I study how languages and cultures evolve. Primarily with phylogenies and other assorted computational methods. Based at @Biology_UoA. Never met a language phylogeny or a cultural phylogeny I didn't like. #phylolinguistics .. more
I study how languages and cultures evolve. Primarily with phylogenies and other assorted computational methods. Based at @Biology_UoA. Never met a language phylogeny or a cultural phylogeny I didn't like. #phylolinguistics
Simon James Greenhill is a New Zealand scientist who works on the application of quantitative methods to the study of cultural evolution and human prehistory. He is well known for creating and building various linguistics databases, including the Austronesian Basic Vocabulary Database, TransNewGuinea.org, Pulotu, and many others. In addition to Austronesian, he has contributed to the study of the phylogeny of many language families, including Dravidian and Sino-Tibetan. .. more
"Watching what others put in their mouths is a powerful way to learn what to eat. Yet ... not everything that goes into another person's mouth is food: The fusilli is edible, but the fork is not"
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
Reposted by Simon J. Greenhill
On the right, yesterday’s NYT opinion piece using public polling as a guide to whether machines are intelligent.
🧪🤖
why don’t they care about these major revenue streams that support most research staff?
Reposted by Simon J. Greenhill
Reposted by Simon J. Greenhill
www.science.org/content/page...
Of that but there is definitely a lot more to say there
around.com/the-informat...
Reposted by Paul E. Smaldino
#evolution #culturalevolution
Although all 8 known examples come from the same female polar bear, who I guess, has a certain taste in men.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grizzly...
Reposted by Simon J. Greenhill
I uploaded the classic Watson & Crick paper about DNA structure, and the Adviser had this to say about one of the greatest paper endings of the century:
Reposted by Kori Schake, Joanna Bryson, Meredith Broussard , and 46 more Kori Schake, Joanna Bryson, Meredith Broussard, Katharine Hayhoe, Christian Odendahl, Suresh Venkatasubramanian, Richard S.J. Tol, Brendan Nyhan, Richard J. Butler, Steve Peers, Steven French, Melissa Terras, Simon J. Greenhill, Harvey J. Miller, Philippe Huneman, Simon Otjes, Dustin Mulvaney, Mirco Tonin, Janne Tukiainen, Paul Matthews, Rachel C. Nethery, Lilian Edwards, Julia Lynch, Caroline T. Schroeder, Bessma Momani, Brian Keegan, Olivier Morin, Peter D. Howe, José Antonio Noguera, Alberto Corsín Jiménez, Lex Heerma van Voss, Catherine J. Frieman, Mauro Gatti, Anthony Burke, Jack Stilgoe, Raúl Pacheco-Vega, Brooke Harrington, Christopher Zorn, Alexander Woywodt, James A. Benn, Charles T. Mathewes, Seth Frey, Jani Erola, Aidan O’Sullivan, Catherine Spooner, Will M. Gervais, David Spurrett, José Pina-Sánchez, Valeria Mazza
Reposted by Brigitte Nerlich, Simon J. Greenhill
Reposted by Joanna Bryson
Our editorial this week argues that I n these financially straitened times, funders must recognize that great discoveries often arise from work that was looking for something completely different
🧪
@nature.com
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
Reposted by Simon J. Greenhill, Martin Paul Eve
Our editorial this week argues that I n these financially straitened times, funders must recognize that great discoveries often arise from work that was looking for something completely different
🧪
@nature.com
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
Reposted by Simon J. Greenhill, Maksym Polyakov
here's some correspondence about the opposite problem: kiwi scientists who want to return home to work, but can't, given the bleak funding environment
#nzpol
Reposted by Simon J. Greenhill, Niklas Johansson
www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...
Reposted by Simon J. Greenhill, Lesley A. Hall
Reposted by Simon J. Greenhill
techcrunch.com/2025/10/27/o...
Reposted by Joanna Bryson, Simon J. Greenhill