Saturday, June 26, 2010

on the road again

Traveling again. Probably won't be able to update for a little over a week. I'll post more pictures when I get back home.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

the trip, part 3

Beach in southern Oregon

Pebbles

Another beach in southern Oregon

Mr. Krabs didn't make it

Beach in Redwood National Park (Northern CA)

View from our hotel (or not...)

Grand Canyon

Grand Canyon

Grand Canyon

River Sliver

My face and torso at the Grand Canyon

New York City

Art

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

homecoming

Made it home safely after 25 straight hours of driving, which brought the total driving time to 100 hours for the trip. I never want to be in a car again. More to come after I recover.

Saturday, June 19, 2010

the trip, part 2

Here are some more pictures. I'm still at the conference but will start the trip home tomorrow. We hope to  hit the Oregon/Northern California coast, Redwood National Forest, Napa Valley, Las Vegas, and the Grand Canyon.

Bird in the Tetons

Buffalo in Yellowstone


Bird in Yellowstone

Artist's Point in Yellowstone

Chipmunk in Yellowstone

Prairie dogs at Devil's Tower

Elk in Yellowstone

Mountain goat in the Badlands

Mountain goat in the Badlands

Pontificating at Devil's Tower

Bear warnings in the Tetons

Yellowstone

Tetons

Tetons

Thursday, June 17, 2010

the trip, part 1








I don't have too much time right this second, but here are a few pictures from the first leg of the trip. I have more photos from my better camera that I'll upload later (hopefully) that include some more wildlife shots (I was about 15 feet from a giant elk with big antlers, some mountain goats, buffalo, etc.).

From the top: the badlands, town on the way to Yellowstone, our campsite at Buffalo Bill State Park in Wyoming (right on the beach!), artists point in Yellowstone, elk, and Old Faithful.

More to come in the next few days...

Friday, June 11, 2010

dog days of summer

Starting Sunday, my friend and I are headed across the country to present some of our research at a conference on the west coast. His wife is also going to be out of town for back-to-back weekend weddings and a week of work training in between (all in another state). That leaves Sarah to hold down the fort--with the addition of their lab/pitbull mix, Sawyer, for the week.

Both dogs are still adolescents, so they are playful and RAMBUNCTIOUS. My friend and his wife left for the first wedding early this morning, and I've been working nonstop trying to get both dogs to stop roughhousing in the house. I hope to have them ready before Sarah has to fly solo in a few days, but I think I have my work cut out for me. Already, there have been lots of timeouts in their crates and lots of positive reinforcement. Yes, I did say timeouts. Believe it or not, they've been more effective than yelling. After all, it's not appropriate to punch dogs. No matter how much you might want to.

After 3.5 hours, both of them finally decided to lay down. It was very quiet and still for a moment. Then I saw a little black and orange head slowly peek out from around a corner (Mowgli). That was a nice five minutes of peace. She saw the new dog sleeping on the floor, HER FLOOR, and froze. Too late. She'd been spotted behind enemy lines. He lazily lifted his head, and she receded into the shadows like an apparition. Unfortunately, dogs are curious about apparitions, and that was the end of nap time. After some more timeouts and playing outside (the timeout free zone), the dogs came in and went back to sleep. The end. Until, four minutes later, Gizmo crept up and pounced on Sawyer's tail...

P.S. Sarah is a saint.

Monday, June 07, 2010

conversations I have during the day


Barney: Excuse me. I have a question. What game was that you guys were playing yesterday?


Me: That's a good question, Barney. We've been playing Scrabble on our fancy new board. Sarah was concentrating very hard on winning.


Don't tell her, but she's about to lose. Try to ignore all the naughty words she spelled. Some people will do anything to win. All I wanted was to eat some cherries, which I did.


Mowgli: I am disturbed by the moral laxity in this household.



 Mediterranean House Gecko: mmmphh freemph vroophrh. Nom, nom, nom.


Mowgli: GET OUT OF MY ROOM!!!!!!!


Barney: Okay, okay. I get it. You don't like other living creatures. Me and my buddy will go talk somewhere else.

Me: There is increasing evidence that I may need a hobby.

Friday, June 04, 2010

on time orientation

This is a super-interesting, 10-minute talk about "time orientations." It's given by Philip Zimbardo, an influential social psychologist, who is perhaps best known for the Stanford Prison Experiment. The animations totally make the talk.

Thursday, June 03, 2010

do the right thing

Come on Selig. You know you can do it.

Update: COME ON!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Tuesday, June 01, 2010

r is for reject

Remember how I mentioned last week about how I was submitting research to a prestigious journal? I believe I had this to say,
Naturally, I'm confident that we'll be rejected immediately (they reject 85% of their submissions, the vast majority of which are from some the of the best researchers in the world), but the good news is that when we are, we can just re-submit to a less prestigious journal.
I shouldn't have been surprised, then, when the paper got stamped with a big red "REJECT" a week after we submitted it. (At least, that's how I imagine it happened. They notified us through email). Surprised? No. Disappointed? Sadly, yes. Apparently our results were "too specific to appeal to psychologists across disciplines." Oh well. Revise and submit elsewhere.