Yearly Archives: 2007

Science Videos

JoVE, SciVee, LabAction and DnaTube are mentioned in this nice article, also found in a number of other newspapers, e.g., USA Today and Seattle Times.

‘Tis the giving season

And bloggers are really, really good at taking care of each other. So, this year, if you have some money to spare, help one of our own, Gary Farber, whose physical disability does not prevent him from writing an amazing blog (where you go to find out, for instance, exactly how, method-wise, the government spies on US citizens), but prevents him from getting a job that pays for food.

Instructional Videos

Sites with videos that are more serious than YouTube are proliferating – I get an e-mail about a new one about every week. This week’s addition is SuTree. By clicking on pets and animals category and then on reptiles and then on care, I found, for instance, this video on the care of Leopard Geckos. It includes some text, as well as user comments (but no responses from the experts or authors of the video). The advice is good, standard pet-shop fare. As my lab-buddy Chris actually did a lot of research with Leopard Geckos, we know a bunch more about the husbandry and other neat tricks with these lizards, but for a pet owner or a teacher, the video is sufficient.

Science Blogging Conference – who is coming? (The hosts: Sigma Xi and The American Scientist)

2008NCSBClogo200.pngThere are 46 days until the Science Blogging Conference. The wiki is looking good, the Program is shaping up nicely, and there is more and more blog and media coverage already. The anthology should be published in time for the event. There are already 163 registered participants and if you do not register soon, it may be too late once you decide to do so (we’ll cap at about 200). Between now and the conference, I am highlighting some of the people who will be there, for you to meet in person if you register in time.
Roger Harris is the Director of Membership & Chapters of Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society. The conference will take place in the Sigma Xi building. Roger also started an educational site, Jungle Photos.
Sigma Xi is the publisher of the popular science magazine, The American Scientist, where David Schoonmaker is the managing editor.
In order to meet him, you know what you have to do: register! Registration is free. Check the map for nearby hotels. And sign up for the Friday dinner.
If you are coming, find hotel information, exchange information about where you are staying, if you are offering a ride, need a ride, or want to carpool on the Ride Board – just edit the wiki page and add the query or information.
Our Friday lab tours are now in place, so you can start signing up to join one of them.
Get updates and get in touch with other participants via our Facebook Event group (I see that some who originally responded “Maybe attending” are now registered).
Please use ‘scienceblogging.com’ as your tag when writing blog posts about it or uploading pictures. You can also download and print out the flyers (PDF1 and PDF2) and post them on bulletin boards at your office, lab or school.

ClockQuotes

Time is the great legalizer, even in the field of morals.
– Henry Louis Mencken

Heh! Wait till you see her play bagpipes!

Alex! Practically Famous!

I thought the name sounded familiar when I checked the newest papers published in PLoS Biology today – yup, that’s him, my SciBling and friend Alex Palazzo:
The Signal Sequence Coding Region Promotes Nuclear Export of mRNA by Alexander F. Palazzo, Michael Springer, Yoko Shibata, Chung-Sheng Lee, Anusha P. Dias and Tom A. Rapoport:

In eukaryotic cells, precursors of messenger RNAs (mRNAs) are synthesized and processed in the nucleus. During processing, noncoding introns are spliced out, and a cap and poly-adenosine sequence are added to the beginning and end of the transcript, respectively. The resulting mature mRNA is exported from the nucleus to the cytoplasm by crossing the nuclear pore. Both the introns and the cap help to recruit factors that are necessary for nuclear export of an mRNA. Here we provide evidence for a novel mRNA export pathway that is specific for transcripts coding for secretory proteins. These proteins contain signal sequences that target them for translocation across the endoplasmic reticulum membrane. We made the surprising observation that the signal sequence coding region (SSCR) can serve as a nuclear export signal of an mRNA that lacks an intron or functional cap. Even the export of an intron-containing natural mRNA was enhanced by its SSCR. The SSCR export signal appears to be characterized in vertebrates by a low content of adenines. Our discovery of an SSCR-mediated pathway explains the previously noted amino acid bias in signal sequences, and suggests a link between nuclear export and membrane targeting of mRNAs.

And check out the editorial synposis as well: Secretory Protein mRNA Finds Another Way Out

My picks from ScienceDaily

In Promiscuous Antelopes, The ‘Battle Of The Sexes’ Gets Flipped:

In some promiscuous species, sexual conflict runs in reverse, reveals a new study. Among African topi antelopes, females are the ones who aggressively pursue their mates, while males play hard to get.

(which Kate explained a few days ago – is ScienceDaily that slow?)
Dinosaur Mummy Found With Fossilized Skin And Soft Tissues:

The amazing discovery of one of the finest and rarest dinosaur specimens ever unearthed — a partially intact dino mummy found in the Hell Creek Formation Badlands of North Dakota was made by 16-year-old fossil hunter Tyler Lyson on his uncle’s farm.

Skin Aging Reversed In Mice By Blocking Action Of Single Protein:

Researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine have reversed the effects of aging on the skin of mice, at least for a short period, by blocking the action of a single critical protein.

Rodent Fossils Provide Data On Climate Six Million Years Ago:

How did the rodents which inhabited the south of the Iberian Peninsula live six million years ago? The researcher of the UGR Raef Minwer-Barakat has attempted to answer this question through his doctoral thesis “Rodents and insectivorous of Upper Turoliense and the Pliocene of the central section of the Guadix basin”, supervised by doctors Elvira Martín and César Viseras, of the Department of Stratigraphy y Palaeontology of the Universidad de Granada. His studied has concluded with the discovering of three new species of rodents and insectivores (Micromys caesaris, Blarinoides aliciae and Archaeodesmana elvirae) and the finding, for the first time in the region, of nine more species.

Choosing Dry Or Wet Food For Cats Makes Little Difference When It Comes To Feline Diabetes:

Although society is accustomed to seeing Garfield-sized cats, obese, middle-aged cats can have a variety of problems including diabetes mellitus, which can be fatal. The causes of diabetes mellitus in cats remain unknown, although there has been a strong debate about whether a dry food diet puts cats at greater risk for diabetes. A new study from a University of Missouri-Columbia veterinarian suggests that weight gain, not the type of diet, is more important when trying to prevent diabetes in cats.

Honey A Better Option For Childhood Cough Than Over The Counter Medications:

A new study by a Penn State College of Medicine research team found that honey may offer parents an effective and safe alternative than over the counter children’s cough medicines.

Fossils Excavated From Bahamian Blue Hole May Give Clues Of Early Life:

Long before tourists arrived in the Bahamas, ancient visitors took up residence in this archipelago off Florida’s coast and left remains offering stark evidence that the arrival of humans can permanently change — and eliminate — life on what had been isolated islands, says a University of Florida researcher.

Malaria Parasite In Patient Blood Finds Distinct Physiological States:

The malaria parasite has been studied for decades, but surprisingly, little is known about how it behaves in humans to cause disease. In a groundbreaking study in Nature, an international research team has for the first time measured which of the parasite’s genes are turned on or off during actual infection in humans, not in cell cultures, unearthing surprising behaviors and opening a window on the most critical aspects of parasite biology.

