1.22.2008

Numb3rs & Lov3 (Pt. 3)

Winkydo brings up a good point in his comment on Part 2:
there is no way to accurately judge real human behavior. after studying body language habits, i know that there is a way to accurately tell what a person is thinking about an individual subject and what a person is going to do about an individual stimuli, but there is no way to accurately know how a person will react to multiple things waiting for a response from them. you can make good estimates about what is to happen next, what direction the person is on a path too, but you cannot accurately determine the personality traits that will decide things like love, hate, or innate reasoning skills.
What I didn't clarify in my previous post is enough to write another post.
In the Sprinkler example from the show, Charlie said that there was no way to predict where the next drop was going to fall...he only said there was a way to predict where the source was coming from - a general region for the sources origin.

In the same way that you can't tell where the next water drop is going to fall, you cannot predict what the next decision's result would be. But you have a set of information where the past drops have fallen, and have a good guess about where they are coming from, and this enables you to form an estimate about where the next one will drop. This is called Predictive Analysis which, simply stated:

...encompasses a variety of techniques from statistics and data mining that analyze current and historical data to make predictions about future events. Such predictions rarely take the form of absolute statements, and are more likely to be expressed as values that correspond to the odds of a particular event or behavior taking place in the future.
By taking the information from the past, and the information from the present about a person, you can then use predictive analytics to form a statistically-based estimate about their future behavior.

The predictions won't be accurate, and shouldn't be considered as a method for predicting exact future events, but instead likely future events. Because they aren't exact predictions, there will be a range of possible outcomes that should be derived from the analysis, and then you have another choice to make: which one do you act upon.

If you take a moment to follow through the decision about which choice needs to be made, you'll find yourself imagining several future-worlds that are the result of your decision. Which one is the right one? It's simple...really, it is...

They all are.

How is that possible? That's simple too - if you know a little something about quantum mechanics...

Consider Erwin Schrödinger, a quantum physicist, and his example of a cat, and the principle of superposition of states.

Superposition is the addition of the amplitudes of waves from interference. In quantum mechanics it is the sum of wave function amplitudes, or state vectors. It occurs when an object simultaneously "possesses" two or more values for an observable quantity. This would extend to, say a BAWLS bottle - one could say it's blue...another could say it's shiny...it possesses two (and more) observable values.

Now, imagine a box, on the floor...it's closed and sealed. Inside is a cat, which was alive at the time it was placed in the box. Also inside there is a volume of gaseous particles - 50% of that is the combination of elements that makes up breathable "air" (nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen, trace elements)...the other 50% is a toxic gas.

Without opening the box, you have to determine whether the cat is dead or alive. Which one is it?

You can guess about the contents of the box, and think "well, the cat is breathing half-poisonous gas, and half-breathable air...so he must be dead, since it's poisonous." Or you can think "well, the cat is breathing half-breathable air, and half poisonous gas, so the poison is probably diluted, and he's alive." Which one is right though? The answer:

Both of them.

Without observation, you cannot take measurements to determine the value of the system. So until the box is opened, the cat theoretically takes on two observable values, but this time not blue & shiny, but rather both dead and alive. And until you open the box, and measure the system, you won't know which value was the conclusive answer to the question.

Now apply this to the predictive analysis about what decision you should make - you can theorize about what is going to happen if you make a certain decision, adapt a certain way, or change someone's directives in their life with the hopes of yielding a particular result. But until you actually open the box, all you can do is say that this will work, and won't work, at the same time.

The answer, as Larry put it in the show Numb3rs: "... is that it's moot to guess about what will happen, until you open the box, and look inside."

All you can do, is do what you do, and hope that everything works out in the end. You'll never know until you try.

1.21.2008

Numb3rs and Lov3 (Pt. 2)

While it may be true that human behavior cannot be quantified and predicted, there is another side to it that can. An example from the tv show Numb3rs...

