Properly labelled information can go a long way toward combating bias in AI.
bias toward 在 Thanuja Ananthan Facebook 的最佳貼文
Gender bias talks, human rights, refugee plight,mental health, animal welfare, the list can go on & on & on.All the right things to advocate but none of it really matters if there is no Earth would it?
Let’s take a moment from all that we are doing right now & acknowledge the reality that is happening to our planet.There is no denying the planet is getting warmer & we humans are behind it.The brutal truth is that we’re hurtling towards a 3-degree world or worse.
My dearest friend @anjhula is currently on an expedition with the World Economic Forum in Greenland and sent me these heart wrenching images.Tears filled my eyes as I watched the video.Mother earth is wasting away 😓
And these beautiful sled dogs.Greenland used to have 30,000 sled dogs, now that's 1/2 because there is no ice for which to travel on
Some of the world’s oldest trees are dying and the Antarctic ice melt is accelerating.I hope we all realise that we’re no longer on the edge of climate change but are living among it.
I AM NOT going to preach for you to GO GREEN, STOP using plastic, eat for a climate stable planet AND help put a price on pollution.
A healthy planet and stable climate aren’t political issues. It’s all about families, communities, energy systems and humanity’s future. It’s important to get everyone on board, working toward climate solutions
This is now our moment
.
#climatecrisis
#greenland19
@worldeconomicforum
bias toward 在 許藍方博士 Dr. Gracie Facebook 的最佳貼文
今天早上,
就是剛剛,
TVBS新聞採訪結束,
是有關嚼口香糖跟減重的新聞。
一大早記者打來說有日本研究說吃口香糖可以減重是真的嗎?我馬上去找了這篇記者口中的日本研究⋯
內容其實是說咀嚼刺激(咀嚼這個動作)會減低食慾和對食物的注意力。
文章中是用「無糖口香糖」來讓個案咀嚼,也強調不一定要嚼有味道的東西,只要是嚼這個動作就可以。
🔺與是不是吃口香糖無關!!我個人覺得嚼未加工蒟蒻片也行⋯⋯
🔺文章中也沒有說到「減重」這兩個字,連熱量都沒提到了。
我看了一下過去文獻資料,就現有的文獻是1️⃣嚼口香糖會抑制食慾(平均減少68cal)、2️⃣增加少許(11cal/hr)熱量消耗、3️⃣可影響部分生理作用(加速心跳,可能因此加速代謝速率)。
🔺口香糖「可能」有助於減重,不是一定會。
➰反而要注意的是口香糖過度咀嚼造成嚼肌肥大(國字臉)、脹氣(咀嚼過程吞入空氣),若是含糖的口香糖會造成蛀牙及不小心攝取過多糖分。
文獻來源:Ikeda, A., Miyamoto, J. J., Usui, N., Taira, M., & Moriyama, K. (2018). Chewing Stimulation Reduces Appetite Ratings and Attentional Bias toward Visual Food Stimuli in Healthy-Weight Individuals. Frontiers in Psychology, 9, 99.