This article uses the word “conceptions” throughout, but it sounds like the only data is about births. These births would have all occurred after the recessions started.
Did the original paper rule out the hypothesis that the recession actually affected births via an increase in miscarriages and abortions instead? I can’t access it.
Even better, add an indicator light to the hardware that shows the OS is asking and not an app (although this suffers from the same problem that users need to notice something is absent).
>voting could reduce the likelihood of the draft being reinstated
... only in the unlikely event that my vote changes the outcome of an election, and the candidate I voted for would also be able to affect such a big legislative change.
Millenials as a group might be worse off if many traded away their right to vote, but that's not the same thing as saying that individuals benefit in a tangible way from that right.
Maybe the Department of Justice? I don't know if they go for that sort of thing. The only other option I can think of off the top of my head is the FCC.
As a non-lawyer, I'd expect to miss something important from the legislative text.
Your point about relying on other organizations is a good one, though. I generally take this approach, but I wasn't expecting anything to have been published yet on such a new bill. It looks like the ACLU, NAACP Legal Defense Fund, and SPLC all issued positive press releases, though.
Reforming bail sounds like a good idea. I don't know why anyone would trust Harris on the issue, though.
If she wanted to shrink jails when she was California's Attorney General, she could have respected court orders requiring prisoners to be released.
Likewise, she could have stopped "defending convictions obtained by local prosecutors who inserted a false confession into the transcript of a police interrogation, lied under oath and withheld crucial evidence from the defense."
No one in this thread claimed to be God. It's worth remembering that the whole point of Hospital IT is to facilitate the doctors' and administrators' work.
Several of the universal perturbation vectors in Figure 4 remind me a lot of Deep Dream's textures.
I wonder what it is about these high-saturation, stripy-spiraly bits that these networks are responding to.
Is it something inherent in natural images? In the training algorithm? In our image compression algorithms? Presumably, the networks would work better if they weren't so hypersensitive to these patterns, so finding a way to dial that down seems like it could be pretty fruitful.
Right. And to be even more specific, they are not compensated in any way (except occasionally by perks with zero marginal cost, like a free online subscription).
Some editors, who manage peer review, do get paid, but the reviewers don't.
Did the original paper rule out the hypothesis that the recession actually affected births via an increase in miscarriages and abortions instead? I can’t access it.