Coral Reefs Living In Sites With Variable Temperatures Better Able To Survive Warm Water:

Finally, some good news about the prospects of coral reefs in the age of climate change. According to a new study by the Wildlife Conservation Society, corals may actually survive rising ocean temperatures in ‘tough love’ seas with wide-ranging temperatures.

Today’s carnivals

Circus of the Spineless #27 is up on The Hawk Owl’s Nest
The 18th Festival of the Trees, or November Arborea, is up on Riverside Rambles
International Carnival of Pozitivities – edition 2.6. (special World AIDS Day edition) is up on DropDeadHappy
Pediatric Grand Rounds, Volume 2, Edition 12, are up on Hope For Pandora.
Encephalon #37 is right here, at A Blog Around The Clock

Have you hugged your horse today?

The other day, Kate wrote an interesting post about inter-species relationships, in particular the cases of inter-species adoption and parenting. In her post, she mentioned a paper that immediately drew my attention – Influence of various early human-foal interferences on subsequent human-foal relationship. by Henry S, Richard-Yris MA and Hausberger M. (Dev Psychobiol. 2006 Dec;48(8):712-8.).
In the paper, the newborn foals were either handled by humans (e.g., brought to the teat), or left completely alone with their mother, or just had humans standing by. Then, a few weeks later, they tested the foals as to their response to human handling. Those that were handled immediately after birth responded less positively than the controls and those that had just a presence of humans had a better response than the controls (in a nutshell – the study is more complicated than that, but this will suffice for now).
As someone who has spent my life around horses, I grokked this intuitively. The idea of “imprinting”, as I understood it at the time it was popular a couple of decades ago, did not mean, in my mind, force-handling newborn foals. It just meant ‘being there’. Letting the mare and foal do their stuff for the first few hours. Then, instead of letting the mares and foals out in the pasture for two years before trying to handle the semi-wild youngsters, making sure that the foals get used to the daily presence of humans, and gradually more and more interaction with humans, including touching and handling.
The paper is described as a test of “imprinting” but I am not sure – has anyone actually tried to imprint by force-handling foals at birth? Was that what imprinting ended up meaning? Or is the paper misinterpreting the idea?
I have raised a foal. My good friend and colleague, a veterinarian, was there when my horse was born. He let the nature take its course. For the first month, the dam was handled daily and they both spent time outside in the presence of humans, but nobody touched the foal. When I got him at six months of age, I spent the first night sitting in his food-trough, talking softly. He calmed down after a couple of hours, finally fell asleep, and later came over to me, sniffed me and nuzzled me. It never occurred to me to pat him as I never expected that to be a naturally soothing experience – “Yeesh, yuck, he…touched me!”.
But I spent hours every day with him afterwards. By the time he turned 1, I could catch him in the paddock (OK, the trick was to offer some tangerines), groom him, pick up his legs and trim his hooves, put a blanket on him, trim his whiskers with an electrical trimmer, lead him on the halter, lunge him, long-rein him, load him on the single-horse trailer and drive him around. At the age of 2, I had no problem putting the saddle on and getting on top myself. For the rest of his life he was a perfect gentleman in and out of the barn, easily handled by kids. He was not as easy to ride later on, I hear, which is surprising as I had no trouble riding him the first few months of his riding career. Last time I went home, back in 1995, I watched him do great at the Young Horse division of the showjumping championship of Serbia. I heard he started refusing to jump later and broke someone’s arm in the process. He subsequently won the dressage championship of Serbia with another rider. You can see a picture of him from his later years here.
I always thought that people patted horses because it feels good to the human, not the horse. The proper reward for work well done is rest – letting the reins long, walking the horse, taking him away from the noise of the show-ring to a quiet corner, giving him a bath, a stall full of fresh straw and some nice food, e.g., a warm bran-mash with apples and carrots (and garlic cloves – they LOVE it and their hair gets so shiny). The pat on the neck that a horse gets after running a good race or jumping a nice course is not in itself a reward. It is just a learned signal that the work is over and that the horse can now relax.

Encephalon #37

It’s been a long time since I last hosted a carnival, but who could resist Mo when he asked so nicely if I would be interested in hosting Encephalon? Of course I will! And here it is and I hope you enjoy it, with a great diversity of posts, linked in the order I received them:
GrrlScientist of Living the Scientific Life invites us all to the Mouse Party to see the difference between ‘your brain’ and ‘your brain on drugs’.
Ed Yong of Not Exactly Rocket Science looks at the recent study on the neurobiology of aesthetics: Brain of the beholder – the neuroscience of beauty in sculpture.
Dr. Deb notes the actor who turned into an advocate for people suffering from mental illness – Joe Pantoliano is Fighting Stigma.
Chris Patil of Ouroboros blogs about ageing – and not just in humans: Longer living through chemistry: Serotonin signaling and CR mimesis in the worm.
Steve and Sandra of Omni Brain were busy this week, pronouncing that Freud is dead (Well… except in english departments), discovering the First recorded experiment? Daniel 1: 1-16 and finding a real scienceblogs.com Hit Of The Week: Psychopharmacologist Song.
PZ Myers is teaching his Neurobiology course this semester and a number of his students are regularly guest-blogging on Pharyngula, asking good questions and tapping into the collective wisdom of the commenters. Here are some excellent recent examples of their work:
Living Clocks of Arctic Animals by Blue_Expo
Hurts so Good by Katie Glasrud
Genetic link of OCD explored by Lua Yar
All I Want for Christmas is Synaesthesia by Bright_Lights
Zebrafish by Mark_Antimony
Synesthesia by Harderkid13
Sandy G of The Mouse Trap sent in two entries: The eight-fold structure of evolutionary biology/ cultural evolution and Schizophrenia: sensory gating and extracting meaning from noise.
Johan Carlin of The Phineas Gage Fan Club looks at a recent study of voting behavior in Evidence for shallow voters, or mere exposure?
The Neurocritic‘s latest is Employment Opportunity as a Professional fMRI Subject – a neuroimaging study demonstrating that it’s rewarding to win a competition and to earn more money than a rival. What a
breakthrough!
Dave and Greta Munger of of Cognitive Daily force a smile for science: ‘Just smile, you’ll feel better!’ Will you? Really?
Alvaro Fernandez of SharpBrains, one of the nine bloggers represented in this carnival who I have had the joy and privilege to meet in person, in real offline life, sent his interview with Robert Emmons on the Positive Psychology of Gratitude, as well as Brain Fitness Program and Neuroplasticity @ PBS and Is Intelligence Innate and Fixed?
Mo of Neurophilosophy, the founder and manager of this carnival, is blogging furiously about axon guiance – four parts so far: The growth cone, A novel axon guidance mechanism, The turning point and Axon guidance: New directions.
From the host of the previous edition, Noam of Brain In A Vat, two entries. First, a study on perceived contributions of first, middle and last authors on biomedical publications: Too Many Authors Spoil the Credit. Second, a Thanksgiving-themed post about the cognitive effects of tryptophan: Need a Favor? Wait Until After the Turkey
Tell Mo if you wish to host the next edition of Encephalon and submit your entries for it using the automated blogcarnival form.

