Yearly Archives: 2007

MedBlogging of the Week

The newest edition of Grand Rounds with a focus on the science aspects of healthcare and medicine, is up on my newest SciBling’s blog Signout.

Radio, blogs and The Book

Well, as I said before, the end of the Conference/Anthology whirlwind is also a return to my Dissertation writing (and a lowering of my output here).
internet-vs-research-paper.jpg
But I had to procrastinate just a little bit more – I just gave a very pleasant 30-minute interview for the Asheville (NC) community radio station about blogging, science-blogging and everything else (including the Conference and a pitch for the anthology), as a part of their Tips For Political Bloggers series. The interviewer is Paul of the Brainshrub blog. It will appear on his site next Monday morning and will air on Monday evening – I will post the links at that time.
Also this morning, I received my copy of the anthology and it looks beautiful in real life! I want to read it (after reading and proofreading each of the 50 posts at least four times)! I hope you buy it.
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My picks from ScienceDaily

Dogs May Be Responding To Psychological Seizures, Not Epilepsy Seizures:

Reports of dogs that can predict their owners’ epilepsy seizures have been anecdotal and not objectively confirmed by doctors and researchers. Some people obtain service dogs trained specifically for people with seizures. In two new studies published in the January 23, 2007, issue of Neurology®, the scientific journal of the American Academy of Neurology, researchers found that in some cases these dogs are responding to seizures caused not by epilepsy, but by psychological conditions.

Bumblebee House Warming: It Takes A Village:

All bumblebees always aren’t as busy as, well, a bee. It all depends on what their job is. Researchers have known that a key to the insects’ success in adapting to cooler climates is their ability to maintain fairly stable body temperatures when flying to flowers. Whether and how they maintained nest temperature was poorly understood. But now scientists from the University of Washington and the University of Puget Sound have peered into bumblebee colonies and have discovered some answers.

New Form Of Sleeping Sickness Discovered In India Stems From Deficiency In Natural Immunity Protein:

Human trypanosomiases are commonly known as sleeping sickness in Africa and Chagas disease in South America. The first case of human trypanosomiasis has now been discovered in India. The specialist investigations conducted, at the request of WHO and the Maharashtra Public Health Department, India, by an IRD scientist (1), has led to the identification of the parasite and the treatment of the patient, a farmer from the State of Maharashtra. He proved to be infected by Trypanosoma evansi, a trypanosome which is usually a parasite of various animals, particularly cattle. The mode of infection has not yet been clearly determined, but the discovery of this first human case of T. evansi raises questions both as to the evolution and adaptation of the parasite and on the real size of the problem.

An Advance In Mimicking Mother Nature:

Birds use them to reduce the weight of their feathers. Polar bears rely on them to keep warm in the Arctic cold. Now scientists in China report what they believe to be the first easy, straightforward method for making the kind of multi-channel microtubes found in birds, polar bears and other animals.

Clock Quotes

To achieve the impossible dream, try going to sleep.
Joan Klempner

Natalie Angier on Time

Making Sense of Time, Earthbound and Otherwise

Some audio and video from the conference

Audio of Dr.Willard’s talk is here
Update: for ease of use, here it is cut in two:
Part I: 16.6mb
Part II: 10.72mb
Slides of Dr.Stemwedel’s talk are here – apparently the mic got turned off after the first 7 minutes of her talk – we may post those later, but slides (and her own pictures and comments) should be sufficient for you to get the idea.
Podcast of the Open Science/Open Notebook sesssion is here.
Check out what people are saying about the conference here (perhaps the best strategy is to go down to the bottom of the page and work your way up until you are exhausted).
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Feedback

If you were at the conference on Saturday, please take a couple of seconds to let us know what you think about it by filling this short feedback questionnaire.
And if you post stuff online (blogs, podcasts, photos, videos), do not forget to use the Tag:

Imagine an Open Science World

If you went to the Open Source/Open Notebook session on Saturday or checked the podcast (linked in there) of it, you are probably familiar with some of the ideas revolutionizing the science publishing world.
One of the people on the forefront of thinking about these questions is Bill Hooker who just finished the third part of his trilogy guest-blogging on 3 Quarks Daily. Just in case you missed the first two installments, here are the links to all three – but take your time and check out the numerous links embedded in them:
The Future of Science is Open, Part 1: Open Access
The Future of Science is Open, Part 2: Open Science
The Future of Science is Open, Part 3: An Open Science World

I am practically famous!

Nature: Science blogger Bora Zivkovic
Nature Newsblog: Science blogger Bora Zivkovic
Addendum: The author/interviewer, of course, blogged about it as well: North Carolina Science Blogging Conference-pt 2-how blogging saved one man’s science career
Funny, in order to put that picture of me there, they had to cut out Atrios out of it. Atrios who? See the uncropped original under the fold….

