MercurysBall2 ago

New Marfa Ballroom thread here: https://voat.co/v/pizzagate/3796709

MercurysBall2 ago

Using Big Data to Understand the Human Condition: The Kavli HUMAN Project. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26487987

MercurysBall2 ago

Just putting this here until I have time to flesh this out.

Contact tracing could very well be linked to the Kavli Human Project...

Beware the Contact Tracers (Clinton involvement) https://youtu.be/FizHg_2hrVQ

https://voat.co/v/pizzagate/3793041/23608535

After starting up the Institute for the Study of Decision Making in 2014, Glimcher––working with Miyoung Chun of The Kavli Foundation..also began the development of a new interdisciplinary longitudinal study sponsored by The Kavli Foundation, called the Kavli HUMAN Project.

...IARPA is involved. ..a collaboration that we have with George Church..He has also pioneered new privacy, biosafety, ELSI, environmental and biosecurity policies. He is director of an IARPA BRAIN Project and NIH Center for Excellence in Genomic Science. Optogenetics is of interest because of their brain experiments which can be seen to potentially be leading to modern forms of mind control [swarm theory with the other Epstein].

https://voat.co/v/MysteryCodes/3584991

Prince Philip as Chancellor of the University in a ceremony with Fred Kavli.

[Malina moved his lab from Arroyo to New Mexico]

New Mexico is known for its underground bases and tunnels. Then I came across this book: Underground Bases and Tunnels: What Is the Government Trying to Hide? By Richard Sauder which describes 'an unusual electronics facility called “ICE station OTTO” which is not far from the Zorro Ranch...OTTO is on the Bill King ranch!

The Human Project https://towardsdatascience.com/the-human-project-21207dda51cf

This upcoming fall, Dr. Glimcher, the Kavli Foundation, and the ISDM will start recruiting for The Human Project — a 20-year, 10,000-person study, bent on creating a vast database of all aspects of the human experience...

The Human Project is a telescope turned away from space and back towards humanity. It is the quest for a complete understanding of human health and behavior. It is the coming together of advanced technologies — (such as bio sample analyses, Geographic Information Systems, and smartphones) — and the highest academic standard for longitudinal survey research.

The main questions the Human Project intends to answer are about health. Researchers today understand that there simply isn’t one cause for asthma, diabetes, hypertension, obesity, or depression. There are thousands of interacting biological, cultural, and environmental factors that combine to cause a person to be one way or the other. The Human Project intends to examine all of these factors at once, with the understanding that the treatment for these diseases is probably a combination of behavior, social, and medical interventions.

..Once participants are randomly recruited for the study, they must go through multiple information sessions in order to guarantee they are properly informed and able to give full consent. Then, they complete an exhaustive medical exam. Everything is tested — blood, urine, hearing, lung capacity, IQ. Every once in a while, they will get tested again. The final piece is a simple smartphone app. This app monitors certain aspects of daily life, such as where one is located or how many steps one is taking (the kind of data, by the way, that phone companies already store and sell to other companies). Participants also use the app to answer simple lifestyle questions everyday, which adds up to only a couple of minutes of commitment for participants every week.

Dr. Glimcher was inspired to obtain data similarly to how the Sloan Digital Sky Survey obtains astronomical data: “Twenty years ago, astronomers would book time on a telescope and pan it around looking for quasars until they’d find one — that is, until Dr. James Gunn decided that was exactly the wrong way to do it.” The Professor of Astrophysical Sciences at Princeton University pioneered the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, which used a wide-angle optical telescope at the Apache Point Observatory to slowly pan across the sky and capture as much as possible at once. The result was a vast, comprehensive database, which has logged observations of over 500 million objects.

Astronomers can easily look back on the Digital Sloan Sky Survey and say, “that was the one that changed the game.” The same can be said of biologists looking back on the Human Genome Project, which for the first time created a databank of genetic information for thousands of organisms.