Lets take a sprinkler, for example...now when you turn it on, you see it shooting drops of water in an arc across the yard. There's no way to tell where the next drop is going to fall. But based on the drops that have already hit the ground, you can form an inference about the source of the drops. You can trace the seemingly random drops back to their point of origin.

You can also do this with people - and their history.

Take, for example, a person's personality and social decisions. In the past, they've made particular decisions that ended up leading them down a certain road. The easiest thing to think of, that has a lot of data, would be relationships.

People tend to date a certain type of person. Every once in a while, there will be someone they date that doesn't quite fit the mold of all the people they've previously dated....but generally, they all have something in common.

In order to figure out what's likely to happen next, you have to figure out what's happened before. You have to figure out the common factor in most of the instances before that yielded the same result. How were they treated, how did they communicate, were they attracted to each other, did all the people they dated look alike, etc...

Once that is figured out, you can pretty much determine what's going to happen with the relationship later on down the road. And that sounds a lot like fate.

But wait...

In quantum physics, there is what's known as the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle which says that you can either observe an object in action, or you can measure the object in non-action. But you cannot do both. Basically the act of measurement disturbs the observation that you would have gotten otherwise...and the act of trying to simply observe will not yield a measurement.

Now apply this to humans. As long as someone doesn't know they're being watched, they will continue to go about their business unabated...undisturbed. (e.g. a thief robbing a bank will continue on with his plans if he is unaware of any pre-existing law enforcement activity to stop him). You'd then be able to take in the observation of how they'd act. But once they are aware of the fact that they are being watched, this act of measurement or gathering information has changed how they would have behaved otherwise. (e.g. the thief adapts his plans to account for this new information).

The problem with predicting human behavior, is that as long as the people are unaware, chances are, that it will go on as planned. But once that is compromised, everything changes.

If you find you're next in line for a relationship - you can either look for the pattern that showed how all the past ones failed, and then adapt your intentions to compensate for those mistakes...or you can go on and do nothing about it.

But either way, there is going to be some uncertainty about all of it. Either you'll end up in the observation side of things, where everything just goes about as it would, and be added to the list of failures....or you'll end up on the measurement side of things, where once you've changed your behavior, you've changed the entire system, and can't live it out the way it was meant to be observed.

Maybe the second one is a good thing...

(...might be continued.)

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1.20.2008

Numb3rs and Lov3

I've been watching Season 1 of Numb3rs lately. It's a show that I wanted to set a schedule to watch when I first moved out onto my own in this apartment. The only bad part was that it came on at 8:00pm on Friday nights. At the time, Friday was the only night of the week that I didn't have school, so my friends and I hung out - and rarely at my place.

Anyway, one of the episodes, Charlie (the mathematician) was working on an algorithm that would predict why the shooter was picking certain locations. He presented the problem to his colleague - an astrophysicist professor, Larry - who promptly showed him the error of his calcuation:

"You can't quantify human behavior...it's too unpredictable."

Ever since I was a kid, living with my step dad and mom, I had paid close attention to what my brother would do, and how my parents reacted. From this I gleamed a general idea for human behavior.

When I got into Jr. High, and High School, I started applying the same methods to my friends who were in relationships...study what they did, and the reaction they received. I spent a good 10-13 years learning about all that stuff, before I went off to apply my findings to a real-life situation.

The first situation involved preventative conflict resolution - anticipate a possible conflict, and perform the necessary actions to prevent it. This worked to an extent, in so much as it prevented some conflicts, but not all of them - and made the person feel like they were being controlled. All the work was for nothing though, because I ended up making the mistake that brought about the first and last conflict we had.

After that, I tried the psychological approach. If I couldn't do it by being intelligent, then I could do it by working with her mind - which was convenient, and actually the only method we had, because it was an interstate relationship, and all we had was the telephone, and internet. Eventually I found out that people don't always tell you who they really are, until you either call them out on it, or they really want to.

