Only the unsatisfied do things. The satisfied do nothing. Unsatisfaction is the stimulus to achievement. Satisfaction is destruction and leads down to the chamber of death.
–Jack London

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PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Mike Driver
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

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Only the unsatisfied do things. The satisfied do nothing. Unsatisfaction is the stimulus to achievement. Satisfaction is destruction and leads down to the chamber of death.
–Jack London
― Haruki Murakami, A Wild Sheep Chase
Hans Enzensberger
many people want to capture you and make you pathetic in a way that is pleasing to them, but you must evade their grasp
I need a vacation, a change of scenery, a miracle, a divine intervention, and a few other things
It’s so crazy that tumblr put me in jail for over a year
Interesting Papers for Week 10, 2025
Simplified internal models in human control of complex objects. Bazzi, S., Stansfield, S., Hogan, N., & Sternad, D. (2024). PLOS Computational Biology, 20(11), e1012599.
Co-contraction embodies uncertainty: An optimal feedforward strategy for robust motor control. Berret, B., Verdel, D., Burdet, E., & Jean, F. (2024). PLOS Computational Biology, 20(11), e1012598.
Distributed representations of behaviour-derived object dimensions in the human visual system. Contier, O., Baker, C. I., & Hebart, M. N. (2024). Nature Human Behaviour, 8(11), 2179–2193.
Thalamic spindles and Up states coordinate cortical and hippocampal co-ripples in humans. Dickey, C. W., Verzhbinsky, I. A., Kajfez, S., Rosen, B. Q., Gonzalez, C. E., Chauvel, P. Y., Cash, S. S., Pati, S., & Halgren, E. (2024). PLOS Biology, 22(11), e3002855.
Preconfigured cortico-thalamic neural dynamics constrain movement-associated thalamic activity. González-Pereyra, P., Sánchez-Lobato, O., Martínez-Montalvo, M. G., Ortega-Romero, D. I., Pérez-Díaz, C. I., Merchant, H., Tellez, L. A., & Rueda-Orozco, P. E. (2024). Nature Communications, 15, 10185.
A tradeoff between efficiency and robustness in the hippocampal-neocortical memory network during human and rodent sleep. Hahn, M. A., Lendner, J. D., Anwander, M., Slama, K. S. J., Knight, R. T., Lin, J. J., & Helfrich, R. F. (2024). Progress in Neurobiology, 242, 102672.
NREM sleep improves behavioral performance by desynchronizing cortical circuits. Kharas, N., Chelaru, M. I., Eagleman, S., Parajuli, A., & Dragoi, V. (2024). Science, 386(6724), 892–897.
Human hippocampus and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex infer and update latent causes during social interaction. Mahmoodi, A., Luo, S., Harbison, C., Piray, P., & Rushworth, M. F. S. (2024). Neuron, 112(22), 3796-3809.e9.
Can compression take place in working memory without a central contribution of long-term memory? Mathy, F., Friedman, O., & Gauvrit, N. (2024). Memory & Cognition, 52(8), 1726–1736.
Offline hippocampal reactivation during dentate spikes supports flexible memory. McHugh, S. B., Lopes-dos-Santos, V., Castelli, M., Gava, G. P., Thompson, S. E., Tam, S. K. E., Hartwich, K., Perry, B., Toth, R., Denison, T., Sharott, A., & Dupret, D. (2024). Neuron, 112(22), 3768-3781.e8.
Reward Bases: A simple mechanism for adaptive acquisition of multiple reward types. Millidge, B., Song, Y., Lak, A., Walton, M. E., & Bogacz, R. (2024). PLOS Computational Biology, 20(11), e1012580.
Hidden state inference requires abstract contextual representations in the ventral hippocampus. Mishchanchuk, K., Gregoriou, G., Qü, A., Kastler, A., Huys, Q. J. M., Wilbrecht, L., & MacAskill, A. F. (2024). Science, 386(6724), 926–932.
Dopamine builds and reveals reward-associated latent behavioral attractors. Naudé, J., Sarazin, M. X. B., Mondoloni, S., Hannesse, B., Vicq, E., Amegandjin, F., Mourot, A., Faure, P., & Delord, B. (2024). Nature Communications, 15, 9825.
Compensation to visual impairments and behavioral plasticity in navigating ants. Schwarz, S., Clement, L., Haalck, L., Risse, B., & Wystrach, A. (2024). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 121(48), e2410908121.