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Reviewing the “Reviewer”

You may have missed a mild slam of mine I snuck into the middle of this post yesterday (as well as an earlier one), at a guy who thinks he can dictate to a blogger how to blog and what to blog about. He is reviewing all Seed Sciencebloggers without, apparently, digging through anyone’s archives to see their formidable output over the months and years of blogging, and without a thought that his notions of what a blog should be about are irrelevant to the blogger, the readers of the blog or the popularity of any particular blog.
Well, I would not review a book without reading the whole thing, or review a movie without watching the whole thing, so why does he think he can review a blog (or 55 blogs) without spending many hours reading through the archives of each, plus other blogs’ posts that link to an “talk back” to the blog, etc. And while a book or a movie are static, 2-hour things that stand alone, blogs are dynamic and embedded in teh context of conversation. It is imperative to follow a blog for a few months on a daily basis before getting a really good feel for it. Everyone goes through phases, everyone slows down during busy times (e.g., grading) and everyone goofs off during holidays (the time this guy picked up for his reviews).
Carl, Orac and PZ (so far) and their commenters take him to task and explain a thing or two about blogging in general and science blogging in particular.
As one of the things that comes up in this discussion is his ignorance of blog carnivals, and I am sure he is watching his sitemeter in awe right now, here is a little educational link – Blog Carnivals and the links embedded in there.

Basic Terms and Concepts

In the wake of the conference, I suspect that my blog is getting checked out today by many a science teacher, so I thought this would be a good time to point out all the posts written so far by my science-blogging friends on ‘Basics Terms and Concepts’ in math and science. Here they are:
Good Math Bad Math:
Normal Distribution
Mean, Median and Mode
Standard Deviation
Margin of Error
Uncertain Principles:
Force
Fields
Pharyngula:
Gene
Discovering Biology in a Digital World:
Gene
How do you sequence a genome?
Sandwalk:
Evolution
The Central Dogma of Molecular Biology
Evolving Thoughts:
Clade
Fitness
Greg Laden:
The Three Necessary and Sufficient Conditions of Natural Selection
The Modes of Natural Selection
I am still thinking what to write myself. Looking back at the stuff I have written in the past, I tend not to focus narrowly on a single term or concept, but prefer to cover a broader area. An exception may be the post in which I explain that a “biological clock” is A Metaphor, for the most part – but not always – a useful and productive metaphor. It is a language concept that helps us understand the phenomenon, not a real thing itself. If you start thinking about a biological clock as a real entity, you may just as well think it was intelligently designed.
For teachers, I think my BIO101 speed-course lecture(and lab) notes may be useful, though almost none of them cover a very narrow term or concept (some come close):
Introduction
Biology and the Scientific Method
Lab 1
Cell Structure
Protein Synthesis: Transcription and Translation
Cell-Cell Interactions
Cell Division and DNA Replication
Lab 2
From Two Cells To Many: Cell Differentiation and Embryonic Development
From Genes To Traits: How Genotype Affects Phenotype
From Genes To Species: A Primer on Evolution
What Creatures Do: Animal Behavior
Organisms In Time and Space: Ecology
Lab 3
Origin of Biological Diversity
Evolution of Biological Diversity
Current Biological Diversity
Lab 4
Introduction to Anatomy and Physiology
Physiology: Regulation and Control
Physiology: Coordinated Response
Going up a level – to senior/grad school material in my own field, I have written about half of my planned series of Clock Tutorials which students taking real-world classes in Biological Clocks have so far found very useful in their studies.
I have also started slowly to cover chronobiology on a taxon-by-taxon basis but did not get too far yet. Only the series on clocks in bacteria is finished (for now, until the next batch of revolutionary studies comes out):
Circadian Clocks in Microorganisms
Clocks in Bacteria I: Synechococcus elongatus
Clocks in Bacteria II: Adaptive Function of Clocks in Cyanobacteria
Clocks in Bacteria III: Evolution of Clocks in Cyanobacteria
Clocks in Bacteria IV: Clocks in other bacteria
Clocks in Bacteria V: How about E.coli?
I just barely started on Protista:
Biological Clocks in Protista
And scratched the surface of Invertebrates:
Do sponges have circadian clocks?
Daily Rhythms in Cnidaria
and scratched the surface of Vertebrates:
Mammals
Non-mammalian vertebrates
Japanese Quail
I need to get some more of that kind of stuff written soon.

Sleep Number Bed?

Adjust your sleep number for the best performance! Or, what does your sleep number say about your performance?

NOTE: To the 50 authors of essays in the Anthology!

I still need from some of you the letters regarding copyright etc., and I need your snail-mail addresses to send to Lulu.com so you can get your free copy shipped to you. Just e-mail me….

