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Sam Gershman
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Sam Gershman
@gershbrain
Professor, Department of Psychology and Center for Brain Science, Harvard University
Cambridge, MA
gershmanlab.com/index.html
Joined July 2016
58
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16.5K
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  • user avatar
    Sam Gershman
    @gershbrain
    Apr 15, 2020
    p-hacking: when a child asks multiple parents for permission until they get a positive result.
  • user avatar
    Sam Gershman
    @gershbrain
    Aug 23, 2018
    My 3-year-old daughter said she wanted to be a professor, so I asked her what professors do. "Talk to each other, drink wine, and put trees on their heads." Sounds about right.
  • user avatar
    Sam Gershman
    @gershbrain
    Feb 7, 2022
    Everyone racking their brains about explainable AI should have a look at the cognitive science literature on how people explain their own behavior. People have very detailed explanations. The only problem is that these explanations can be very wrong!
  • user avatar
    Sam Gershman
    @gershbrain
    Apr 29, 2021
    Coming in October! What Makes Us Smart: The Computational Logic of Human Cognition
    Cover of What Makes Us Smart
    What Makes Us Smart
    From press.princeton.edu
  • user avatar
    Sam Gershman
    @gershbrain
    Oct 7, 2020
    I was thinking about writing a paper called "What the hell is the insula doing?" but then realized I could write this paper about literally any brain region.
  • user avatar
    Sam Gershman
    @gershbrain
    Sep 13, 2020
    I was asked to present some advice to young investigators. Here are my slides. Happy to hear suggestions! gershmanlab.webfactional.com/docs/advice_yo…
  • user avatar
    Sam Gershman
    @gershbrain
    Aug 7, 2022
    As a reviewer for NeurIPS, I'm surprised that no reviewers want to give high ratings to any papers. Even those I gave an 8 or 9 to, nobody else gave higher than 6. Why is everyone so negative? A good paper doesn't have to be perfect as long as it's making progress.
  • user avatar
    Sam Gershman
    @gershbrain
    Sep 27, 2024
    Before you write a review of a paper in which you say "It's mostly meh" (a direct quote), stop to consider that you might be talking to a grad student who spent years on the project and is now internalizing the social norms of their profession.
    57K
  • user avatar
    Sam Gershman
    @gershbrain
    Aug 26, 2022
    Replying to @gershbrain
    Nature Communications charges $5890/article and has published 159 articles in the last 7 days. Much of that is paid by federal grants. This means that the money spent on *one* journal over the course of 2 weeks could support an entire graduate cohort for a year.
  • user avatar
    Sam Gershman
    @gershbrain
    Oct 8, 2019
    Wired is using something called "hype", a concept from quantum mechanics, to confuse familiar concepts with cutting-edge research.
    user avatar
    WIRED
    @WIRED
    Oct 8, 2019
    Stitch Fix is using something called eigenvector decomposition, a concept from quantum mechanics, to tease apart the overlapping “notes” in an individual’s style. Using physics, the team can better understand the complexities of the clients’ style minds. wired.trib.al/IvWQkYM
  • user avatar
    Sam Gershman
    @gershbrain
    Dec 20, 2020
    I told my 3yo that anything can break with enough force and he asked me if holes can break.
  • user avatar
    Sam Gershman
    @gershbrain
    Apr 15, 2020
    Replying to @gershbrain
    Needless to say, I told my kids to preregister their design and correct for multiple parents.
  • user avatar
    Sam Gershman
    @gershbrain
    Jun 24, 2020
    People sometimes ask me about reading suggestions for cognitive science and related topics, so I thought I would put together a (highly subjective) annotated reading list: gershmanlab.webfactional.com/docs/Getting_s… I might expand this later since I'm sure I forgot some things.
  • user avatar
    Sam Gershman
    @gershbrain
    Dec 19, 2019
    I don't understand "data available upon request". Isn't that actually more work for the authors? Wouldn't it be easier to document it once and put it somewhere on the internet rather than having to respond to e-mails long after you've forgotten where you've even put the data?

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