Science Blogging Conference – who is coming? (Local scientists 2)

2008NCSBClogo200.pngThere are 47 days until the Science Blogging Conference. The wiki is looking good, the Program is shaping up nicely, and there is more and more blog and media coverage already. The anthology should be published in time for the event. There are already 161 registered participants and if you do not register soon, it may be too late once you decide to do so (we’ll cap at about 200). Between now and the conference, I am highlighting some of the people who will be there, for you to meet in person if you register in time.
Tyra Dunn-Thomas is a recent PhD from the Iowa State University program in Bioinformatics and Computational Biology and is now a postdoc at UNC in the department of Dental Research.
Kamana Singh is a Microbiology graduate student at North Carolina State University.
In order to meet him, you know what you have to do: register! Registration is free. Check the map for nearby hotels. And sign up for the Friday dinner.
If you are coming, find hotel information, exchange information about where you are staying, if you are offering a ride, need a ride, or want to carpool on the Ride Board – just edit the wiki page and add the query or information.
Our Friday lab tours are now in place, so you can start signing up to join one of them.
Get updates and get in touch with other participants via our Facebook Event group (I see that some who originally responded “Maybe attending” are now registered).
Please use ‘scienceblogging.com’ as your tag when writing blog posts about it or uploading pictures. You can also download and print out the flyers (PDF1 and PDF2) and post them on bulletin boards at your office, lab or school.

ClockQuotes

It’s time to start living the life you’ve imagined.
– Henry James

Besides shooting out a big blank from your buttock, you can feel as if your root chakra leaked sweet hot mucus.

This is woo of the decade! Priceless: How to Good-Bye Depression: If You Constrict Anus 100 Times Everyday. Malarkey? or Effective Way? by Hiroyuki Nishigaki is, according to the Amazon reviewers, absolutely hilarious – reading it will make you laugh (and thus constrict your anus) at least a 100 times, thus completely good-bying your depression. The title of this post is an actual sentence from the book, according to one of the reviewers. Hat-tip: Vaughan

Sleep News

All-Nighters Equal Lower Grades:

With end-of-semester finals looming, here’s an exam question: Will pulling an all-nighter actually help you score well? To the dismay of college students everywhere, the correct answer is “no.”

Morning Jolt Of Caffeine Might Mask Serious Sleep Problems:

With the holiday season’s hustle and bustle in full swing, most of us will race to our favorite coffee shop to get that caffeine boost to make it through the day. However, that daily jolt that we crave might be the reason we need the caffeine in the first place.

Insufficient Sleep Raises Risk Of Diabetes, Study Suggests:

The most common factors believed to contribute to diabetes are a decreased amount of physical activity and access to highly palatable processed foods. However, there is growing evidence that another aspect of our modern lifestyle, short sleep duration, is also contributing toward the “diabetes epidemic”, according to a new study.

Security! The issue Republicans run on (or should they?)

Chris Clarke on Joshua Trees

Chris Clarke is writing a book on Joshua trees. This requires money and Chris does not have enough. I know I want to read the book when it comes out. This is what blog-friends are for: donate now.

In Memoriam: Seymour Benzer

One of the greatest biologists of the 20th century, Seymour Benzer died last Friday. In his obituary post John Dennehy focuses on the bacteriophage work that led to deciphering of the genetic “alphabet”, and so does Carl Zimmer.
Readers of my blog probably know the name more in the connection with the discovery of the first clock mutants in Drosophila, by Ron Konopka in Benzer’s lab. You can read the paper itself (pdf) and watch a video in which Benzer explains it.

Science Blogging Conference – who is coming? (Local Biotech)

2008NCSBClogo200.pngThere are 48 days until the Science Blogging Conference. The wiki is looking good, the Program is shaping up nicely, and there is more and more blog and media coverage already. The anthology should be published in time for the event. There are already 161 registered participants and if you do not register soon, it may be too late once you decide to do so (we’ll cap at about 200). Between now and the conference, I am highlighting some of the people who will be there, for you to meet in person if you register in time.
Jennifer Williams of OpenHelix, LLC and Jennifer Montague of BioCytics will be there.
In order to meet him, you know what you have to do: register! Registration is free. Check the map for nearby hotels. And sign up for the Friday dinner.
If you are coming, find hotel information, exchange information about where you are staying, if you are offering a ride, need a ride, or want to carpool on the Ride Board – just edit the wiki page and add the query or information.
Our Friday lab tours are now in place, so you can start signing up to join one of them.
Get updates and get in touch with other participants via our Facebook Event group (I see that some who originally responded “Maybe attending” are now registered).
Please use ‘scienceblogging.com’ as your tag when writing blog posts about it or uploading pictures. You can also download and print out the flyers (PDF1 and PDF2) and post them on bulletin boards at your office, lab or school.

ClockQuotes

A lifetime of happiness! No man alive could bear it: it would be hell on earth.
– George Bernard Shaw

Happy birthday Woody Allen

Allan Stewart Konigsberg was born at Brooklyn, New York on this day in 1935. By age fifteen he was selling one-liners to New York gossip columnists. He dropped out of college and sold jokes to several prominent comics of the day, and started doing standup comedy himself in 1960. Five years later, under the name Woody Allen, he wrote and acted in “What’s New, Pussycat?”.

All men are mortal. Socrates was mortal. Therefore, all men are Socrates.
I will not eat oysters. I want my food dead – not sick, not wounded – dead.
If it bends, it’s funny; if it breaks, it’s not funny.
It’s not that I’m afraid to die, I just don’t want to be there when it happens.
The good people sleep much better at night than the bad people. Of course, the bad people enjoy the waking hours much more.
You can live to be 100 if you give up all the things that make you want to live to be 100.

– All from Woody Allen
From Quotes of the Day

Science Blogging Conference – who is coming? (Local bloggers I had many beers with)

2008NCSBClogo200.pngThere are 49 days until the Science Blogging Conference. The wiki is looking good, the Program is shaping up nicely, and there is more and more blog and media coverage already. The anthology should be published in time for the event. There are already 161 registered participants and if you do not register soon, it may be too late once you decide to do so (we’ll cap at about 200). Between now and the conference, I am highlighting some of the people who will be there, for you to meet in person if you register in time.
Ayse Erginer blogs on Arse Poetica
Will Raymond, twice candidate for the Town Council, blogs on CitizenWill
Dave Johnson (real job: Sun Microsystems, Apache Software Foundation) writes on the Blogging Roller.
In order to meet him, you know what you have to do: register! Registration is free. Check the map for nearby hotels. And sign up for the Friday dinner.
If you are coming, find hotel information, exchange information about where you are staying, if you are offering a ride, need a ride, or want to carpool on the Ride Board – just edit the wiki page and add the query or information.
Our Friday lab tours are now in place, so you can start signing up to join one of them.
Get updates and get in touch with other participants via our Facebook Event group (I see that some who originally responded “Maybe attending” are now registered).
Please use ‘scienceblogging.com’ as your tag when writing blog posts about it or uploading pictures. You can also download and print out the flyers (PDF1 and PDF2) and post them on bulletin boards at your office, lab or school.

