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Search Result for “brains”

Showing 1 - 10 of 22

OPINION

In defence of Anutin

Oped, Postbag, Published on 09/12/2025

» Re: "Thailand hit by a confluence of crises", (Opinion, Dec 5). 

OPINION

Let's just try leaning into your morbid curiosity

Oped, Coltan Scrivner, Published on 30/10/2025

» Film critics Gene Siskel and Johnny Oleksinski have called fans of slasher films like Friday the 13th and Saw "very sick people" and "depraved lunatics who should not be allowed near animals or most other living things". Public outcry around the video game Mortal Kombat in the early 1990s was so extreme that it led to a special US Senate hearing on the topic. Similarly, the recent rise of true crime entertainment has some people wondering if we are becoming desensitised to the horror and seriousness of the events themselves.

OPINION

Breaking barriers for Thai innovations

Oped, Saowaruj Rattanakhamfu and Pichakorn Khowasinth, Published on 27/08/2025

» Thailand is abundant with talent in medical technology. Why aren't our homegrown innovations reaching patients? The answer is simple: a broken system.

OPINION

Are you a 'doomscroller' or 'hopescroller'?

Oped, Jennifer Mercieca, Published on 10/07/2025

» My students tell me that they don't sleep. They stay up all night endlessly scrolling their social media feeds. Their attention has been captured, but not by anything in particular, not really, they say. Like a lot of us, my students are chronic doomscrollers.

OPINION

Is AI a curse or a blessing for education?

Oped, Matthew Robert Ferguson, Published on 17/08/2024

» My collegiate rowing coach at the University of Western Ontario was an eccentric West German named Dr Volker Nolte, a stocky and imposing figure who was only funny when he didn't mean to be. He was a biomechanics wizard, obsessing over the countervailing forces of the rower and shell, currents and winds, blades and water. In the early 80s, as part of his doctoral research, he designed a sliding rigger that moved along the hull of the boat on slides in tandem with the rower, which, when compared to a fixed rigger, effectively doubled the force and propulsion of every stroke. It made second-tier rowers competitive with the best in the world.

OPINION

Trump: Neither unique nor irreplaceable

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 16/07/2024

» Almost everybody who feels obliged to comment about the attempted assassination of Donald Trump is currently insisting that "violence has no place in American politics", but of course it has. Four US presidents have been assassinated while in office, and three others (now including Mr Trump) have been injured in assassination attempts.

OPINION

How a teen can turn into a killer

Oped, Tulapawn Achananuparp, Published on 25/01/2024

» Since the murder of Buaphan Tansu, 47, a woman with a level 5 intellectual disability, there has been growing alarm and fear among the public, especially considering who the perpetrators were and the nature of the crime.

OPINION

Human success in the AI age

Oped, Jamie Metzl, Published on 21/09/2023

» Everywhere we look nowadays, we find warnings that artificial-intelligence algorithms are coming for our jobs. While Goldman Sachs estimates that two-thirds of all current jobs in the United States and Europe could be "exposed to some degree of AI automation" in the coming years, a report from Pew Research Center puts the figure at closer to one-fifth -- with a special emphasis on jobs requiring a college education.

OPINION

Asean mapping out a vision for 2045

Oped, Kavi Chongkittavorn, Published on 15/08/2023

» Regional experts and scholars have been busy squeezing their brains to draft Asean's vision for the next two decades. They are already halfway there. However, a lot more needs to be done to ensure that the new Asean Community Post 2025 Vision, which will now run up to 2045, will fit the overall aspiration of Asean citizens, who currently number roughly 672 million.

OPINION

Have we passed the point of no return with AI?

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 01/06/2023

» 'Sometimes I think it's as if aliens have landed and people haven't realised because they speak very good English," said Geoffrey Hinton, the 'godfather of AI' (Artificial Intelligence), who resigned from Google and now fears his godchildren will become "things more intelligent than us, taking control".