Archive for the ‘collective intelligence’ Category

What Impact on Your Business does this suggest: Higher Intelligence Associated with Delayed Gratification

Tuesday, September 9th, 2008

Yale University research reports that Most people prefer to have their rewards immediately, rather than have to wait for them, but would what if the rewards of the future are greater than the rewards available now – would you be prepared to wait? What if you were offered £20 now, or you could wait and have £100 in six months time – what would you choose? Being able wait for more valuable rewards is associated with higher intelligence, and now researchers believe they have found a region of the brain that is involved in both intelligence and what psychologists call “delay discounting” – the inability to resist the temptation of a smaller reward in lieu of recieving a larger reward at a later date. Discounting future rewards too much is a form of impulsivity, and an important way in which we can neglect to exert self-control.

Previous research suggests that higher intelligence is related to better self-control, but the reasons for this link are unknown. Psychologists Noah A. Shamosh and Jeremy R. Gray, from Yale University, and their colleagues, were interested in testing the idea that certain brain regions supporting short-term memory play a critical role in this relationship.

The results show that participants with the greatest activation in the brain region known as the anterior prefrontal cortex also scored the highest on intelligence tests and exhibited the best self-control during the financial reward test. This was the only brain region to show this relation. The results appear in the September issue of Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

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Semantic Web: Borderless Information for Healthcare, Climate Change, User Generated Content

Monday, October 29th, 2007

These developments are strategically aligned with our company’s roots. Shared information via a common framework for data to be shared and reused across application, enterprise, and community boundaries.

Examples:

Semantic Web (‘SemWeb”) Technology is being used to share information at the Australian Great Barrier Reef Park Authority. Users (“observers”) of coral bleaching can self-report incidents to the authority to improve knowledge of the millions of square miles of coast around Australia.

Craigslist, a company with less than 50 employees champions user generated content for Collectivie Wisdom. This is a hugely disruptive development because Craigslist is one of the top 20 most visited sites on the web.

Semantic Webs are being leveraged as a mechanism for improved health care. The World Wide Web Consortium and the Semantic Web for Health Care and Life Sciences Interest Group , which is chartered to deploy standardized Semantic Web specifications to provide services defined by the user community. Looking to overcome obstacles to data sharing in the life science research and health services communities, W3C seeks a framework supporting semantically rich system, process, and information interoperability. According to W3C, embedding of semantics into medical and research information will offer better access to information needed to find cures for diseases, make drugs safer and more affordable, and enable health care providers to offer individualized clinical management.

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