ClockQuotes

Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it’s time to pause and reflect.
– Mark Twain

Open Laboratory 2007 – last call for submissions

Openlab 2007
[Bumped up for visibility – and it makes it easier for me to keep updating with new entries] Now that the Science Blogging Conference is getting very close, it is time to remind you that the new edition of the Science Blogging Anthology, “Open Laboratory 2007”, is in the works and is (still) accepting your suggestions.
Although the entire process, from the initial idea all the way to having a real book printed and up for sale, took only about a month, the Open Laboratory 2006 was a great success. This year, we have had much more time so we hope we will do an even better job of it.
More than 180 329 410 entries have come in so far (see under the fold) and we are looking for more. I have read them all and written my annotations about each, while Reed Cartwright is in the process of reading them closely as we speak. He is recruiting several other bloggers to act as referees and help him decide – if you want to be a referee, post a comment here or here.
In the end, he will be the final aribiter of which 50 posts, plus one poem and one cartoon, will make it into the anthology. Think of me as a ‘series editor’ and Reed as the ‘2007 editor’.
As we are bloggers, we like transparency. As much as the automated submission form makes our lives easy, we decided that it would be best if, like last year, we made the list of entries public. That way, you can all see them, read them, comment about them, and see what is missing and needs to be entered before the deadline comes (December 20th 2007).
Please, use the submission form to enter your submissions (i.e., putting a link in the comments of this post will not do you any good) and pick up the code for the cool badges (like the one on top of this post) here to help us spread the word.
As I wrote earlier:

Clicking on the button will take you to the submission form. Reed and I will get e-mail notification every time there is a new entry and we will read them all and jot down some ‘notes to self’. Since we have ten months to do this, we will not need a jury of 12 bloggers to help us read all the entries, but do not be surprised if we ask you to vet/factcheck/peer-review a post that is in your domain of expertise (and not ours) later in the year.
So, go back to December 20th, 2006 and start looking through your archives as well as archives of your favourite science bloggers and look for real gems – the outstanding posts. Many have been written recently for the “Science Only Week”, or for the “Basic Terms and Concepts” collection.
Try to look for posts that cover as many areas of science blogging as posssible: mathematics, astronomy, cosmology, physics, chemistry, earth science, atmospheric/climate science, marine science, biochemistry, genetics, molecular/cellular/developmental biology, anatomy/physiology, behavior, ecology, paleontology, evolution, psychology, anthropology, archaeology, and/or history of science, philosophy of science, sociology of science, science ethics and rhetorics, science communication and education, the business of science, the Life in Academia (from undergraduate, graduate, postdoc, faculty or administrative perspective), politics of science, science and pseudoscience, science and religion, etc.
Also, try to think of different post formats: essays, personal stories, poems, polemics, fiskings, textbook-style prose, etc. For now, let’s assume that color images cannot make it into the book (I’ll let you know if that changes) and certainly copyrighted (by others) material is a No-No. Posts that are too heavily reliant on multiple links are difficult to turn into hardcopy as well. Otherwise, write and submit stuff and hopefully one of your posts will make it into the Best 50 Science Posts of 2007 and get published!

Under the fold are the entries so far. About half have been submitted by authors, the rest by readers. I hope you don’t need to ask us to remove an entry of yours, but if that is the case (e.g., you intend to include it in your own book), please contact me about it.
Reading all the entries so far will help you think of other posts, yours or others’, that may fit in here. Perhaps a big story of this year is not covered in any of the submissions so far. Perhaps you remember a post which covers a story better than the entry we already have. Have we missed a really popular post that everyone loved and linked to?
Also, if you are an expert in an area and you have BIG problems with one of the entries in your field, please let us know soon so we can send it out for further peer-review. As was the case last year, only English-language posts are eligible. If you have written an awesome post in another language, please make a GOOD translation available before submission.
We are looking especially for more poems and more original cartoons.
The entries are arranged in alphabetical order of the name of the blog (because all attempts at categorization failed), which makes it easy to get my own out of the way first, and let you go on quickly to see all the really cool writers of the science blogosphere. If a blog has multiple contributors, the author of the submitted post(s) is named in parentheses.

Continue reading

The World AIDS Day

Tomorrow is the World AIDS Day:

The WAC’s slogan for their work is “Stop AIDS: Keep the Promise”. This is an appeal to governments, policy makers and regional health authorities to ensure that they meet the many targets that have been set in the fight against HIV and AIDS, and especially the promise of universal access to HIV treatment, care, support and prevention services by 2010. This campaign will run until 2010, with a related theme chosen for World AIDS Day each year.

So, I hope you choose to blog about this tomorrow and raise awareness about the HIV/AIDS epidemic, rallying your readers to contact the relevant authorities/governments and remind them of their promises (and thank those who are already doing a lot).
If you are a science blogger or a medblogger, I hope you also use this opportunity to educate your readers about the disease, from whichever angle you think is important. If you are looking for information, I hope you do not mind my shameless promotion of my employer (but you all love PLoS already, don’t you?) and point you to a whole host of papers on AIDS published a couple of hours ago in PLoS Medicine.
Larry Peiperl reviews this special AIDS issue and here are the links to all the papers (at least you don’t have to pay to read them):
Elevated Risk for HIV Infection among Men Who Have Sex with Men in Low- and Middle-Income Countries 2000-2006: A Systematic Review
When Do HIV-Infected Women Disclose Their HIV Status to Their Male Partner and Why? A Study in a PMTCT Programme, Abidjan
N348I in the Connection Domain of HIV-1 Reverse Transcriptase Confers Zidovudine and Nevirapine Resistance
Assessment of Recent HIV-1 Infection by a Line Immunoassay for HIV-1/2 Confirmation
Cytomegalovirus Retinitis: The Neglected Disease of the AIDS Pandemic
Antibody-Based HIV-1 Vaccines: Recent Developments and Future Directions
So, if one or more of these articles is of interest to you, or within the domain of your expertise, I will not get mad if you blog about it!

Science Communicators of North Carolina (SCONC) events for December

The editors of American Scientist magazine invite you to join them next week for the current installment of the fabled Pizza Lunch Seminar. This time, they have invited Alan Finkel, a neurologist at UNC Hospital, to describe his studies on migraines, cluster headaches and other, similarly delightful topics next Wednesday, December 5 at 12:00 noon at the Sigma Xi Center in RTP. The official title of his talk is “Headaches and Migraines: Causes, Treatments and Effects on Behavior.” To put people in the right “frame of mind,” a continuous loop of Alvin & the Chipmunks’ “Chipmunk Song (Christmas Don’t Be Late)” will be playing in the lobby. (Just kidding!) RSVP to Chris Brodie by Tuesday, December 4.
This month’s SCONC meeting will be a holiday party on Thursday, December 13 at 5:30 p.m. at the Burroughs Wellcome Fund in RTP. Come celebrate or commiserate (as you wish!) with the colleagues who know what it’s like to wade through jargon. Rage at the crass commercialism of the holidays by dining on food bought with someone else’s money. Raise a glass to cheer the health of science communications in North Carolina. Ho Ho Ho! RSVP to Russ Campbell by Thursday, December 6.

New and Exciting in PLoS Community Journals

Let’s see what is new in PLoS Pathogens, PLoS Genetics, PLoS Computational Biology and PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases:
A new installment in the “Ten Simple Rules” series: Ten Simple Rules for Graduate Students

Choosing to go to graduate school is a major life decision. Whether you have already made that decision or are about to, now it is time to consider how best to be a successful graduate student. Here are some thoughts from someone who holds these memories fresh in her mind (JG) and from someone who has had a whole career to reflect back on the decisions made in graduate school, both good and bad (PEB). These thoughts taken together, from former student and mentor, represent experiences spanning some 25 or more years. For ease, these experiences are presented as ten simple rules, in approximate order of priority as defined by a number of graduate students we have consulted here in the US; but we hope the rules are more globally applicable, even though length, method of evaluation, and institutional structure of graduate education varies widely. These rules are intended as a companion to earlier editorials covering other areas of professional development.

