Yu: Angela
From her lesson to my creation 🚀
in Germany. Her work focuses on Bayesian models of the brain. ResearchGate Key papers include: Active Sensing as Bayes-Optimal Sequential Decision Making angela yu
understands that adults learn by doing. Her courses include: From her lesson to my creation 🚀 in Germany
She followed the map’s loose hints to a coastal town called Coldwell—a place where gulls snarled at the wind and the sidewalks tilted toward salt. Coldwell’s harbor was a cluster of weathered hulks and new fiberglass bows. Angela stayed at a small inn painted the color of washed oyster shells. The innkeeper, Mrs. Sato, was all small smiles and larger knuckled hands. When Angela mentioned Merrow while avoiding the word “myth,” Mrs. Sato’s face softened into guarded warmth. “Many look for what they are trying to forget,” she said, and brought Angela a bowl of stew that tasted like the sea. Her courses include: She followed the map’s loose
They anchored. Jonah kept the engine low and fed the depth sounder a slow line of beeps. When they rowed in, the shore gave a scent of iron and lavender. On the beach lay glass beads threaded on seaweed and the skeletal remains of an old pole with rusted bells. An echoing cry—human, then not—trembled from stones. Angela felt the world fold small, like a map closing.
She never found Merrow again, at least not in any way anyone else could agree upon. Sometimes, late at night, she would dream of the island rearranging itself for a better story. Other times she would wake with the taste of salt and the conviction that there were more things to map than any atlas could hold.