Discover and read the best of Twitter Threads about #bornonthisday

Most recents (3)

To help me get back into some sort of routine, I’m going to restart my #paperperday challenge and finish when normal life resumes. Yes, your timeline with be spammed with papers focusing on psychology, cognitive neuroscience, reproducible, and transparent research, again!
#1 Seven Steps Toward Transparency and Replicability in Psychological Science psyarxiv.com/32uz6/ by @dstephenlindsay

“these are...disciplines, practices, even aspirations...I’m still working on them myself...most of us would do better science if we worked on these“ Image
#2 Why Are Self-Report and Behavioral Measures Weakly Correlated? By @dangjunhua @KMKing_Psych @minzlicht

“These tasks tend to have low reliability, making them unsuitable for psychiatric diagnoses of individuals”

#measurementschmeasurement

doi.org/10.1016/j.tics… ImageImageImage
Read 51 tweets
“You didn't see me on television, you didn't see news stories about me. The kind of role that I tried to play was to pick up pieces or put together pieces out of which I hoped organization might come. My theory is, strong people don't need strong leaders.”
Happy birthday Ms. Ella Image
“The Negro and white students, North and South, are seeking to rid America of the scourge of racial seg-regation and discrimination—not only at lunch counters, but in every aspect of life. ~ Ella Baker, “ Bigger Than a Hamburger”
Dr. @BarbaraRansby has written the essential biography of Ella Baker. It deserves to be on every bookshelf.
uncpress.org/book/978080785…
#EllaBaker #BornOnThisDay Image
Read 6 tweets
#BornOnThisDay 200 years ago, Sir Joseph Bazalgette brought a lot to London: poo-free streets, super sewers and some epic moustache realness. In his honour, here's a Bazalthread:
Bazalgette lived in a time when the streets of London ran with human filth. The city's patchwork system of waste disposal, relied on night-soil collectors who emptied cesspits into rivers like the Fleet and Tyburn.
Long story, short: it was rank.
See here a 19th century Londoner taking a afternoon boat trip.
Read 17 tweets

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