Computational Biology in Cuba: An Opportunity to Promote Science in a Developing Country:

Computational biology can be considered a supradisciplinary field of knowledge that merges biology, chemistry, physics, and computer science into a broad-based science that is important to furthering our understanding of the life sciences. Although a relatively new area of research, it is recognized as a crucial field for scientific advancement in developing countries. This Perspective introduces our vision of the role of computational biology in biomedical research and teaching in Cuba. Except where individuals are directly quoted, any opinions expressed herein should be considered those of the authors.

Fortunately, nobody from PLoS will have to go prison for publishing research originating in Cuba.
Measuring the Burden of Neglected Tropical Diseases: The Global Burden of Disease Framework:

Governments and international agencies are faced with setting priorities for health research and investment in health systems and health interventions in a context of increasing health care costs, increasing availability of effective interventions, and numerous and diverse priorities and interest groups. Evidence on the magnitude and trends of diseases and their causes should be a critical input to decision making at the global, national, and local levels. Broad evaluation of the effectiveness of health systems and major health programs and policies also requires assessments of the causes of loss of health that are comparable not only across populations, but also over time.

Lessons from “Lower” Organisms: What Worms, Flies, and Zebrafish Can Teach Us about Human Energy Metabolism:

A pandemic of metabolic diseases (atherosclerosis, diabetes mellitus, and obesity), unleashed by multiple social and economic factors beyond the control of most individuals, threatens to diminish human life span for the first time in the modern era. Given the redundancy and inherent complexity of processes regulating the uptake, transport, catabolism, and synthesis of nutrients, magic bullets to target these diseases will be hard to find. Recent studies using the worm Caenorhabditis elegans, the fly Drosophila melanogaster, and the zebrafish Danio rerio indicate that these “lower” metazoans possess unique attributes that should help in identifying, investigating, and even validating new pharmaceutical targets for these diseases. We summarize findings in these organisms that shed light on highly conserved pathways of energy homeostasis.

Open Lab 2007 is now being judged

Reed has assembled more than 30 judges and provided a secret online place for them to start working today on the difficult job of choosing the 50 best posts, one poem and one cartoon for the 2007 Open Laboratory science blogging anthology. You have only 20 days left to submit your own or your favourite bloggers’ antries.

My picks from ScienceDaily

Ocean Fertilization ‘Fix’ For Global Warming Discredited By New Research:

Scientists have revealed an important discovery that raises doubts concerning the viability of plans to fertilize the ocean to solve global warming, a projected $100 billion venture.

Separating The Therapeutic Benefits Of Cannabis From Its Mood-altering Side-effects:

Scientists from Queen Mary, University of London, have discovered a new way to separate the therapeutic benefits of cannabis from its mood-altering side-effects.

Human Genome Has Four Times More Imprinted Genes Than Previously Identified:

Scientists at Duke University have created the first map of imprinted genes throughout the human genome, and they say a modern-day Rosetta stone — a form of artificial intelligence called machine learning — was the key to their success. The study revealed four times as many imprinted genes as had been previously identified.

More Than One-quarter Of US Bird Species Imperiled, Report States:

One hundred seventy-eight species in the continental U.S. and 39 in Hawaii have the dubious distinction of landing on the newest and most scientifically sound list of America’s most imperiled birds. WatchList 2007, a joint effort of Audubon and American Bird Conservancy, reflects a comprehensive analysis of population size and trends, distribution, and threats for 700 bird species in the U.S. It reveals those in greatest need of immediate conservation help simply to survive amid a convergence of environmental challenges, including habitat loss, invasive species and global warming.

Endangered Brazilian Ocelot Kitten Born: Birth Significant For Species:

An endangered Brazilian ocelot kitten was born at the Louisville Zoo Sept. 23. This was the first offspring for mom Miguela and second for father Itirapua.

PRISM is a Lemon

Peter Suber reports that the Charleston Advisor gave its 2007 Lemon Award to PRISM. I first learned about this from an e-mail:

“The Charleston Advisor (TCA) announced its seventh annual Reader’s Choice Awards for products and services in academic libraries, although “winning” one of these awards isn’t always a good thing. For example, the 2007 Lemon Award went to the Association of American Publishers for PRISM (The Partnership for Research Integrity in Science and Medicine), the controversial web initiative created to oppose efforts to make publicly-funded research free on the web. “These publishers should not bite the hand that feeds them,” warned the Lemon Award’s tart announcement.”

How to Think About Science

CBC has started a series of interviews (later available as podcasts) with scientists and others about the nature of science, the public undrestanding of science and related issues. Let me know what you think and feel free to blog about individual interviews if you particularly like or dislike what someone there said.
(Hat-tip)

Antelopes Gone Wild!

Kate describes an unusual reproductive system in topi antelopes in which the fertile females are extremely promiscuous (but choosy) and aggressive. Not what you learned in school under the “mate choice” and “male-male competition” topics in your Animal Behavior classes….

Today’s carnivals

Philosophia Naturalis #15 is up on Sorting Out Science
Friday Ark #167 is up on the Modulator
Change of Shift: Vol 2, Number 12 is up on Doctor Anonymous

Shift Work labeled as a Probable Cause of Cancer

Shift Work May Be Cancer Risk:

In an announcement to be published Saturday in the journal Lancet Oncology, the International Agency for Research on Cancer, part of the World Health Organization, will label shift work as a “probable cause” of cancer.
The designation — rooted in the theory that the disruption of circadian rhythms could be a culprit — puts shift work on a par with ultraviolet radiation or anabolic steroids as suspected carcinogens, but does not say it is a definitive cause of cancer, such as cigarette smoking.

A random schedule of shifts – working a couple of days a week at night, a couple of days during the day – is the worst.
A phase-advancing shift-rotation (a week at night, followed by a week in the afternoon, followed by a week in the morning) is just as bad.
A slower, phase-delaying rotation (a month in the morning, followed by a month in the afternoon, followed by a month at night) is a little bit better.
Staying constantly on the night shift is almost as bad, mainly as it is almost impossible to keep it consistent, i.e., completely avoiding light during the day and exposing oneself to bright light during the night even on one’s days off. Social events and weekends produce a state of permanent jet-lag nonetheless.
But as in everything biological, there is a variation in population – some people are affected much more strongly than others. Let workers self-select their schedules as they can best feel on their own how the night work is affecting their physical and mental health.