My picks from ScienceDaily

As always, comment on the studies and reporting of them in the comments….
Male Fish Turn To Cannibalism When Uncertain Of Paternity:

A study from the February issue of the American Naturalist is the first to demonstrate that male fish are more likely to eat their offspring when they have been cuckolded during the act of spawning. Moreover, the more males that are present during spawning, the more likely it is that a male will try to eat the eggs when they are laid, as it is less likely that he fertilized them.

…more under the fold….

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Clock Quotes

The great French Marshall Lyautey once asked his gardener to plant a tree. The gardener objected that the tree was slow growing and would not reach maturity for 100 years. The Marshall replied, ‘In that case, there is no time to lose; plant it this afternoon!’
John F. Kennedy (1917 – 1963)

Happy Bloggiversary!

Darren Naish started Tetrapod Zoology a year ago. As a systematist, he does everything systematically, including the analysis of his own year in blogging:
Volume I
Volume II

The e-candidate

A good article in Business Week.
Oh, btw, while I was conferencing, I heard that Clinton and Richardson announced. Anyone surprised?

NC blogging of the week

The 100th edition of the Tar Heel Tavern is up on Ogre’s place. Enjoy the seven-course meal! And let me know if you want to host in the near future.

Conference Pictures 2 – Saturday morning

More pictures under the fold (until my batteries died). Again, tell me if I misidentified or non-identified somebody:

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Conference Pictures 1 – Friday dinner

On Friday night we had dinner at Town Hall Grill – the service and the food were excellent! Yum! [For those of you not local, the John Edwards campaign headquarters are exactly above on the second floor]
Under the fold you’ll see the pictures (let me know if I misidentified or non-identified someone – I will come back to these pictures-posts later and add links to everyone):

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Clock Quotes

People who say they sleep like a baby usually don’t have one.
Leo J. Burke

The Sci Blog Conference article in Raleigh News & Observer is now online

It must be hard writing a report on a conference where one of the most frequently voiced opinions is that mainstream media reports always get science stories wrong! But, Kristin Collins did a great job describing what just transpired on UNC campus at the Science Blogging Conference in this article (free registration may be required).
Update: The article was re-published in Charleston (SC) Post and Courier: Scientists hope blogging brings discoveries to the masses
Update 2: Syndication works like a charm: Houston Chronicle: Scientists hope blogging boosts public’s interest
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Back from the Conference

Well, I am back from the Science Blogging Conference, exhilarated and exhausted! After months of preparation, and last few days of frantic last-minute work, the Big Day has come and I could finally relax and enjoy myself. And enjoy it I did! I hope the others did as well.
First order of duty: go say Hello and Thank You to Anton without whose ideas, persistence, hard work and organizational skills, there would have been no conference!
From what we heard in person, everyone was excited about the meeting and voiced hope we will organize it again next year. To make your opinions heard, if you were there today, please take a moment to fill out this brief feedback questionnaire to tell us what you thought was good or bad today, and what we can do better next time (yes, the coffee was late, due to a death in the family of the owners of the cafe that was supposed to provide it, but Brian and Paul saved the day by quickly getting coffee from another place in the neighborhood). I also hope you are happy with your swag bag – the PLoS shirts are awesome!
Both Technorati and Blogsearch Google (as well as my own Sitemeter) are pretty slow and untrustworthy at providing the links to everyone who has already blogged (or liveblogged) about the conference, but I scanned the usual suspects (i.e., blogs of people who were there) and added some of the links to this and this collection of links so you can check out the first impressions (I’ll add more as I find them over the next day or two).
There are already some pictures up on Flickr and Technorati as well, just check the tag. There will be more (I will upload my pics right here on the blog tomorrow – I took quite a few before the batteries died).
The first two talks – excellent talks by Hunt Willard and Janet Stemwedel – were also recorded, and I will link to the audio files as soon as they are available online. Also, I’ll link to my interviews with Nature and News&Observer once they are online, as well as any other media reports that may come out (there were people here from NYTimes, WaPo, Independent Weekly, Charlotte Observer, PBS NewsHour and a couple of local radio stations).
The discussions were lively and I think very fertile – the group was very diverse and there was fast exchange of a lot of interesting and new ideas by bloggers, scientists, teachers, students, journalists and everyone else. Check the livebloggers for details of each session – I am too exhausted now to write a lot of details of each one I attended (but if you check the Program page of the wiki, each session has a link to its own page where people are now adding their thoughts, links etc).
I think I did well for my Seed Overlords and touted Scienceblogs.com as the next best thing after the invention of apple pie! We also promoted the anthology as heavily as was still in good taste (I’ve been adding links to the bottom of that post to everyone who mentioned the book on their blogs so far). Check out what John Hawks wrote about it – quite interesting and somehwat similar to what I wrote in the Preface. On the other hand [edit: see this follow up – thank you!], seeing so many people today who are interested in science blogs but do not know where to start and what it is all about (or may not be very technically savvy), I believe that the book will be useful tool to drive people who are not usually online to the science blogs. For such people, I think that this page (which evolved over the last couple of months or so) is a good starting point for exploration of the science blogging universe.
For those of you who just started your own blogs on Thursday, I’ll be watching you! And as soon as you have interesting content on your blog, I will be sending hordes of my readers to you! Also, keep an eye on the Blogtogether page and come to our regular blogger meetups, where we can help you with all the bloggy questions you may have.
Perhaps, if this guy with the deadline and no ideas what to write about read science blogs instead of pamphlets lying around the cafeteria, his understanding of science as well as his attitude would improve! The same goes for the guy who is reviewing Seed sciencebloggers here, here, here, here, here and here and was even allowed to post here. The reviewer probably never even scrolled down the front page of any of the scienceblogs, let alone dig through the archives, so whatever was the first post on top was the only source of information about the entire blog. If he was at the conference, he would have learned what science blogging is all about (or for that matter what blogging is all about).
It is impossible to list here all the interesting people I have met today (and I wish I had more time to spend with each – but there were, I dunno exactly – about 170 of them), but I am assuming that my blog readers are most interested in other science bloggers who were there. From the Seed Scienceblogging Universe, it was great spending some time with Janet, Zuska, James, Dave and Greta and Abel. Panda’s Thumb was well represented by Burt Humburg, Reed Cartwright and Professor Steve Steve. Larry, Eva, Rob, Bill, Cathy and Corie are even nicer in person then online (if that is possible). I wish I had more time to chat with Rob, Lorraine, Josh, Bharat, Jean-Claude, Jacqueline, Liz and Christina – next year (or next meetup if you are local)!
Everyone else can relax now – no more posts here titled “SBC – NC07”! Give me a couple of days to recuperate and I’ll be back to my normal SCIENCE blogging for a change!
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Clock Quotes