Replay shapes abstract cognitive maps for efficient social navigation. Son, J.-Y., Vives, M.-L., Bhandari, A., & FeldmanHall, O. (2024). Nature Human Behaviour, 8(11), 2156–2167.
Rapid modulation of striatal cholinergic interneurons and dopamine release by satellite astrocytes. Stedehouder, J., Roberts, B. M., Raina, S., Bossi, S., Liu, A. K. L., Doig, N. M., McGerty, K., Magill, P. J., Parkkinen, L., & Cragg, S. J. (2024). Nature Communications, 15, 10017.
A hierarchical active inference model of spatial alternation tasks and the hippocampal-prefrontal circuit. Van de Maele, T., Dhoedt, B., Verbelen, T., & Pezzulo, G. (2024). Nature Communications, 15, 9892.
Cognitive reserve against Alzheimer’s pathology is linked to brain activity during memory formation. Vockert, N., Machts, J., Kleineidam, L., Nemali, A., Incesoy, E. I., Bernal, J., Schütze, H., Yakupov, R., Peters, O., Gref, D., Schneider, L. S., Preis, L., Priller, J., Spruth, E. J., Altenstein, S., Schneider, A., Fliessbach, K., Wiltfang, J., Rostamzadeh, A., … Ziegler, G. (2024). Nature Communications, 15, 9815.
The human posterior parietal cortices orthogonalize the representation of different streams of information concurrently coded in visual working memory. Xu, Y. (2024). PLOS Biology, 22(11), e3002915.
Challenging the Bayesian confidence hypothesis in perceptual decision-making. Xue, K., Shekhar, M., & Rahnev, D. (2024). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 121(48), e2410487121.
Taste is the form par excellence of amor fati. The habitus generates representations and practices which are always more adjusted than they seem to be to the objective conditions of which they are the product. To say with Marx that ‘the petit bourgeois cannot transcend the limits of his mind’ (others would have said the limits of his understanding) is to say that his thought has the same limits as his condition, that his condition in a sense doubly limits him, by the material limits which it sets to his practice and the limits it sets to his thought and therefore his practice, and which make him accept, and even love, these limits. We are now better placed to understand the specific effect of the ‘raising of consciousness’: making explicit what is given presupposes and produces a suspension of immediate attachment to the given so that the knowledge of probable relationships may become dissociated from recognition of them; and amor fati can thus collapse into odium fati, hatred of one’s destiny.
— Pierre Bourdieu, Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste
“The seasonal urge is strong in poets. Milton wrote chiefly in winter. Keats looked for spring to wake him up (as it did in the miraculous months of April and May, 1819). Burns chose autumn. Longfellow liked the month of September. Shelley flourished in the hot months. Some poets, like Wordsworth, have gone outdoors to work. Others, like Auden, keep to the curtained room. Schiller needed the smell of rotten apples about him to make a poem. Tennyson and Walter de la Mare had to smoke. Auden drinks lots of tea, Spender coffee; Hart Crane drank alcohol. Pope, Byron, and William Morris were creative late at night. And so it goes.”
— Helen Bevington, from When Found, Make a Verse Of (via violentwavesofemotion)
“I will bring you flowers from the mountains, bluebells, dark hazels, and rustic baskets of kisses. I want to do with you what spring does with the cherry trees.”
—
Pablo Neruda, from ‘Every Day You Play’.
“Each spring will be a sword you’ll sharpen,”
— Anne Sexton, from The Complete Poems; “Courage,” (via violentwavesofemotion)
“So you relax, you don’t fight it anymore, the darkness coming down called water, called spring, called the green leaf, called a woman’s body as it turns into mud and leaves, as it beats in its cage of water, as it turns like a lonely spindle in the moonlight, as it says yes.”
— “Mary Oliver, from “Pink Moon—The Pond”, Devotions
Elliott Smith by Mark Alesky
everyone collectively get on my dick immediately
Angel Heart (1987)
"The shift from the Afro-Caribbean zombie to the U.S. zombie is clear: in Caribbean folklore, people are scared of becoming zombies, whereas in U.S. narratives people are scared of zombies. This shift is significant because it maps the movement from the zombie as victim (Caribbean) to the zombie as an aggressive and terrifying monster who consumes human flesh (U.S.). In Haitian folklore, for instance, zombies do not physically threaten people; rather, the threat comes from the voduon practice whereby the sorcerer (master) subjugates the individual by robbing the victim of free will, language and cognition. The zombie is enslaved."
— Justin D. Edwards, "Mapping Tropical Gothic in the Americas" in Tropical Gothic in Literature and Culture.
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