Science Blogging Conference – who is coming? (National Center for Science Education)

2008NCSBClogo200.pngThere are 50 days until the Science Blogging Conference. The wiki is looking good, the Program is shaping up nicely, and there is more and more blog and media coverage already. The anthology should be published in time for the event. There are already 158 registered participants and if you do not register soon, it may be too late once you decide to do so (we’ll cap at about 200). Between now and the conference, I am highlighting some of the people who will be there, for you to meet in person if you register in time.
Josh%20Rosenau.jpgJoshua Rosenau is the Public Information Project Director at the National Center for Science Education and also a SciBling at Traveling From Kansas (formerly Thoughts From Kansas).
In order to meet him, you know what you have to do: register! Registration is free. Check the map for nearby hotels. And sign up for the Friday dinner.
If you are coming, find hotel information, exchange information about where you are staying, if you are offering a ride, need a ride, or want to carpool on the Ride Board – just edit the wiki page and add the query or information.
Our Friday lab tours are now in place, so you can start signing up to join one of them.
Get updates and get in touch with other participants via our Facebook Event group (I see that some who originally responded “Maybe attending” are now registered).
Please use ‘scienceblogging.com’ as your tag when writing blog posts about it or uploading pictures. You can also download and print out the flyers (PDF1 and PDF2) and post them on bulletin boards at your office, lab or school.

Happy Birthday, Mark Twain

Samuel Langhorne Clemens was born on this day in 1835. The picture is from his visit to Nikola Tesla’s lab:
Twain_in_Tesla%27s_Lab.jpg

ClockQuotes

Vision without action is merely a dream. Action without vision just passes the time. Vision with action can change the world.
– Joel Barker

How It All Ends

Tinamou’s Dilemma: Canines or Talons?

When I first read about a new paper about the behavior and ecology of maned wolves, I immediately thought of the blogger most uniquely qualified to write about it. Anne-Marie’s research is on maned wolves and in her latest post she describes an ecological love-hate triangle in which the maned wolves flush out birds, mostly tinamous, out of the bushes – just to have them preyed upon by hawks. Anne-Marie provides more details, the back-story and the cute pictures.

Today’s carnivals

I and the Bird #63 is up on The Greenbelt
The 147th edition of The Carnival of Education is up on Matt-a-matical Thinking.

Science Blogging Conference – who is coming? (Popular Science Media)

2008NCSBClogo200.pngThere are 51 days until the Science Blogging Conference. The wiki is looking good, the Program is shaping up nicely, and there is more and more blog and media coverage already. The anthology should be published in time for the event. There are already 153 registered participants and if you do not register soon, it may be too late once you decide to do so (we’ll cap at about 200). Between now and the conference, I am highlighting some of the people who will be there, for you to meet in person if you register in time.
Ivan Oransky is the Deputy Editor of The Scientist and a blogger. His colleague Richard Gallagher recently wrote an editorial about Open Access there, among many others.
Ernie Hood is a freelance science writer/editor best known locally as the Producer/Host of Radio In Vivo, the science radio show for the Carrboro/Chapel Hill area.
In order to meet them, you know what you have to do: register! Registration is free. Check the map for nearby hotels. And sign up for the Friday dinner.
If you are coming, find hotel information, exchange information about where you are staying, if you are offering a ride, need a ride, or want to carpool on the Ride Board – just edit the wiki page and add the query or information.
Our Friday lab tours are now in place, so you can start signing up to join one of them.
Get updates and get in touch with other participants via our Facebook Event group (I see that some who originally responded “Maybe attending” are now registered).
Please use ‘scienceblogging.com’ as your tag when writing blog posts about it or uploading pictures. You can also download and print out the flyers (PDF1 and PDF2) and post them on bulletin boards at your office, lab or school.

ClockQuotes

Time will explain it all. He is a talker, and needs no questioning before he speaks.
– Euripides

My picks from ScienceDaily

Gene Study Supports Single Main Migration Across Bering Strait:

Did a relatively small number of people from Siberia who trekked across a Bering Strait land bridge some 12,000 years ago give rise to the native peoples of North and South America?

Greg Laden and Jake Young comment.
Dogs Can Classify Complex Photos In Categories Like Humans Do:

Like us, our canine friends are able to form abstract concepts. Friederike Range and colleagues from the University of Vienna in Austria have shown for the first time that dogs can classify complex color photographs and place them into categories in the same way that humans do. And the dogs successfully demonstrate their learning through the use of computer automated touch-screens, eliminating potential human influence.

Using Beetle Biology To Protect Beehives:

A new way to lessen damage from small hive beetles in honey bee colonies has been developed by Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists in Gainesville, Fla. Small hive beetles (Aethina tumida) began appearing in U.S. hives during the past 15 to 20 years and now infest bee colonies throughout the East.

Stopping for Deer: Sensing, Movement And Behavior Illuminated:

Driving down a country road at night your car’s headlights illuminate a deer in your path, and the creature doesn’t move. Depending on your speed and other conditions, chances are good you will hit the deer. And if you do, it’s because you are in what is fittingly defined as the “collision mode,” according to a Northwestern University study.

Clock QuickLinks

A milestone for Abel PharmBoy and Happy Birthday to Olduvai George!
Chris asks: how to get alienated kids from inner cities interested in nature?
This year saw a sharp rise in the number of multi-author scientific papers. This reflects the increasingly collaborative nature of science – no more crazy loners tinkering in their basements. Thus, a better system for assessing scientific contributions (at least as it pertains to publication of research) is becoming more urgent.
This Saturday is the World AIDS Day. Will you blog about it?
10 top researchers in the area of adolescent health, sexuality and behavior sent a letter to the Democratic leadership in the Senate, urging them to cut funding for abstinence-only education immediately. Why? Because it is dangerous.
Explore Our Dumb World! (hat-tip) Via Onion, which some people do not know is a satirical newspaper. But hey, some people have never heard of Leo Tolstoy either.
Is “intellectual property” really “intellectual monopoly“?
Verizon Wireless To Introduce ‘Any Apps, Any Device’ Option For Customers In 2008. Good. I am on Verizon. Will take a look once the details become public.
Elsevier’s 2collab science social network is now open to public. Deepak Singh, Wouter Gerritsma and Richard Akerman have the first reviews.
A new player in the Global Warming Denialism field – the typically dishonestly named Civil Society Coalition on Climate Change, which as its members boasts all the libertarian, Right Wing “think”-tanks that employ no real climate scientists, but instead an army of apologists for the pollution industry, including the nefarious John Locke Foundation (via) and the propaganda experts in the cookie-cutter mold of Frank Luntz, Carl Rove and Eric Dezenhall. Just look at their opening salvo, their first so-called report (pdf) – if you have been following the GW denialism lately you can instantly recognize all their carefully crafted Orwellian words, phrases and the entire denialists’ deck of cards.
The extreme right wing of the GOP is being purged by an even more extreme right wing of the GOP. Is there anyone normal left in that party at all, one wonders?

Has the word “gene” outlived its usefulness?

