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Blog archive

November 2024

October 2024

ARBORIST WALK: NOT FOR TREE HUGGERS ONLY!
10/29/2024

Bill Wishner: Visual Hunter
10/29/2024

Can a Village Group Fix Our Healthcare System?
10/29/2024

Community Board Directors Strengthen Village Board
10/29/2024

Connecting with Village Connections: The A, B, C, & D’s of Medicare @ 65+
10/29/2024

Grief is a Journey: Two Paths Taken
10/29/2024

Message from the President
10/29/2024

Promoting Informed & Involved Voters
10/29/2024

What Will Be Your Legacy?
10/29/2024

1619, Approaching the Election...
10/27/2024

Beyond and Within the Village - A Star is Born
10/17/2024

Happiness by Priscilla Leonard
10/11/2024

Those Winter Sundays by Robert Hayden
10/11/2024

Unpainted Door by Louise Gluck
10/11/2024

In the Evening by Billy Collins
10/10/2024

Wild Geese by Mary Oliver
10/10/2024

Betty Kilby, A Family History
10/01/2024

Betty Kilby, A Family History
10/01/2024

Betty Kilby, A Family History
10/01/2024

September 2024

August 2024

1619 Wide Ranging Interests
08/19/2024

1619 Wide Ranging Interests
08/19/2024

First Anniversary
08/19/2024

Alexandra Leaving by Leonard Cohen
08/16/2024

Muse des Beaux Arts by W. H. Auden
08/16/2024

The God Abandons Antony by Constantinos P. Cavafy
08/16/2024

Ch – Ch – Ch –Changes
08/15/2024

Cultural Activities Team offers an ‘embarrassment of riches’
08/15/2024

Engaging in Pasadena Village
08/15/2024

Future Housing Options
08/15/2024

Message from the President
08/15/2024

There Are Authors Among Us
08/15/2024

Villagers Welcome New Members at the Tournament Park Picnic
08/15/2024

Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night by Dylan Thomas
08/14/2024

A narrow Fellow in the Grass by Emily Dickinson
08/13/2024

Haikus
08/13/2024

One Art by Elizabeth Bishop
08/13/2024

Poem 20 by Pablo Neruda
08/13/2024

Still I Rise by Maya Angelou
08/13/2024

Trees by Joyce Kilmer
08/13/2024

July 2024

June 2024

May 2024

Emergency Preparedness: Are You Ready?
05/28/2024

Farewell from the 2023/24 Social Work Interns
05/28/2024

Gina on the Horizon
05/28/2024

Mark Your Calendars for the Healthy Aging Research California Virtual Summit
05/28/2024

Meet Our New Development Associate
05/28/2024

Putting the Strategic Plan into Practice
05/28/2024

Washington Park: Pasadena’s Rediscovered Gem
05/28/2024

Introducing Civil Rights Discussions
05/22/2024

Rumor of Humor #2416
05/14/2024

Rumor of Humor #2417
05/14/2024

Rumor of Humor #2417
05/14/2024

Rumor of Humor #2418
05/14/2024

Springtime Visitors
05/07/2024

Freezing for a Good Cause – Credit, That Is
05/02/2024

No Discussion Meeting on May 3rd
05/02/2024

An Apparently Normal Person Author Presentation and Book-signing
05/01/2024

Flintridge Center: Pasadena Village’s Neighbor That Changes Lives
05/01/2024

Pasadena Celebrates Older Americans Month 2024
05/01/2024

The 2024 Pasadena Village Volunteer Appreciation Lunch
05/01/2024

Woman of the Year: Katy Townsend
05/01/2024

April 2024

March 2024

February 2024

January 2024

Science: Muon, Neanderthals, IBM Project Debater

By Bob Snodgrass
Posted: 04/12/2021
Tags:
Attending – Barbara, Howard, Bruce and Bob

This was a disturbingly small meeting, although no one was to blame. I believe that we all
enjoyed ourselves; and we had time to discuss scientific issues in depth. Because of the
small attendance, this a shorter summary than usual. At least the Ingenuity helicopter lived
up to expectations.

Barbara spoke first and showed material from two Scientific American papers. The first
concerned the inner ears of Neanderthals, which can be studied in detail by CT scans of
skulls, even those thousands of years old. From such scans, it is possible to construct
educated guesses about the hearing range of any animal. Those scans showed no similarity
of the inner ears of chimpanzees and ancient hominids to those of Neanderthals and
modern humans, which are close together. This makes it likely that Neanderthals soke,
even though presumed differences in the larynx suggested in the past that Neanderthals
didn’t speak, consistent with a general tendency to underestimate Neanderthal function.
Her second paper concerned brain organoids formed in culture from human stem cells
compared with organoids grown from other stem cells in which the important brain gene
NOVA1, which differs by one base pair between humans and Neanderthals, is replaced by
the Neanderthal form of NOVA1, using CRISPR techniques. It takes months to grow the pea-
sized organoids in culture, Those with the Neanderthal form of NOVA1 differ in appearance
and electrical behavior. It’s very difficult to know what to make of this. Many genes differ
between modern humans and Neanderthals, and we know that sensory input has a
profound effect on the organization of the growing mammalian brain. Organoids are
deprived of all sensory input from the beginning.

Howard then spoke of the much publicized aberrations found in detailed studies of the
behavior of muons in two major centers. As he stressed, that these detailed studies of such
a transient particle are done and agree in different labs is amazing, because the average
half-life of the muon is only 2.2 useconds (millionths of a second) and yet FermiLab now
and the Brookhaven National laboratory in 2001 both obtained similar anomalous
magnetic moments for the muon, anomalous because significantly different than predicted
by the standard model. Muons are elementary particles similar to the electron, with an
electric charge of −1 e and a spin of 1/2, but with a much greater mass , Muons, electrons
and the tau particle make up the family of leptons, which are not known to contain smaller
particles. Some subatomic particles have even shorter lives, the top quark being the
shortest. We’ll have to wait for a third lab to conform this anomalous behavior; if confirmed
it will not mean that the whole realm of subatomic particles is turned upside down,
important though it is.

Bob then spoke about the IBM Project Debater, begun in 2012, which has debated 5
premier human debaters in the last 2 ½ years. Conceived as a sequel to Deep Blue amd
Watson, machines that convincingly defeated the best humans at chess and Jeopardy,
Project Debater faced a more open ended challenge. The four main modules are: argument
mining, an argument knowledge base (AKB), argument rebuttal and debate construction. The
system has not been able to beat a human debater so far, but has performed surprisingly well.
Because of the open-ended nature of debates- debaters can’t invent words, but they may combine words and emotion in unusual ways, I expect human debaters to remain supreme for many years.

You can access one debate on YouTube and see what you make of it,
Our next meeting will be Monday, May 10, at 4 PM. Here are two scary stories, at least scary for
me:
Story 1
Story 2



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