31 JAN 2012 by ideonexus
The Importance of Accuracy
In 1905, a physicist measuring the thermal conductivity of copper would have faced, unknowingly, a very small systematic error due to the heating of his equipment and sample by the absorption of cosmic rays, then unknown to physics. In early 1946, an opinion poller, studying Japanese opinion as to who won the war, would have faced a very small systematic error due to the neglect of the 17 Japanese holdouts, who were discovered later north of Saipan. These cases are entirely parallel. Social, ...Folksonomies: statistics measurment
Folksonomies: statistics measurment
Comparing an error in measuring the thermal conductivity of copper to surveying Japanese after WWII.
20 MAY 2011 by ideonexus
DNA as an Archive of the Past
Each individual's genome, in any one generation, will be a sample from the species
database. Different species will have different databases because of their different ancestral worlds.
The database in the gene pool of camels will encode information about deserts and how to survive
in them. The DNA in mole gene pools will contain instructions and hints for survival in dark, moist
soil. The DNA in predator gene pools will increasingly contain information about prey animals,
their evasive trick...A repository of ancestral survival techniques.