Blogging on Peer-Reviewed Research

When Wilhelm Johannsen coined the word “gene” back in 1909 (hmmm, less than two years until the Centennial), the word was quite unambiguous – it meant “a unit of heredity”. Its material basis, while widely speculated on, was immaterial for its usefulness as a concept. It could have been tiny little Martians inside the cells, it would have been OK, as they could have been plugged into the growing body of mathematics describing the changes and properties of genes in populations. In other words, gene referred to a concept that can be mathematically and experimentally studied without a reference to any molecules or intracellular processes.
Fast-forward half a century to the discovery of DNA and subsequent discoveries of the genetic code, transcription, translation, various types of gene regulation, etc. Everyone was happy – finally, we had a material gene. We had a molecule of inheritance that we could study. And an army of thousands started studying it, announcing breakthroughs at a breath-taking pace.
The confusion about the use of the term ‘gene’, as everyone used it differently, grew over the years. The use of terminology from information theory (e.g., program, transcription, translation, algorithm) affected the way researchers thought and designed experiments, limiting for a long time all discourse on inheritance to just DNA and worse, just to the DNA sequence.
But research went on, hit the walls, and smart people found the ways around the conundrum. What the research uncovered undermined the “gene” as a unit of inheritance, and for that matter undermined DNA as the molecule of inheritance. What we have learned is that:
– there is a difference between what an organism gets from parents (a static concept of the gene) and what it does with it to properly develop, function and behave in a species-specific way (a dynamic concept of the gene)
– the DNA sequence is just one of many properties of DNA that is important for proper development, function and behavior of an organism – there are other properties of DNA, as well as other non-DNA factors that are equally important.
– a sequence of nucleotides that gets transcribed is a very poor definition of a gene, as so much happens between transcription and the generation of the final protein shape, not to mention the complexity of the question how a single protein contributes to the appearance of a phenotypic trait.
– DNA is not the only “thing” that an organism gets from the parents. There is also a DNA methylation pattern, the transcription/translation machinery of the egg cell, various molecules (RNA, proteins, steroid hormones, etc.) present in the egg cell or introduced by the sperm cell, the environment inside the egg or womb, and the external environment into which the parents deposit the progeny (including the special case of teaching/learning).
I have thought about this quite a lot over the years (see, for instance this, this, this, this and this) and more I thought about it, more I liked the ideas that Developmental Systems Theory had to offer. Last ten years of published research changed the way we think about this and changed my mind in many ways. In a way, I was right all along – it’s not just DNA that confers heredity (static concept of the gene). In other cases, I was wrong: it turned out that it is, in fact, DNA, just not its sequence, that does this or that job in running the organism (the dynamic concept of the gene).
Two of the books I have read over the years that tackled the problem in a very good way (though sometimes not going far enough for my own tastes) are Refiguring Life and The Century of the Gene by Evelyn Fox Keller, one of the most prominent thinkers about the problem right now.
Thus, I got really excited when I heard that Chris Surridge, editor of PLoS ONE, after mulling over it for a long time (philosophy of science is not supposed to be one of the topics ONE publishes papers on, at least officially and at least until now), decided to go with the reviewers’ recommendations and publish a paper by Evelyn Fox Keller and David Harel – Beyond the Gene – in which the concept of the gene is discussed. What the paper does, on top of coming up with concepts that clearly differentiate between the static and the dynamic meanings and incorporate the current understanding of the complexity of both, is propose new names for those concepts. Read it carefully – it is quite thought-provoking.
Proposing new terminology is easy. Having it accepted and used by others is far more difficult. Especially when the terms are picked very cleverly to pick up on particular mental associations, while at the same time being (probably intentionally) catchy and funny (if you read them out loud they sound like deans, beans and janitors). The straight-laced researchers will probably balk at the new words. The folks that give funny names to Drosophila genes (e.g., Sonic hedgehog or fruity…er, fruitless) will probably grok why these new proposed terms are potentially useful.
Just like their conception of gene in everyday work differs, I expect that the response to this article’s proposal will differ between a biochemist, a bioinformatics scientist, a biological anthropologist, a medical researcher and a developmental biologist, between someone who works on microbial genomes, or mammalian genetics, or compares all genomes or looks at the way viral and mammalian genomes interract, or someone who looks at evolution of genes, or population genetics, history of biology or philosophy of biology. I hope they and others chime in.

Science Blogging Conference – who is coming? (Reaching out through the Web)

2008NCSBClogo200.pngThere are 52 days until the Science Blogging Conference. The wiki is looking good, the Program is shaping up nicely, and there is more and more blog and media coverage already. The anthology should be published in time for the event. There are already 146 registered participants and if you do not register soon, it may be too late once you decide to do so (we’ll cap at about 200). Between now and the conference, I am highlighting some of the people who will be there, for you to meet in person if you register in time.
Kevin Gamble is the Associate Director of the National eXtension Initiative at North Carolina State University and he blogs on High Touch.
Greg Corrin of Charlotte is the IDEA Conference coordinator at Information Architecture Institute
In order to meet them, you know what you have to do: register! Registration is free. Check the map for nearby hotels. And sign up for the Friday dinner.
If you are coming, find hotel information, exchange information about where you are staying, if you are offering a ride, need a ride, or want to carpool on the Ride Board – just edit the wiki page and add the query or information.
Our Friday lab tours are now in place, so you can start signing up to join one of them.
Get updates and get in touch with other participants via our Facebook Event group (I see that some who originally responded “Maybe attending” are now registered).
Please use ‘scienceblogging.com’ as your tag when writing blog posts about it or uploading pictures. You can also download and print out the flyers (PDF1 and PDF2) and post them on bulletin boards at your office, lab or school.

ClockQuotes

Until the 20th century, few people needed money. Apart from salt and iron, everything could be paid for in kind. Economic activity was more a means of making the time pass than of making money, which might explain why one of the few winter industries in the Alps was clock-making. Tinkering with tiny mechanisms made time pass less slowly, and the clocks themselves proved that it was indeed passing.
– Graham Robb [N.Y.Times, November 25, 2007]
Hat-tip: Selva

New and Exciting in PLoS ONE

There are 35 brand new papers on PLoS ONE tonight and it is difficult for me to pick the most exciting for the week. So, here is one on the effects of night-shift, one on melanopsin and light perception, one on time perception, one on limb regeneration in the Axolotl, a meta-analysis of the soil ecology literature and, a first for PLoS ONE, an article by a prominent philosopher of science that I expect to be discussed on blogs over the next few days:
Acute Sleep Deprivation and Circadian Misalignment Associated with Transition onto the First Night of Work Impairs Visual Selective Attention:

Overnight operations pose a challenge because our circadian biology promotes sleepiness and dissipates wakefulness at night. Since the circadian effect on cognitive functions magnifies with increasing sleep pressure, cognitive deficits associated with night work are likely to be most acute with extended wakefulness, such as during the transition from a day shift to night shift. To test this hypothesis we measured selective attention (with visual search), vigilance (with Psychomotor Vigilance Task [PVT]) and alertness (with a visual analog scale) in a shift work simulation protocol, which included four day shifts followed by three night shifts. There was a nocturnal decline in cognitive processes, some of which were most pronounced on the first night shift. The nighttime decrease in visual search sensitivity was most pronounced on the first night compared with subsequent nights (p = .04), and this was accompanied by a trend towards selective attention becoming ‘fast and sloppy’. The nighttime increase in attentional lapses on the PVT was significantly greater on the first night compared to subsequent nights (p<.05) indicating an impaired ability to sustain focus. The nighttime decrease in subjective alertness was also greatest on the first night compared with subsequent nights (p<.05). These nocturnal deficits in attention and alertness offer some insight into why occupational errors, accidents, and injuries are pronounced during night work compared to day work. Examination of the nighttime vulnerabilities underlying the deployment of attention can be informative for the design of optimal work schedules and the implementation of effective countermeasures for performance deficits during night work.

