを拒否するそうです。 >電話に保存されるから配偶者の電話番号を忘れるのと同じメカニズムが、インターネットで読んだほとんどを忘れられるようにするのです。
Ihtesham Ali@ihtesham2005

A Columbia psychologist proved that the moment your brain knows it can Google something, it quietly refuses to remember it. She ran four experiments to be sure. It happened every time. Her name is Betsy Sparrow. She runs a research lab in the Department of Psychology at Columbia, and the paper that closed the argument was published in the journal Science in July 2011, with two co-authors, Jenny Liu at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Daniel Wegner at Harvard. The finding is brutal enough that it should have changed how we think about the internet itself. The first experiment was simple. She asked participants to answer a series of difficult trivia questions, then immediately gave them a modified Stroop task where they had to name the color of a word on a screen as quickly as possible. The words were a mix of everyday objects and technology terms like Google and screen. Every participant slowed down measurably when the tech words appeared, but only after they had been struggling with the trivia. The harder the question they had just failed, the slower they were to read past the word Google. Their brains had quietly reached for the search bar before the question was even finished. The second experiment is the one that should genuinely change how you live. She gave participants 40 trivia statements to type into a computer, things like "an ostrich's eye is bigger than its brain." Half the participants were told the computer would save their work and they could come back to it later. The other half were told the computer would erase everything the moment they finished. Then she tested both groups on how much they remembered. The group that believed the information had been saved remembered significantly less than the group that believed it had been erased. Same statements, same typing task, same amount of time spent reading each fact, and one group simply forgot more of it because they knew they would not need it later. The brain had quietly decided that storage was someone else's job. The third experiment pushed the finding even further. Participants were told their typed statements would be saved into specific folders on the computer, with names like Facts or Data. When tested afterwards, the participants remembered the folder locations significantly better than they remembered the actual statements themselves. They could not tell you that an ostrich's eye is bigger than its brain, but they could tell you exactly which folder you would find that fact in if you went looking for it. Their memory had reorganized itself in real time around where to find the information, not what the information was. The fourth experiment confirmed the entire pattern with 34 Columbia undergraduates and a recognition test designed to rule out every other explanation. The result held. People remembered where to find the answer better than they remembered the answer. Sparrow called this transactive memory, which is a concept her co-author Daniel Wegner had introduced decades earlier to describe how married couples and close colleagues quietly outsource parts of their memory to each other. You do not need to remember your spouse's mother's birthday if your spouse remembers it. You do not need to remember a complicated client's preferences if your colleague does. The brain treats trusted external sources as extensions of its own memory and reallocates effort accordingly. What Sparrow showed was that the human brain has done the same thing with the internet now. Google is not the tool you go to when your memory fails. It’s been upgraded to a permanent member of your cognitive team. Your brain just stopped doing the work silently when that happened. The implication is what should scare anyone who has grown up with a search engine in their pocket. Every fact you’ve looked up in the last 15 years that seemed easy to look up again was processed by your brain at a shallower level than it would have been processed before search engines. You didn't learn it the way your parents learned stuff. You discover where it lives. The address was written into long-term storage. The stuff went into some sort of cognitive holding area that gets emptied the instant your brain confirms the address is still working. This is not a moral failing, Brains have always done that with reliable external memory. The same mechanism that allows you to forget your spouse's phone number because you have it saved in your phone is the same mechanism that allows you to forget almost everything you read on the internet. Your brain is doing exactly what it was designed to do . Save effort where effort can safely be saved . The thing is, the more you outsource, the less you have inside. The more a brain has learned where to find information , not what the information is , over 15 years , the more it becomes dependent on the external system that contains the actual content . The moment the system goes down, the moment you can't search, the moment you have to reason out a problem from raw memory alone, the gap between what you know and what you can access becomes painfully apparent. The answer is uncomfortable and it’s the same answer that worked before search engines existed. You have to deliberately learn things you could easily look up, but which you don't, not because looking up is hard, but because the looking up is what builds the part of you that can actually think without a phone in your hand. Your brain is not worse than your parents brain. it simply stopped storing the things it used to store because someone else volunteered to do it for free.

