Here's some discussion by Martin Ternouth and others on organizing office space. I've actually started to use the blog as a way to store interesting ideas. It has the advantage of forcing me to work in full sentences. Storing things in email is a mess.
4 Comments
Leave a comment
Subscribe to Entry
For more info on our research:
Blogroll
Sister Blogs:
Statistics:
- Chance News
- The Endeavour
- Christian Robert
- Revolution Computing
- Yu-Sung Su's Blog
- The Numbers Guy
- Messy Matters
Visualization:
Cognitive and Behavioral Science:
- Decision Science News
- British Psychological Society Research Digest
- Seth Roberts [experimental psychology]
- Criteria's Employee Testing Blog
Social and Political Science:
- Monthly Labor Review Precis
- Marginal Revolution [economics]
- Language Log
- Social Science Statistics
- The Baby Name Wizard
- Vox EU
Machine Learning:
Cultural:
Pages
Research supported by the National Science Foundation
National Institutes of Health
Yahoo Research
Search
Recent Comments
Recent Entries
- The divergence of the intellectual upper class
- Inbox zero
- Big juicy datasets
- A horror story involving the correction of a published scientific article
- A question about poker
- Seniors Skeptical on Health Care Spending
- Linf: An L-infinity Classifier
- Election 2008: What really happened
- Baseball stats: innovation, randomness, and other issues
- A cool bit of experimental research on group threat and voter mobilization
- Why don't I do more explicit modeling of spatial or temporal patterns?
- Computational Legal Studies
- The work-until-its-significant strategy
- News flash: Nascar drivers support Republicans
- Two-stage regression as an approximation to multilevel modeling
- Thinking about rationality of voting, and cooperative systems in general, in terms of the design of intelligent agents
- A Central Limit Theorem Java applet
- Clustered standard errors vs. hierarchical modeling
- OmniGraphSketcher
- What do you need to apply to a Ph.D. program in statistics?
Categories
- Administrative (15)
- Art (36)
- Bayesian Statistics (239)
- Causal Inference (93)
- Decision Theory (149)
- Economics (199)
- Literature (135)
- Miscellaneous Science (120)
- Miscellaneous Statistics (423)
- Multilevel Modeling (171)
- Political Science (636)
- Public Health (133)
- Sociology (247)
- Sports (27)
- Statistical computing (121)
- Statistical graphics (152)
- Teaching (149)

Thanks for the great link! It got me thinking about paper and its manifold wonderful uses for organizing ideas and helping to think clearly. Following this link and what follows helped inspire this post on my blog about the wonderfulness of clutter.
Andrew, the article opened my eyes onto so many useful and really obvious things. thanks a lot. You know my desk space is never " at peace", if I say it is a complete mess I will underestimate it. : )My desk is like a field of battle between different books, dictionaries, journals, CDs, note books, pens, pencils, occasionally met pictures and poor pc just huddles in the background. Though I can justify myself, there is one day a week my desk looks different. It is when I am cleaning my lodgings. I put every item in its place and God it looks cute, but i cannnot work wihtout making a mess of my work place. and I do not consider it to be a mess. Let's see when a painter is working on the picture, he does not care for the roder around him, when the tailor is making a suit his work place is also not a sight for feeble hearts. The same story goes with us. nevertheless, I am glad that I ahve read this article due to you and I wish you happy blogging.
Organizing office or just everything? I think I can write a paper on this. :)
If papers that scatter on a desk represent what are currently on a researcher's mind. The actual action of organizing them into piles, folders, etc, can get thoughts in the head more organized.