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35 votes
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Recent French research indicates that certain food emulsifiers may increase the risk of type 2 diabetes
18 votes -
Research on Earth’s raging fever of 2023-24 is picking up
9 votes -
Male birth control gel (that is applied to the shoulders) is safe and effective, new trial findings show
72 votes -
Internet addiction affects the behavior and development of adolescents
8 votes -
Holotypic Occlupanid Research Group
12 votes -
Why the pandemic probably started in a lab, in five key points
44 votes -
Extracting interpretable features from Claude 3 Sonnet
13 votes -
Frozen human brain tissue was successfully revived for the first time
34 votes -
UNM researchers find microplastics in canine and human testicular tissue
23 votes -
How much research is being written by large language models?
14 votes -
Police are not primarily crime fighters
43 votes -
Wiley to shutter nineteen more journals, some tainted by fraud
20 votes -
New candidate genes for human male infertility found by analyzing gorillas' unusual reproductive system
7 votes -
How do you take notes while reading? Do you have a “marginalia” process? What has helped you learn better and retain new knowledge?
I aspire to better equip myself as a researcher and writer. As part of this, for me at least, I think that developing a note-taking (or marginalia) system would be useful. I read a ton of...
I aspire to better equip myself as a researcher and writer. As part of this, for me at least, I think that developing a note-taking (or marginalia) system would be useful. I read a ton of nonfiction and have especially been into history, economics, and geopolitics lately…but my “system” tends to just “highlight” insightful stuff in my Kindle and then…everything kinda falls off the map for me. I should probably start going back, reviewing the highlights, and making notes in a separate notebook/app/document for later research and writing purposes.
I thought it might be interesting to learn more about everyone’s reading/studying routine and specifically note-taking processes. I’m especially curious about those who blog/publish writings, and how they work to gather their thoughts and information as they are reading.
If you don’t mind sharing a bit about your note taking process or systems, here are some questions for discussion:
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What is your process, generally? (Do you read print/digital/audio? Does your note taking change depending on different formats? Do you highlight with specific colors for certain reasons? What do you find yourself notating most frequently?)
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Do you use pen/paper or is there a specific app you like to use for note-taking/research purposes?
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If you use an app, what is your process for book notes? Do you take notes on paper and then transfer it to the digital app later when you’re reviewing? Do you take notes directly into the app?
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Any other advice for someone looking to improve their learning/knowledge through more focused and intentional reading and note taking?
31 votes -
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Spending cuts are often false economies that end up costing society dearly
16 votes -
mRNA cancer vaccine reprograms immune system to tackle glioblastoma
12 votes -
What cats’ love of boxes and squares can tell us about their visual perception
30 votes -
The Homo Economicus as a prototype of a psychopath? A conceptual analysis and implications for business research and teaching.
6 votes -
‘Like a film in my mind’: hyperphantasia and the quest to understand vivid imaginations
18 votes -
A primer on Bitcoin cross-border flows: Measurement and drivers
2 votes -
Turning old maps into 3D digital models of lost neighborhoods
9 votes -
When provided with CVE descriptions of 15 different vulnerabilities and a set of tools useful for exploitation, GPT-4 was capable of autonomously exploiting 13 of which, yielding an 87% success rate
17 votes -
Canadian science gets biggest boost to PhD and postdoc pay in twenty years
7 votes -
Hogzilla or Jaws? Wild pigs kill more people than sharks, research reveals.
13 votes -
Burden of stroke attributable to nonoptimal temperature in 204 countries and territories
7 votes -
A pat on the back statistically improves free throw numbers in basketball
17 votes -
Why large language models like ChatGPT treat Black- and White-sounding names differently
10 votes -
How Finding Your Roots turns DNA research into essential TV
5 votes -
Loneliness can kill, and new research shows middle-aged Americans are particularly vulnerable
31 votes -
There is no evidence that CBD products reduce chronic pain, and taking them is a waste of money and potentially harmful to health, new research finds
58 votes -
Novo Nordisk Foundation is entering into a partnership with Nvidia to establish a national AI research centre in Denmark – will be home to one of the world's most powerful supercomputers
5 votes -
Root cause of Alzheimer's may be fat buildup in brain cells, research suggests
22 votes -
HIV in cell culture can be completely eliminated using CRISPR-Cas gene editing technology, increasing hopes of cure
18 votes -
Scientists studied how cicadas pee. Their insights could shed light on fluid dynamics.
7 votes -
Argentina president Javier Milei’s actions after taking office have research institutions facing shutdown. Scientists protest.
18 votes -
Tests show high-temperature superconducting magnets are ready for fusion
10 votes -
Research sheds light on new strategy to treat infertility
5 votes -
On International Women's Day, Northern European countries stand out for women who are looking to develop their careers – Iceland secured the top spot
3 votes -
Research paper compares LLM responses based on politeness of requests and finds quality difference
28 votes -
Annoying hospital beeps are causing hundreds of deaths a year
27 votes -
Millions of research papers at risk of disappearing from the Internet: An analysis of DOIs suggests that digital preservation is not keeping up with burgeoning scholarly knowledge
26 votes -
What are some interesting machine learning research papers you found?
Here's a place to share machine learning research papers that seem interesting to you. I'm no expert, but sometimes I skim them, and maybe there are some folks on Tilde who know more than I do?...
Here's a place to share machine learning research papers that seem interesting to you. I'm no expert, but sometimes I skim them, and maybe there are some folks on Tilde who know more than I do?
One paper per top-level post, and please link to arXiv (if relevant) and quote a bit of the abstract.
11 votes -
How parents' trauma leaves biological traces in children
18 votes -
MRI research shows live music makes us more emotional than recordings
21 votes -
Out of the rabbit hole? New research shows people can change their minds about conspiracy theories.
14 votes -
Why joining a club is good for democracy
11 votes -
Frequent/long-term use of the Apple Vision Pro may rewire our brains in unexpected ways
17 votes -
Progress deferred: Lessons from mRNA vaccine development
9 votes -
What's an obelisk, anyway?
25 votes