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posted by takyon on Saturday December 15 2018, @07:40PM   Printer-friendly
from the TFS-is-too-long dept.

It's not often you open a mathematical research paper and find a Pablo Neruda poem. But a new study in the journal Nature Human Behavior begins just like that: "Es tan corto el amor, y tan largo el olvido." Translation? "Love is so short, forgetting is so long."

The paper, titled "The universal decay of collective memory and attention," is an ambitious attempt to turn the slow slippage of cultural memory—the way a hit song lingers, or doesn't—into a quantitative method for measuring the way our attention to various cultural products declines. It seeks, in other words, to turn the most abstract cognitive phenomenon into a cold, hard equation.

[...] The process of decline was similar among all of the artifacts the researchers studied, but the amount of time it took for each to fade varied by domain. Biographies lasted the longest, circulating in the collective memory for 20 to 30 years. Music disappeared the fastest, lasting just 5.6 years on average.

[...] The work could fuel research into our species' tendency to forget large spans of history, with landmark events tucked away into our cultural memory, sans context of the surrounding years and minus the perspective of characters we don't care for. Perhaps understanding how quickly these historical moments fade—morphing from the truth we lived to the condensed narrative we save for posterity—could keep us from constantly repeating ourselves.

How long can an event hold humanity's attention?

Sorry for the long link to the paper. The shorter link gives access to the abstract.

[Paper - Abstract] The universal decay of collective memory and attention


Original Submission

 
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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by MichaelDavidCrawford on Saturday December 15 2018, @11:46PM (5 children)

    by MichaelDavidCrawford (2339) Subscriber Badge <mdcrawford@gmail.com> on Saturday December 15 2018, @11:46PM (#774968) Homepage Journal

    Good luck finding something to do with your lady on Saturday night when no one has had singing, dancing or acting lessons in high school.

    Do you like to read books? Fiction you say?

    Good luck with that.

    --
    Yes I Have No Bananas. [gofundme.com]
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  • (Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 16 2018, @01:24AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 16 2018, @01:24AM (#774999)

    You know people sang and danced before there were such things as lessons and high schools, right?

    And several of my favorite authors were originally trained in STEM fields; of course Asimov, Clarke, and Heinlein, but more contemporary examples include Larry Niven (mathematics), Poul Anderson (physics), and arguably Jerry Pournelle (psychology and polsci), depending where you draw the line for soft sciences in your STEM definition.

  • (Score: 3, Touché) by fyngyrz on Sunday December 16 2018, @01:33AM

    by fyngyrz (6567) on Sunday December 16 2018, @01:33AM (#775003) Journal

    Good luck finding something to do with your lady on Saturday night when no one has had singing, dancing or acting lessons in high school.

    Wait, what?

    That's it? That's just... pitiful.

    And singing? Acting? These are the enabling top of your list of what you want to do with a partner on Saturday night?

    I can see the dancing being at least useful for the dance-oriented (though I certainly think it's absurd to assert that "lessons in high school" are required to engage in such pursuits) but the other two don't seem to me to be things where the lack of same would cripple most people's Saturday evening.

    I mean, let's think about a nice Saturday night. There's the big one, a romantic interval leading, hopefully, to wild monkey sex and consensual showering. Some enjoy getting high together, either at home or out and about. There's sharable entertainment of all kinds: the play house, the movie house (or home theater — here, we've quit going out for that one as I built us a nice theater here), the ballet, comedy clubs, sports events, dinner out, charity events, visiting friends, visiting family, taking a nice walk...

    Then there are more homey things one might enjoy, such as crafting, working on the home, studying together, discussing current events, spending some quality time with the pets and/or the kids, having friends over (the opposite of going to visit them and possessed of a completely different vibe in my opinion, taking a drive (car, bike, all terrain vehicle, boat, whatever), reading books together, or reading a book to each other, playing games (video, board, cards, strip-whatever floats your boats), etc.

    Hell, you could go to dance lessons together.

    I mean, come on. If you and yours are actually inclined to have a good time, it's just not the case that a lack of any of "singing, dancing, acting" in high school should slow you down even a little bit. If it does, it wasn't the fault of a limited high school education, I assure you.

    --
    Say it with flowers - Send a Triffid.

  • (Score: 2) by hendrikboom on Sunday December 16 2018, @03:57AM (1 child)

    by hendrikboom (1125) Subscriber Badge on Sunday December 16 2018, @03:57AM (#775039) Homepage Journal

    If you're in Portland, there's this lovely tram system that travels all over the area -- a scenic tour.

    Seriously, I was in Portland for a short while a few years ago, and that tram system was delightful!

    Too bad I wasn't there long enough with free time to try and meet you.

    -- hendrik

  • (Score: 0, Spam) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 16 2018, @09:59AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 16 2018, @09:59AM (#775084)

    ANAL SEX