Brain Responses to Violet, Blue, and Green Monochromatic Light Exposures in Humans: Prominent Role of Blue Light and the Brainstem:

Melanopsin is a pigment that responds to light and is found in specialised light sensitive cells of the retina. In this paper, Maquet and colleagues investigated the spectral sensitivity of immediate brain responses to light by measuring brain activity in participants exposed to different wavelengths. Their results reveal that short exposures to light induce changes in brain activity and that the melanopsin system provides the most important contribution to these changes.

The Effect of Predictability on Subjective Duration:

Events can sometimes appear longer or shorter in duration than other events of equal length. For example, in a repeated presentation of auditory or visual stimuli, an unexpected object of equivalent duration appears to last longer. Illusions of duration distortion beg an important question of time representation: when durations dilate or contract, does time in general slow down or speed up during that moment? In other words, what entailments do duration distortions have with respect to other timing judgments? We here show that when a sound or visual flicker is presented in conjunction with an unexpected visual stimulus, neither the pitch of the sound nor the frequency of the flicker is affected by the apparent duration dilation. This demonstrates that subjective time in general is not slowed; instead, duration judgments can be manipulated with no concurrent impact on other temporal judgments. Like spatial vision, time perception appears to be underpinned by a collaboration of separate neural mechanisms that usually work in concert but are separable. We further show that the duration dilation of an unexpected stimulus is not enhanced by increasing its saliency, suggesting that the effect is more closely related to prediction violation than enhanced attention. Finally, duration distortions induced by violations of progressive number sequences implicate the involvement of high-level predictability, suggesting the involvement of areas higher than primary visual cortex. We suggest that duration distortions can be understood in terms of repetition suppression, in which neural responses to repeated stimuli are diminished.

Transforming Growth Factor: β Signaling Is Essential for Limb Regeneration in Axolotls:

The axolotl limb has been widely studied in developmental biology because of its unusual ability to regenerate following injury. In this study, the authors investigated the role of the transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-β) family members in axolotl limb regeneration. Their results show that the inhibition of TGF-β stopped the redevelopment process, thus suggesting that TGF-β is essential in limb regeneration.

A Tale of Four Stories: Soil Ecology, Theory, Evolution and the Publication System:

Soil ecology has produced a huge corpus of results on relations between soil organisms, ecosystem processes controlled by these organisms and links between belowground and aboveground processes. However, some soil scientists think that soil ecology is short of modelling and evolutionary approaches and has developed too independently from general ecology. We have tested quantitatively these hypotheses through a bibliographic study (about 23000 articles) comparing soil ecology journals, generalist ecology journals, evolutionary ecology journals and theoretical ecology journals. We have shown that soil ecology is not well represented in generalist ecology journals and that soil ecologists poorly use modelling and evolutionary approaches. Moreover, the articles published by a typical soil ecology journal (Soil Biology and Biochemistry) are cited by and cite low percentages of articles published in generalist ecology journals, evolutionary ecology journals and theoretical ecology journals. This confirms our hypotheses and suggests that soil ecology would benefit from an effort towards modelling and evolutionary approaches. This effort should promote the building of a general conceptual framework for soil ecology and bridges between soil ecology and general ecology. We give some historical reasons for the parsimonious use of modelling and evolutionary approaches by soil ecologists. We finally suggest that a publication system that classifies journals according to their Impact Factors and their level of generality is probably inadequate to integrate “particularity” (empirical observations) and “generality” (general theories), which is the goal of all natural sciences. Such a system might also be particularly detrimental to the development of a science such as ecology that is intrinsically multidisciplinary.

Beyond the Gene by Evelyn Fox Keller and David Harel:

This paper is a response to the increasing difficulty biologists find in agreeing upon a definition of the gene, and indeed, the increasing disarray in which that concept finds itself. After briefly reviewing these problems, we propose an alternative to both the concept and the word gene–an alternative that, like the gene, is intended to capture the essence of inheritance, but which is both richer and more expressive. It is also clearer in its separation of what the organism statically is (what it tangibly inherits) and what it dynamically does (its functionality and behavior). Our proposal of a genetic functor, or genitor, is a sweeping extension of the classical genotype/phenotype paradigm, yet it appears to be faithful to the findings of contemporary biology, encompassing many of the recently emerging–and surprisingly complex–links between structure and functionality.

My picks from ScienceDaily

Bear Hunting Altered Genetics More Than Ice Age Isolation:

It was not the isolation of the Ice Age that determined the genetic distribution of bears, as has long been thought. This is shown by an international research team led from Uppsala University in Sweden in the latest issue of Molecular Ecology. One possible interpretation is that the hunting of bears by humans and human land use have been crucial factors.

Mediterranean Sea: Most Dangerous Place On Earth For Sharks And Rays:

The first complete IUCN Red List assessment of the status of all Mediterranean sharks and rays has revealed that 42% of the species are threatened with extinction. Overfishing, including bycatch (non-target species caught incidentally), is the main cause of decline, according to the research.

Nicotine May Enhance Attention And Working Memory In Recovering Alcoholics:

Detoxified alcoholics in the early stages of recovery tend to have impaired cognitive functioning. Many alcoholics also smoke, and nicotine is known to have enhancing effects on attentional processes. New findings indicate that nicotine patches can enhance cognitive function among newly recovering alcoholics with a history of smoking.

Facial Expressions Have Greater Impact On Kids With Bipolar Disorder:

Children with bipolar disorder respond differently to facial expressions than children without psychiatric disorders, according to a new study led by a Bradley Hospital researcher. These findings provide additional insight into the neurobiology of pediatric bipolar disorder.

Why Age Doesn’t Matter For Motherhood:

The assumption that those born to mothers outside the optimum age for reproduction are disadvantaged has been challenged by scientists at the University of Exeter. Their research found that mothers adjust their pre and post-natal care to compensate for any health problems their babies might face as a result of them being below or above the best age to give birth.

Ripening Secrets Of The Vine Revealed:

Whether you prefer a Cabernet Sauvignon or a Pinot Noir grape variety, two new research articles offer a host of new genetic information on fruit ripening for this economically important fruit crop.

Environmental Researchers Propose Radical ‘Human-centric’ Map Of The World:

Ecologists pay too much attention to increasingly rare “pristine” ecosystems while ignoring the overwhelming influence of humans on the environment, say researchers from McGill University and the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC).

Are Current Projections Of Climate Change Impacts On Biodiversity Misleading?:

Are patterns of current climate sufficient to explain and predict the diversity of life? This is the urgent question arising from the study “Quaternary climate changes explain diversity among reptiles and amphibians,” published in the journal Ecography. The new theory proposes that historical climate patterns are of strong importance to diversity prediction.

Today’s carnivals

Carnival of Space #30 is up on Bad Astronomy Blog
The 79th Edition of Carnival of the Godless is up on Sexy Secularist!
Friday Ark #166 is up on Modulator
Grand Rounds 4.10 are up on Prudence, M.D.
Carnival of the Green #105 is up on Great Green Goods
Carnival of Homeschooling – Centennial Edition – is up on Mom is Teaching
Finally, after a long break, I will host a carnival again. The Encephelon #37 will be right here on December 3rd. Email your posts to encephalon{dot}host{at}gmail{dot}com or directly to me at coturnix AT gmail DOT com, or submit using the blogcarnival online form.