why the “given time” tastes like glory to you

It’s a pretty specific feeling to be looking at your calendar and mentally preparing yourself for a string of endless video calls or a meeting that threatens to consume the entire morning. But there comes a time when an email or a written message arrives with a phrase that gives relief: the meeting has been cancelled. The relief you feel is instantaneous, but there is a quite curious phenomenon behind it: the hour that has just been recovered in the day feels much longer and more useful than a free hour that was already scheduled for quite some time. The big question. It may be something that we feel subjectively, and now that you have read this paragraph you have realized that the sensation that is perceived is true. But now science has arrived to answer the question of why this happens. And it is not magic, but rather it is pure behavioral psychology. The answer is in a recently published study where the research team set out to understand what happens in the brain when the clock gives us an unexpected break. To do this, they carried out seven experiments involving more than 2,300 participants. Your conclusions. The first thing that have seen It is precisely that the time “gained” unexpectedly is subjectively perceived as much longer. The researchers explain that this is due to a powerful contrast effect, since the mind was rigidly prepared to not have free time and undergo a cognitive load such as the meeting. When that obligation abruptly disappears, the empty space that remains contrasts brutally with our expectation of saturation. In short, the brain, faced with the sudden absence of scheduled stress, stretches our perception of those minutes. What do we do with time? This altered perception of time has direct and measurable consequences on our behavior, since, as the experiments detail, the feeling of “liberation” pushes us to make very specific decisions about how to invest that time. And because we perceive that we have a lot of extra time, we are more likely to invest it in more extensive, leisure-oriented activities. This explains why, after a cancellation, it is rare that we launch into a harder and more tedious task that we have pending. Instead, that false sense of temporary abundance invites us to have a long coffee, read a pending article, chat with a colleague or do low-intensity tasks. It is as if you were literally tasting freedom. The modern era. With everything around us, science reminds us that there is a cost to living obsessed with the agenda. Previous research suggests that our leisure time drastically reduces how much we enjoy it and makes us perceive that time passes faster. This is why overscheduling contracts our perception of time, while unexpected cancellations expand it. Images | Campaign Creators In Xataka | It is possible that you have been studying poorly all your life: neuroscience is destroying the myth of “crazing” the night before

While OpenAI takes all the media glory with ChatGPT, Alibaba is already taking important clients with Qwen. The latest: Airbnb

Alibaba has been investing in its family of open language models for quite some time.qwen‘, which are gaining increasing acceptance between developers and users. Although OpenAI takes all the media glory with ChatGPT and the rest of the services, the Chinese firm is not short and already is overtaking him with some clients. The latest example: Airbnb, which has chosen to rely mostly on Alibaba’s Qwen AI model for its automated customer service, leaving ChatGPT in a secondary role. Airbnb’s decision. Brian Chesky, co-founder and CEO of the tourist accommodation platform, explained Bloomberg this week that his company “heavily relies” on Alibaba’s Qwen model. As he admitted to the outlet, ChatGPT’s integration capabilities “are not quite ready” for Airbnb’s needs. On the other hand, Chesky assured that Qwen is “very good, fast and cheap.” It is curious, especially considering that Chesky is a personal friend of Sam Altman, head of OpenAI. How the system works. Airbnb’s customer service agent, which the company deployed to all its users Americans in English last May, is built on 13 different AI models, including those from OpenAI, Google and open source providers. However, Chesky recognized that, although they use the latest OpenAI models, “we usually don’t use them much in production because there are faster and cheaper models.” Just like point the company, the system has allowed them to cut their human workforce by 15% and claims to have saved average resolution time, going from almost three hours to just six seconds. Open source is gaining ground. Open source models, which developers can modify as they wish, are increasingly challenging closed systems like those from OpenAI. Although the company also has an open model (gpt-oss), Chinese tech companies are releasing models much faster, more cost-effectively, and open source. Joe Tsai, president of Alibaba, declared recently that the winner in AI should be determined by “who can adopt it the fastest,” not “who creates the most powerful model.” A future integration with ChatGPT in the air. Although Airbnb is awaiting the development of ChatGPT app integrations and could consider a collaboration in the future, similar to those of its competitors Booking and Expedia, the platform is not currently among the first applications available on the OpenAI chatbot. Chesky even advised to OpenAI about its new ability for third-party developers to integrate their applications into ChatGPT, a feature that the company announced this month and which he described as a “developer preview.” And now what. Airbnb plans expand its AI agent with support in Spanish and French this fall, and 56 more languages ​​next year. Meanwhile, the company claims to be betting on new social functions to foster connections between users and improve travel recommendations within the application. For Chesky, these features are “probably the most differentiated part of Airbnb.” Cover image | Unsplash (Oberon Copeland), Wikimedia In Xataka | OpenAI is no longer a startup. Now it is a black hole of 500,000 million that threatens the world economy

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