Bibliography:

  1. ‘psychology’ tag

  2. Can You Unsort Lists for Diversity?

  3. Review Of Crumb

  4. Why Cats Knock Stuff Over

  5. Cat Psychology & Domestication: Are We Good Owners?

  6. Why Do Hipsters Steal Stuff?

  7. Boxed: Things I learned after lying in an MRI machine for 30 hours

  8. The Lessons of Hermann Grassmann and the Nature of Abstractions

  9. 8b226cb9ce8ab9549c0a7498d447eab00d2c7f9f.html#the-lessons-of-hermann-grassmann-and-the-nature-of-abstractions

  10. Appendix: The Art of Slowness: Slow Motion Enhances Consumer Evaluations by Increasing Processing Fluency

  11. The Art of Slowness: Slow Motion Enhances Consumer Evaluations by Increasing Processing Fluency

  12. Deviancy Aversion and Social Norms

  13. Contrastive Search Is What You Need For Neural Text Generation

  14. Cannabis use does not increase actual creativity but biases evaluations of creativity

  15. Mastering uncertainty: A predictive processing account of enjoying uncertain success in video game play

  16. What’s Next? Artists’ Music after Grammy Awards

  17. Macaques preferentially attend to intermediately surprising information

  18. Balancing Categorical Conventionality in Music

  19. The esthetic Quality Model: Complexity and Randomness as Foundations of Visual Beauty by Signaling Quality

  20. Collaborations and Innovation in Partitioned Industries: An Analysis of U.S. Feature Film Coproductions

  21. A Stanford Psychologist Says He’s Cracked the Code of One-Hit Wonders: What separates Blind Melon from Shania Twain?

  22. Nymph Piss and Gravy Orgies: Local and Global Contrast Effects in Relational Humor

  23. Night Shifts: Can technology shape our dreams?

  24. Motivating Personal Growth by Seeking Discomfort

  25. One-Hit Wonders versus Hit Makers: Sustaining Success in Creative Industries

  26. Eliciting false insights with semantic priming

  27. Typical Decoding for Natural Language Generation

  28. Hipsters and the cool: A game theoretic analysis of identity expression, trends, and fads

  29. Algorithmic Balancing of Familiarity, Similarity, & Discovery in Music Recommendations

  30. Networks, Creativity, and Time: Staying Creative through Brokerage and Network Rejuvenation

  31. Embracing New Techniques in Deep Learning for Estimating Image Memorability

  32. Emotionally Numb: Expertise Dulls Consumer Experience

  33. Entropy trade-offs in artistic design: A case study of Tamil kolam

  34. Mirostat: A Neural Text Decoding Algorithm that Directly Controls Perplexity

  35. An insight-related neural reward signal

  36. Aversion towards simple broken patterns predicts moral judgment

  37. Stay True to Your Roots? Category Distance, Hierarchy, and the Performance of New Entrants in the Music Industry

  38. People Prefer Simpler Content When There Are More Choices: A Time Series Analysis of Lyrical Complexity in Six Decades of American Popular Music

  39. The Similarity Network of Motion Pictures

  40. The Curious Case of Neural Text Degeneration

  41. Accelerating dynamics of collective attention

  42. Fashion and art cycles are driven by counter-dominance signals of elite competition: quantitative evidence from music styles

  43. Wriggly, Squiffy, Lummox, and Boobs: What Makes Some Words Funny?

  44. Enjoy it again: Repeat experiences are less repetitive than people think

  45. Predictability and Uncertainty in the Pleasure of Music: A Reward for Learning?

  46. Relating pattern deviancy aversion to stigma and prejudice

  47. What Makes Popular Culture Popular? Product Features and Optimal Differentiation in Music

  48. CAN: Creative Adversarial Networks, Generating "Art" by Learning About Styles and Deviating from Style Norms

  49. It Doesn’t Hurt to Ask: Question-Asking Increases Liking

  50. Exploration and exploitation of Victorian science in Darwin’s reading notebooks

  51. Optimal Distinctiveness Revisited: an integrative framework for understanding the balance between differentiation and conformity in individual and organizational identities

