The ossification of belief

Quite regularly my theoretical work on AI throws up or suggests ideas that are applicable to other areas of study. A detail in a structure I am investigating will spark across to another field and form an idea that is not directly relevant to what I am doing, but interesting none the less.

A recent example of this is the idea that beliefs in people become entrenched over time. Any belief, whether it be about the state of the world, a behaviour, a good way to do things or even muscle memory. When learning to type or changing a password how often do you find yourself making the same mistake each time, until it slowly gets unlearnt?

Beliefs seem to be most malleable when they are first formed. Before any reinforcement has strengthened and solidified the belief.  As such the best time to correct an incorrect belief is as soon as it is formed.

Some lifestyles tend to lend themselves to an easier engagement with modification of personal beliefs. Typically where incorrect beliefs get challenged and can be shown to be wrong in a way that the individual can accept. Research science is a prime example.

Where an individual encounters no challenges to their belief set, or the beliefs are of a form that have no obvious mechanism to prove them right or wrong, then an incorrect belief once formed is likely to linger for a long time.

Playlist

Under pressure / Queen and David Bowie

The first week

The first week has been an avalanche of starting projects. Probably too many projects. Some of them have sustained through the week and others have been put on hold quite quickly.

The core project, some theoretical research into AI techniques, is moving along. The availability of time to be able to work on it has sustained its pace of progress, if not yet significantly accelerating its pace.

Other projects include learning Mandarin using the HelloChinese app on Android (a DuoLingo style app for Mandarin.)  It is early days but Mandarin is actually quite a nice language to learn.  I think a part of this is knowing that I have time to learn it – rather than having to run to a self-imposed demand to try to get through the lessons as fast as possible, or to a given timescale.

Music has also come to the forefront.  As tracks pop into my head I now stop for five minutes, find it on YouTube and listen to the track.  The source of the playlists that I can hopefully sustain over the long term.  It has highlighted to me that I need to discover new music – and that there are tracts of time where I was just not engaged with the chart and so have no sense of what was the excellent music of the time.

Playlist

Whatever / Oasis

Wake up it’s a beautiful morning / The Boo Radleys

Somebody to love / Queen

A first step

“Take care.” The words hung in my mind as the reverberation of the door quickly dissipated.

The tube and the train were far emptier than normal. As I sat letting the carriages transport me to a new life phrases from the music at the end of The Matrix and Greengrass’s Bourne drifted through my head.

On arriving home the last shards of sun beaming from a clear blue sky still cast their light. A smile, then a grin and a short laugh expressed my emotion more than words could.

The weekend is first but then day one will arrive.

Playlist

You ain’t seen nothing yet / Bachman Turner Overdrive

Wake up / Rage Against the Machine

Extreme Ways (Jason Bourne) / Moby