Steven E. Landsburg (Google), a professor at the University of Rochester recently published a book called More Sex is Safer Sex: The Unconventional Wisdom of Economics, where he applied economics theory in everyday life. The book is largely based on his column called Everyday Economics on Slate Magazine.
I haven't read the book yet, but it looks quite interesting based on the book review on New York Times, where he suggests that the AIDS epidemic is "the price of our permissive attitudes toward monogamy, chastity, and other forms of extreme sexual conservatism."
You can also read the first chapter of the book on New York Times' Web site.
SML Search
Sunday, September 30, 2007
More sex is safer sex / Steven Landsburg
SML AIDS = non-profit HIV/AIDS information portal
I created a site called SML AIDS (http://smlaids.org) last Sunday using Google Apps to feed news and resources that I found related to HIV/AIDS on the Internet, in hopes to bring awareness to the significance of the issue, and provide as a source for news, research, studies for those who are concerned with this disease.
Earlier this year, through my various studies on network theory, I discovered many discoveries relating to HIV/AIDS that may not be immediately apparent.
Although I am negative, many of my friends are positive. While I am technically savvy and have the know-how to fetch information easily, many of my friends may not be. And I wish to do the do the best I can to give back to the community who has always been there to provide me with support when I needed them most.
If you have any suggestion and feedback, please do not hesitate to contact me at seeminglee+smlaids@gmail.com.
Related SML
SML AIDS
SML Pro Blog: HIV/AIDS
SML Copyright Notice
Copyright 2007 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe. All rights reserved.
Friday, September 28, 2007
Pattern Recognition = Key to Fight (HIV + Spam)
Source: Business Week: 2007-10-01: print edition. pp.68, 70
David Heckerman (Google), a physician as well as a PhD in computer science at Microsoft Research, was doing research on better spam-blocking when he noted that those same technology can be applied to blocking HIV, the virus that leads to AIDS.
From Heckerman’s perspective, HIV is like a cagey spammer. After attacking a cell, it injects its own genetic material and proceeds (much like a spam jockey who has commandeered as an unprotected computer) to manufacture thousands of copies of the virus.
The trouble? Complexity and mutations. HIV-infected cells often wear mutated nameplates that immune systems haven’t learned to read. In this sense, vaccines have been like faulty spam filters, the ones that block e-mails promoting “Viagra” while letter ads for “V1agra” scoot through.
But Heckerman is upbeat. He argues that by revving up the computing power and blending thousands of new variable, researchers are making progress. One key, he says, is to map the patterns of mutation and incorporate them into medicine. These mutations, he says, appear to vary according to a person’s immune system. If researchers can find the patterns, they’ll be closer to making effective vaccines. Yet if they conclude that the mutations are utterly random, then “we’re in big trouble,” says Heckerman.
Read the full article here:
Business Week: 2007-10-01: Info Tech: Using Spam Blockers To Target HIV, Too: A Microsoft researcher and his team make a surprising new assault on the AIDS epidemic.
Related SML
SML Copyright Notice
Copyright 2007 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe. All rights reserved.
Sunday, September 23, 2007
BMS Light to Unite for World AIDS Day 2006 = Web Marketing Association's WebAwards 2007 Outstanding Website
Light to Unite was awarded Web Marketing Association's WebAwards 2007 Outstanding Website this week.
IconNicholson Team (IconNicholson.com)
- Gregg Fisher (LinkedIn)
- Jabe Bloom (LinkedIn)
- Jennifer Crowe
- Hillary Savage (LinkedIn)
- Mark Hopkins
- Scott Friedberg (LinkedIn)
- See-ming Lee (Blog / LinkedIn)
- Stephen Baker aka Steve Baker (LinkedIn)
SML Awards: Additional Awards for Light to Unite 2006
- Step Inside Design: Step Best of Web 2007
- Web Marketing Association (WMA) 2007 WebAward, Outstanding Website
- World Wide Web Health Awards 2007: Silver
Additional WebAwards awarded to IconNicholson
Related SML
- SML Collection
- SML Flickr Collections: SML Collection
- SML Flickr Collections: SML Projects
- Light to Unite 2006 / SML Projects
- SML Flickr Tags: Light to Unite
- SML Flickr Tags: SML Awards
- SML Flickr Tags: SML Projects
- SML Graphic Design
- SML Interaction Design
- SML LinkedIn
- SML Motion Design
- SML Pro Blog: Light to Unite 2006 = Best of Web 2007 / Step Inside Design
- SML Pro Blog: SML Collection
- SML Projects
- SML UI Design
SML Copyright Notice
Copyright 2007 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe. All rights reserved.
Friday, September 7, 2007
Sexual Relationship Database = World Health Optimization Management
[AIDS] must have followed the route already spotted in the spread of innovation and computer viruses: Hubs are among the first infected thanks to their numerous sexual contacts.
...The scale-free topology at AIDS’s disposal allowed the virus to spread and persist.
...Whereas the early spread of AIDS was attributed primarily to homosexual sex, today heterosexual sex is the leading means of transmission. As we’ve established, hubs play a key role in these processes. Their unique role suggests a bold but cruel solution: As long as resources are finite we should treat only the hubs. That is, when a treatment exists but there is not enough money to offer it to everybody who needs it, we should primarily gives it to the hubs.
...The problem is that we do not know for sure who the hubs are.SML Reference: Barabasi. Linked: how everything is connected to everything else and what it means for business, science and everyday life. pp 138-139 (Google Books)
Analyzing the sex web is a huge undertaking.
Whereas most will be happy to disclose their personal or professional relationships using sites like Facebook, Friendster or LinkedIn, few would be readily compelled to disclose personal information about their sex life.