  52. What Does It Mean to Span Cultural Boundaries? Variety and Atypicality in Cultural Consumption

  53. Anthony Downs, ‘Up and Down with Ecology: The ‘Issue-Attention’ Cycle’

  54. Spoiler Alert: Consequences of Narrative Spoilers for Dimensions of Enjoyment, Appreciation, and Transportation

  55. df562f43f7743cbd0513bfde9af8ffcf86034072.pdf

  56. Why Read New Books?

  57. 0feb393d015585416798d260aca56aa833c9792a.html

  58. The hipster effect: When anticonformists all look the same

  59. Give Your Ideas Some Legs: The Positive Effect of Walking on Creative Thinking

  60. Social psychology. Just think: the challenges of the disengaged mind

  61. Atypical Combinations and Scientific Impact

  62. Identifiable but Not Identical: Combining Social Identity and Uniqueness Motives in Choice

  63. The Logic of Fashion Cycles

  64. Dear Young Eccentric

  65. The Creativity Crisis: The Decrease in Creative Thinking Scores on the Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking

  66. Things You Can’t Countersignal

  67. Formal Theory of Creativity & Fun & Intrinsic Motivation (1990–2010)

  68. Does Your iPod Really Play Favorites?

  69. Driven by Compression Progress: A Simple Principle Explains Essential Aspects of Subjective Beauty, Novelty, Surprise, Interestingness, Attention, Curiosity, Creativity, Art, Science, Music, Jokes

  70. Jacks of All Trades and Masters of None: Audiences’ Reactions to Spanning Genres in Feature Film Production

  71. Relationship Between Complexity and Liking As a Function of Expertise

  72. The Psychologist Who Empathized with Rats: James Tiptree Junior as Alice B. Sheldon, PhD

  73. Endogenous Explanation in the Sociology of Culture

  74. Cultural entrepreneurship: stories, legitimacy, and the acquisition of resources

  75. Staring Emmy Straight in the Eye—And Doing My Best Not to Flinch

  76. Subjective complexity, familiarity, and liking for popular music

  77. The Social Self: On Being the Same and Different at the Same Time

  78. Development of Liking for Familiar and Unfamiliar Melodies

  79. The Effects of Repetition on Liking for Music

  80. Novelty and human esthetic preferences

  81. Some experimental studies of familiarity and liking

  82. Liking words as a function of the experienced frequency of their occurrence

  83. Psychological Factors Affecting Preferences for First Names

  84. The Reaction of Monkeys to ‘Fearsome’ Pictures

  85. Up and down with ecology—the ‘issue-attention cycle’

  86. That’s Interesting!: Towards a Phenomenology of Sociology and a Sociology of Phenomenology

  87. Preference for familiar versus novel stimuli as a function of the familiarity of the environment

  88. The Creative Personality and the Ideal Pupil

  89. It’s Hard to Know Why Music Gives Pleasure: Is That the Point?

  90. ROBOT9000 and #xkcd-Signal: Attacking Noise in Chat

  91. The Secret of Minecraft, and Its Challenge to the Rest of Us

  92. The Economy of Weirdness

  93. 3a5fcd9bdf4529106e14e452985285d685ddc3ab.html

  94. You Need a Novelty Budget

  95. Creativity Is Rejected: Teachers and Bosses Don’t Value Out-Of-The-Box Thinking.

  96. The What-You’d-Implicitly-Heard-Before Telling Thing

  97. Right Is The New Left

  98. What Happened To 90s Environmentalism?

  99. New Atheism: The Godlessness That Failed

  100. How To Know When It’s Time To Go

  101. 34d5151cb2e8a2ce2bf1b62fb975e505b44213aa.html

  102. Catholic Converts: British and American Intellectuals Turn to Rome

  103. How Do Internet Atheism and Internet Feminism Help Us Understand the Current Cultural Moment?

  104. Google, Amazon, and Facebook Owe Jürgen Schmidhuber a Fortune

  105. A Non-Conformist's Guide to Success in a Conformist World

  106. Intellectual Hipsters and Meta-Contrarianism

  107. You Have a Set Amount of "Weirdness Points". Spend Them Wisely.

  108. When A.I. Matures, It May Call Jürgen Schmidhuber ‘Dad’

  109. Melodies of Popular Songs Have Gotten Simpler Over Time

  110. Even When Contrarians Win, They Lose

  111. The Shazam Effect

  112. From Fashion to Housewares, Are We in a Decades-Long Design Rut?

  113. XKCD #1053: Ten Thousand

  114. Connoisseur

  115. design#future-tag-features

    [Transclude the forward-link's context]

  116. 2023-11-22-xkcd-2857-rebuttals.png

  117. 2023-stuppy-figure1-schematicdiagramoftheoryofslowmotioneffectonnoveltyandestheticliking.jpg

  118. 1999-zuckerman.pdf

  119. https://aeon.co/magazine/culture/why-we-love-repetition-in-music

  120. https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/sites/r9k

  121. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=6861533

  122. fe034f192e1a40b91ec6974f7ba2500b71a00754.html

  123. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/bdm.2360

  124. https://rs.io/creativity-literature-compression/#methods

  125. https://statmodeling.stat.columbia.edu/2022/01/11/suspense-in-music-suspense-in-stories-how-do-they-differ/

