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The Uncanny Valley

Yet the humans' skin could not be too realistic.  It was well known that as depictions of humans became more lifelike, audiences would perceive them as more appealing -- until the realism reached a certain point, close to human but not quite, when suddenly the depictions would be perceived as repulsive.  The phenomenon, known as the "uncanny valley," had been hypothesized by a Japanese robotics researcher, Masahiro Mori, as early as 1970.  No one knew precisely why it happened, but the sight of nearly human forms seemd to trigger some primeval aversion in onlookers.  Thus, the minute details of human skin, such as pores and hair follicles, were left out of The Incredibles' characters in favor of a deliberately cartoonlike appearance.

That is from David A. Price's very interesting The Pixar Touch.  Here is Jason Kottke on The Uncanny Valley.

Posted by Tyler Cowen on May 18, 2008 at 01:23 PM in Film | Permalink | Comments (16)

Local Bounties

One benefit of the economic downturn is that the number of people hoping to earn a reward by calling the police with a tip has increased, especially in regions with a lot of home foreclosures. 

For tips that bring results, programs in most places pay $50 to $1,000, with some jurisdictions giving bonuses for help solving the most serious crimes, or an extra “gun bounty” if a weapon is recovered...

“We have people out there that, realistically, this could be their job,” said Sgt. Zachary Self, who answers Crime Stoppers calls for the Macon Police Department.

The success of these local programs suggests similar international programs could also work.

Posted by Alex Tabarrok on May 18, 2008 at 09:49 AM in Economics | Permalink | Comments (6)

Links

1. GMU Econ Society blog

2. Top ten Jackie Chan fight scenes?: How can they leave off Jackie against the monks?

3. More on speculation and oil prices as a bubble; very thoughtful analysis

4. Solving the climate change attitude mystery

5. Does religion make people happy?

Posted by Tyler Cowen on May 18, 2008 at 06:21 AM in Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (18)

Network Power

Indeed, while this convergence in ways of thinking and living may extend to influence cultural forms like music or food, it need not necessarily do so.  It is striking that in this moment of global integration producing massive convergence in economic, linguistic, and institutional standards, we should be so worried about restaurant chains and pop music, neglecting much more significant issues.  Famously, Sigmund Freud argued that nationalist rivalries between neighboring countries reflected the "narcissism of minor differences," a pathological focus on relatively trivial distinctions driven by the desire to keep at bay an anxiety-provoking recognition of fundamental sameness.

That is from David Singh Grewal's Network Power: The Social Dynamics of Globalization, one of the most interesting books on cultural globalization in recent years.  He uses the ideas of social networks and peer effects to argue that widespread cultural convergence is occurring, most of all in ways of life.  Here is the book's home page.

There is much wrong in the central thesis.  "Ways of thinking" may be less diverse across countries (France is more like Germany than it used to be) but ways of thinking are now much more diverse within countries and in fact within the world as a whole.  What's so special about having diversity distributed according to geographic or political criteria?  Once you get over the geography fetish, many of the author's main mechanisms don't hold up as accounts of growing sameness of ways of life and thinking.  Has the author spent much time poking around Second Life?

Nor is he capable of simply coming out and saying that lots of countries in the world *ought* to be doing more to emulate Anglo-American ways of thinking.

The following claim is also questionable:

To reshape or reduce the power that the social structures we create have over us, we can only summon the organized power of politics.  The large-scale voluntarism of sociability, by contrast, has always delivered the most varied and elaborate forms of individual subjugation.

Cranky Tyler is about to come out of his shell, so maybe it is time to end this post.  It's still a book worth reading and thinking about.

On a not totally unrelated topic, here is a good post on babies and globalization.

Posted by Tyler Cowen on May 18, 2008 at 05:28 AM in Books | Permalink | Comments (11)