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六内円栄
六内円栄@rokudaimaruei·
デルウハ誕生日です!最近イラストばかりだったのと、100万部御礼ということでDLCの追加パックです🪓(1/5) 誕生日に…あのヒモを…? kindle版の「Thisコミュニケーション」1・2巻が100円のセールを30日までやっているそうなので、是非全12巻読んでからご確認ください!
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天野こずえ
天野こずえ@aquaria2go·
『ミルクです!  ミルクをくだしゃい!!』 #黒猫くろちゃ日記📔
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ゆな先生
ゆな先生@JapanTank·
この脱出させた先生ガチ有能すぎる ほんまギリギリやったな
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マクー
マクー@yonasawa·
これはちいサメも容赦なくこねるネコチャン
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アセトラスト
アセトラスト@srehyouka·
相続税評価の半分以上は固定資産税評価をベースにしているので、的を得ています。 固定資産税は賦課課税なので、納税者自身が評価額の計算方法なんて微塵も気にしていなくて、自治体もブラックボックス化させてるから、こういう時にしか問題が表面化してきません。
ゴンザレス・D・ゴンザレス@raitei3000

この問題の真犯人は国の税制ではなく、地方自治体の圧倒的な怠慢。 『3年に1回の評価替え』という義務を何十年も脳死でサボり、市場の実態から乖離した数字を机の上でタイピングし続けた自業自得の結末です。 それを国が尻拭いし始めたというのが事の真相。

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サウスポー
サウスポー@chamio22·
色々コメントあるけど日本の制度設計って外国人の存在を想定してないのが露呈したんだよね。 外国人がエコシステムに入ってこなければ税金による強制売却が促され日本人の間で分配を達成するのだが、昨今の状態がその前提ぶち壊してるよね。 外国人性悪説じゃないかって?そりゃそう想定しとかないと。
日本経済新聞 電子版(日経電子版)@nikkei

国の「相続土地」、民間に購入促す 財務省が新ルール nikkei.com/article/DGXZQO… 国が引き取った相続土地の評価額をまず3割下げます。それでも需要がなければ最大93%まで引き下げます。地方を中心に相続土地が増えており、維持管理コストが課題になっています。

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cargo 💴💶💵🌹🐾🍉
ところがこの相続税ルールを考えた財務官僚は昇進してしまう。 財務省にとって、国民生活を豊かにしたか?など評価基準にはならず、より多くの税を取るスキームを考えた人が評価されるシステムになっています。 こういう事を繰り返したことで腐りきった組織になり、経済も「失われた30年」になりました
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清水ともみ@swim_shu

え?何のための国庫返納なの?93%まで下げて売る?これじゃ外国資本が買うよね😨元から相続税や固定資産税、そんなに取らなきゃ維持できた話でしょ。日本人から資産を手放させるため?国家・国益という意識が皆無だよ...

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たまゆら
たまゆら@singing65937378·
相続税とは、日露戦争の戦費を賄うために作られた税制です。 本来は戦費を完済した1986年に廃止されるべきものでした。 つまり未だに毟り取り続けることには何の大義もなく、ただ惰性で取られ続けているのです。
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アナグマ
アナグマ@anagumakamo·
今日の地域外はフランスの隠者にノクラテオの知らないルートを教えてもらった
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tk8d32(リクエスト再開中)
何がすごいかって、著作権侵害・訴訟ガン無視した上での6兆円の年間損失ということ。権利問題クリアしたところでOpenAI自体維持できない可能性が高いことを隠して営業かけている。ソフトバンクもいい加減夢見てないで損切りした方がいいんじゃないの?
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石を使うな徳川メフィなんとかEX
やっぱリベリオンのガンカタはここが真骨頂よね アニメのガンカタはここまではやらんもんな
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かねこしんや
かねこしんや@kanekoS3·
わぁ……、待って、 「ダーククリスタル」が無料で配信されてます😳(吹替版ですけど…) youtu.be/47jezcuOo90?si… ぼくがファンタジー世界やモンスターを大好きになったのは、かなりの割合がこの映画のおかげです!!!!😻
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