24 JAN 2015 by ideonexus
Von Neuman and Predicting the Weather
I remember a talk that Von Neumann gave at Princeton around 1950, describing the glorious future which he then saw for his computers. Most of the people that he hired for his computer project in the early days were meteorologists. Meteorology was the big thing on his horizon. He said, as soon as we have good computers, we shall be able to divide the phenomena of meteorology cleanly into two categories, the stable and the unstable. The unstable phenomena are those which are upset by small dist...Folksonomies: prediction chaos theory
Folksonomies: prediction chaos theory
20 MAY 2011 by ideonexus
An Experiment With a Tadpole's Development
An early classic experiment by the Nobel Prize-winning embryologist Roger Sperry illustrates the principle perfectly. Sperry and a colleague took a tadpole and removed a tiny square of skin from the back. They removed another square, the same size, from the belly. They then regrafted the two squares, but each in the other's place: the belly skin was grafted on the back, and the back skin on the belly. When the tadpole grew up into a frog, the result was rather pretty, as experiments in embryo...Folksonomies: biology experiments
Folksonomies: biology experiments
Taking a piece of skin from the belly and switching it with a piece from the back caused the frog to scratch its belly when you tickle its back.