  126. https://www.amazon.com/Hit-Makers-Science-Popularity-Distraction/dp/110198032X

  127. https://www.amazon.com/Matter-Taste-Fashions-Culture-Change/dp/0300173873

  128. https://www.edge.org/response-detail/11825

  129. https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/5GnwjxbL3SQ7gjRn6/open-thread-july-16-22-2013#gFRKkcyXDTiKkug56

  130. https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/7LnHFj4gs5Zd4WKcu/notes-on-awe

  131. https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/Bc9qnvKZXWBcmGdfM/why-is-everyone-so-boring-by-robin-hanson?commentId=CnQfnkmDfuEYSFtj4

  132. https://www.nature.com/articles/srep02758

  133. https://www.npr.org/2023/11/08/1209932614/jungle-gym-playground-monkey-bars-maths-hinton-fourth-dimension

  134. https://www.overcomingbias.com/2007/06/against_free_th.html

  135. https://www.overcomingbias.com/2023/01/i-see-stylists-everywhere.html

  136. https://www.overcomingbias.com/p/why-is-everyone-so-boringhtml

  137. https://www.schedium.net/2023/01/the-window-trick-of-las-vegas-hotels.html

  138. https://www.statsignificant.com/p/when-do-we-stop-finding-new-music

  139. 6e1d475b07aaa809613297423aee7cedfc423b4f.html

  140. https://www.statsignificant.com/p/which-movies-stand-the-test-of-time

  141. https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/12/great-resignation-myth-polls/676189/

  142. https://www.wired.com/story/beauty-is-in-the-eye-of-the-beholder-but-memorability-may-be-universal/

  143. https://x.com/deedydas/status/1809428693980442841

  144. https://x.com/eshear/status/1830806943289745825

  145. https://x.com/kenneth0stanley/status/1733571230803058920

  146. Boxed: Things I learned after lying in an MRI machine for 30 hours

  147. https%253A%252F%252Faethermug.com%252Fposts%252Fboxed.html

  148. The Art of Slowness: Slow Motion Enhances Consumer Evaluations by Increasing Processing Fluency

  149. https%253A%252F%252Fjournals.sagepub.com%252Fdoi%252Ffull%252F10.1177%252F00222437231179187.html

  150. Contrastive Search Is What You Need For Neural Text Generation

  151. https%253A%252F%252Farxiv.org%252Fabs%252F2210.14140.html

  152. Cannabis use does not increase actual creativity but biases evaluations of creativity

  153. %252Fdoc%252Fmarijuana%252F2022-heng.pdf.html

  154. Balancing Categorical Conventionality in Music

  155. %252Fdoc%252Fpsychology%252Fnovelty%252F2022-silver.pdf.html

  156. Nymph Piss and Gravy Orgies: Local and Global Contrast Effects in Relational Humor

  157. %252Fdoc%252Fpsychology%252Fnovelty%252F2022-siew.pdf.html

  158. Night Shifts: Can technology shape our dreams?

  159. https%253A%252F%252Fharpers.org%252Farchive%252F2022%252F04%252Fnight-shifts-dream-incubation-technology-sleep-research%252F.html

  160. Motivating Personal Growth by Seeking Discomfort

  161. %252Fdoc%252Fpsychology%252Fnovelty%252F2022-woolley.pdf.html

  162. Eliciting false insights with semantic priming

  163. https%253A%252F%252Flink.springer.com%252Farticle%252F10.3758%252Fs13423-021-02049-x.html

  164. Hipsters and the cool: A game theoretic analysis of identity expression, trends, and fads

  165. %252Fdoc%252Fsociology%252F2021-golman.pdf.html

  166. Algorithmic Balancing of Familiarity, Similarity, & Discovery in Music Recommendations

  167. %252Fdoc%252Freinforcement-learning%252Fexploration%252F2021-mehrotra.pdf%2523spotify.html

  168. It Doesn’t Hurt to Ask: Question-Asking Increases Liking

  169. %252Fdoc%252Fpsychology%252Fnovelty%252F2017-huang.pdf.html

  170. Give Your Ideas Some Legs: The Positive Effect of Walking on Creative Thinking

  171. %252Fdoc%252Fpsychology%252Fnovelty%252F2014-oppezzo.pdf.html

  172. Does Your iPod Really Play Favorites?

  173. %252Fdoc%252Fstatistics%252Fprobability%252F2009-froelich.pdf.html