Now that I've moved one of my labs to
accommodate
the princess and her pea, with the result
that the occasional blind patient now has to negotiate a concrete
stairwell in order to move from the interview room to the
eye-tracking laboratory (apparently a price well worth paying in
order to accommodate all those mattresses with which to cover the
pea), I've got on with trying to manage more important things.
Still, it's interesting how minor irritants can prove so annoying.
I guess I too have my metaphorical peas.
So what's happened in all this time? Not much. Work, work, and more
work. I've been to Washington for an NIH meeting and to Houston for
a conference (where I ate the best steak
ever); I've
finished teaching a Masters-level statistics course and an advanced
course on language processing (taught with Silvia); and I've
processed another hundred or so papers for the journal
Cognition. I really enjoy the editorial work. But it gets
me down that there's such a huge backlog of papers waiting to be
processed. I manage around 20 papers a week (sending out to review,
or making editorial decisions such as 'accept', 'revise', or
'reject'). But that doesn't do anything to reduce the backlog, as
no sooner do I process one paper than another is submitted to the
journal. My current estimate is that it won't be until next Easter
before the lag between receiving a paper, or receiving all its
reviews, and processing that paper, comes down to just one week.
I'm too embarrassed to say what the lag is currently! It built up
over the summer (due to vacation and conference time), and I've
never managed to get it down. Things will improve now that the
associate editors are coming online (so a big thank-you to Rebecca,
Vic, Steven, and Andrew), but it's a slow process. And each time I
get an email from an author asking why it's taking so long, I feel
a pang of guilt. My ideal Christmas? Two weeks off in which to work
uninterrupted on the journal. My
actual Christmas? Two
days off in which to work, probably interrupted, on the journal...
like its birth control counterpart, editorial control by
editus
interruptus is not particularly efficient.
My New Year's Resolution? To write a couple of papers, write two
grant proposals, collaborate on a third, be a better father, be a
better partner, be a better karateka and get my brown belt (3rd
Kyu) and hopefully my brown and white belt also (2nd Kyu), and be
less stressed. It's really very tempting to take up all those
offers that my spam email brings me each day (I get on average 200
spam a day). Though it's not clear to me whether Viagra, a cheap
mortgage, an imitation watch, stock options, and a share of
someone's Nigerian fortune would really make me that much happier.
Maybe the fortune... and yes, the cheap mortgage.. and probably the
stock options (I still regret not buying shares in Apple...).

So, in the spirit of Xmas... the Christmas tree is up, and lit. But
outside the front of the house our 2 ft. Monkey Puzzle tree has
provided a more natural seasonal decoration: It's been very frosty,
and foggy, so all that white stuff is cobwebs covered in
condensation from the fog that has frozen. Maybe next year I'll rig
up some lights. So... for the two people who I know read this (one
of whom kindly sent me the link to a much more interesting
blog than mine), very best wishes for the holiday
season, and may next year bring you less spam, less stress, more
satisfaction, and a big lottery win. Happy Xmas!