Once all those cards were laid on the table, it unfortunately went straight to physical. I was set up on a blind-double-date with a friend, and her friend. She went right into it within 3 days/dates, and that was that. It lasted for about 2 months or so until I decided that it wasn't right for me, and then found out she had cheated...so it was an easy out for something that was an easy in - if you know what I mean. Of course you do.

I got out of that, and tried emotions - that was ghey. Took a break from everything, and tried to kindle old interests that I never could muster up the courage to start...that was an epic fail. And then I tried local...

With the local scene, I tried to just be myself - be there, and someone they'd possibly want to be with...I tried to adapt to new interests, use a different life perspective to appeal to them...and then tried to find the one. That combined personality and interests, and the physical, and the psychological...

And that didn't work.

At this point, I just started going with the flow. I'd take note of everything that was happening, all the stuff I'd have paid attention to before, but just do whatever. It was because I was trying to figure out what the hell was going on inside my mind that could be causing all this stuff to fail. (Afterall, if you fail so many times with so many different people...surely it's not them that has the issue, it's you...don't ya think? Of course some of you won't - you're too conceited.)

From that point on, I rolled through three different attempts -all of which were valid interests in me, but none of which I could pull off for more than a couple months. That sucks. And only now do I figure out - by watching a show that could have saved me all this trouble, heartache, and wasted time (but would have stripped me from the memories and the journey which I have traveled)...the one simple sent3nce that I needed to hear in a w4y that w0u1d c47ch my att3nt!0n...

"You can't quantify human behavior...it's too unpredictable."

(to be continued...)

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1.03.2008

Here fishy fishy

Well, at thanksgiving I had baby fish - there were at least 3 - 3 that I saw and rescued from the other fish in the tank. And then at Christmas Eve Night I noticed 16 more baby fish in the tank...so I pulled them and put them in a net as well, since I just released the previous 3 that were big enough to not be eaten.

So, yesterday I noticed that it was time to clean the tank, as it was starting to turn greenish - and hadn't before in the 6 months I've had those fish in there...so I gave it a shot. The water ended up really cloudy and I couldn't get all the crap out of there - so I headed off to the Petsmart to buy a bigger tank, since i'd have about 20 fish in there once the babies grew up.

I dropped $400 on a 47 gallon tank and fixin's and when I got it all home, the fish were dead...all but 2 of them. :( I guess they suffocated. So I got the new tank setup quickly and tried to get the other two fish in it before they had issues themselves, but unfortunately they too died shortly after I got the tank setup. In total retrospect, I think the water was too hot for them, even though it felt like room temperature to me.

So I go back to the Petsmart and get some more fish, and put them in their baggies in the water to equalize it...and wait the proper time, and then release them - and after about 30 minutes they die too. wtf? I could see them shooting to the top, with actions that looked like gasping for air...but I'm not sure. Even the frog that doesn't require air from the water died...so I attribute that to the temperature of the water as well. It's been sitting there empty since then, and was at 80 degrees this morning when I woke up. So I guess that by tomorrow evening, I should be able to buy a fish (only one this time, since I wasted $30 last night on them) to see if he makes it through the weekend.


In other news, I've been speaking my peace with a lot of old crap that I've stored away in my closet for the past couple years, like 15 years...things I've had since childhood that I don't have any business holding on to. Wizard mentioned that everything in his storage could go when he moved into his new house, because he obviously didn't use any of it. I started thinking about all the stuff that I have around the apartment that I don't use, but was holding on to in case I needed it...I have a lot of stuff.

If it wasn't so expensive to throw it all away and start all over, and if I didn't have a psychological issue throwing away working objects, I would. I'd like to get rid of my furniture, all the old clothes in my closet, and boxes of stuff that I don't need. I've started setting things outside hoping someone would take them, but no dice yet. I need to participate in a garage sale...I'm hoping Wizard and Mandy have one soon.

Other than that - I'm looking forward to the LAN Party this year. I have a better camera, and have played some better games than the years past.