Finding out the topology of sex is important in the ever-changing web of human existence, however. So it is not at all surprising that a scientific research tool called Sexual Relationship Database was created.
According to the Website, the World Health Optimization Management created the project “in an effort to better understand society’s interconnected nature.” For this project, a sexual partner is defined “as a human with whom a person has had oral, anal or vaginal sexual contact.”
Like the Wikipedia, anyone may edit the sexual histories. To ensure accuracy of the study, the organization requires that users log in with a valid email address. They also reserve the right to ban users who knowingly provide false information.
Here is a map of the sex web of a few celebrities to get you started:
Related Blog Posts
- SML Pro Blog: Innovation = Synergy of existing ideas
- SML Pro Blog: Product Space + Wealth of Nations = Visualizing Economics
- SML Pro Blog: Sex
- SML Pro Blog: SML SEO = See-ming Lee + Search Engine Optimization
Copyright Notice
Copyright 2007 See-ming Lee (SML Pro Blog) / SML Research. All rights reserved.
Monday, September 3, 2007
Light to Unite 2006 = Best of Web 2007 / Step Inside Design
Step Inside Design article (StepInsideDesign.com)
September + October 2007 Print Edition
Step 2007 Best of Web
Winning Sites: LightToUnite.org (LightToUnite.org)
IconNicholson / LBi International
“Light is the metaphor for hope and knowledge,” says Gregg Fisher, vice president of Health and Life Science Practice at IconNicholson.
So it only seems appropriate that the firm developed an interactive candle-lighting experience for the 2006 Light to Unite website. This annual campaign from Bristol-Myers Squibb raises awareness as well as funds for HIV/AIDS treatment and prevention in the U.S.
“When people start to think about AIDS, they often think about Africa,” says See-ming Lee, art director and senior interface engineer. “It’s still a very serious disease in the United States.”
This fact was reinforced as soon as visitors logged onto the site. During the roughly seven-week campaign, which started on World AIDS Day, users found themselves facing an unlit candle against a dark background, with only a lit match to help them navigate the screen. As they moved the flame around, they illuminated startling statistics about HIV’s spread in the U.S., and these facts all became visible once users lit their candles. For every person who completed this simple act, Bristol-Myers Squibb donated $1 (up to $100,000) to the National AIDS Fund. Site visitors could also give additional funds.
Fisher says the project is a great example of what happens when you give power over to community and let it take control. The majority of the site’s traffic came from people who found out about the effort through word-of-mouth online—not paid media. this becomes all the more impressive when you realize that more than 1.8 million candles where lit during this relatively brief effort. And through the first week of January 2007, more than 8000 people signed up for the site’s newsletter—and there were more than 200,000 requests to send the site to a friend. “It's taken on a life of its own,” Fisher says. “Light to Unite is spreading life, spreading awareness, spreading knowledge.”
After lighting a candle, visitors could learn more about the personal impact of HIV/AIDS through the site’s user-generated stories. These short, emotional snippets were submitted through last year’s Light to Unite site, an they’re each represented by a burning candle. “We spent two weeks trying to animate a candle to make it look real,” Lee says. “Every single flame is animated differently.” This attention to detail heightens the experience as you navigate through individual stories or explore them by broad themes ranging from courage and fear to family—and the stories are still accessible now that the campaign as concluded.
—Michelle Taute (LinkedIn) / Step Inside Design September + October 2007 Print Edition: Step 2007 Best of Web: Winning Sites: LightToUnite.org. pp.108-109
IconNicholson Team (IconNicholson.com)
- Gregg Fisher (LinkedIn)
- Jabe Bloom (LinkedIn)
- Jennifer Crowe
- Hillary Savage (LinkedIn)
- Mark Hopkins
- Scott Friedberg (LinkedIn)
- See-ming Lee (Blog / LinkedIn)
- Stephen Baker (LinkedIn)
SML Notes + SML Tech Talk
- The inspiration for associating candles with the story came from Hillary Savage (LinkedIn), who suggested that behind every candles is a story worth telling during our brainstorming session.
- The inspiration behind the using highlighted words (aka tags) to get to different collection of stories came from my avid tagging behavior on Del.icio.us. I felt that users ought to be able to tag the stories themselves, as different people will interpret the stories differently. However, due to legal contraints—it is pharma afterall—we compromised to pre-tag the content.
- The candle flash animation are individually generated using Flash 8's BitmapData.perlinNoise method to alter a 5k PNG. Writing this class was the most satisfying accomplishment thus far—most of my friends thought that they are videos.
SML Awards
- Light to Unite 2006 also received Silver at the World Wide Web Health Awards 2007
SML Thank You
- I would like to thank my friends from the gay community who provided much inspiration and support while I worked on this project in 2006.
- I would like to thank Stephen Baker of Red Antenna for collaborating with me on this project. Besides being the best ActionScript 2.0 - compliant Flash developer I have been able to find in New York City, his expertise in visual and interaction design have brought tremendous value to the project.
- I would like to thank Jennifer Crowe who spent days and nights being our tagging engine.
- I would like to thank Hillary Savage who provided me with a lot of courage and support during my stressful times working on this baby.
- I would like to thank Celeste Bryant (LinkedIn) for submitting the project for awards consideration.
SML + HR
- I am looking for ActionScript 2.0 - compliant Flash developers to collaborate with on future projects—because Stephen is very busy these days. If you think that you are more than capable, please send me an email with your portfolio + resume + sample code snippets.
SML Copyright Notice
Copyright 2007 See-ming Lee. All rights reserved.