Nothing is as far away as one minute ago.
Jim Bishop

New Brain Carnival

Inaugural Edition: Brain Fitness Blog Carnival #1 is up on SharpBrains
There were 21 of us at the dinner tonight and it was grand. I will say more once I have the pictures uploaded. Now I better get my intro for tomorrow in shape and get some sleep before the big event!

Dinner

I am about to go to the airport to pick up four attendees. Tomorrow for dinner, we’ll be joined by US. Rep. Brad Miller! Never too late to sign up for dinners!

GeneBlogging of the Month

The newest edition of Mendel’s Garden, the genetics carnival, is up on Neurotopia.

Dinner Tonight

The dinner tonight is starting to look like a huge blogger meetup! Who will be there?
Suzanne Franks aka Zuska
Janet D. Stemwedel aka Dr.Free-ride
Anton Zuiker aka Mistersugar
Dave and Greta Munger
Brian Russell
Larry Moran and his daughter Jane
Paul Jones and his son Tucker
Bill Hooker
Cathy Davies aka Lab Cat
Reed Cartwright and Professor Steve Steve
Sarah Greene
Rob Knop
Bharat Chandramouli
Eric Roach
Adnaan Wasey
Xan Gregg
Will Raymond
George Birchard
Bonnie Springer
Amy Hughes
probably a couple of others who have not officially signed up, and me.
Pictures will follow…. (watch here and here for updates)
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My picks from ScienceDaily

Bats In Flight Reveal Unexpected Aerodynamics:

The maneuverability of a bat in flight makes even Harry Potter’s quidditch performance look downright clumsy. While many people may be content to simply watch these aerial acrobats in wonder, Kenneth Breuer and Sharon Swartz are determined to understand the detailed aerodynamics of bat flight – and ultimately the evolutionary path that created it.

…more under the fold:

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Lefty Blogosphere and the Love/Hate of Hillary

Lefty Blogosphere and the Love/Hate of HillaryI wrote this on January 28, 2006. Was I wrong then? Is that wrong now? Have things changed in the meantime?

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On the radio this morning….

You can hear me talk about the conference on NPR’s Marketplace if you listen to this audio file (the segment starts at minute 2:59)
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Clock Quotes

Let your light shine. Shine within you so that it can shine on someone else. Let your light shine.
Oprah Winfrey (1954 – ), O Magazine, January 2004

Skeptical Blogging of the week

The 52nd edition of the Skeptic’s Circle is up on Frank the Financially Savvy Atheist

Welcome a new SciBling!

Go say Hello to Karen Ventii of ScienceToLife, the newest addition to the ScienceBlogs.com Universe!

The Tar Heel Tavern – call for submissions

This week’s edition of the Tar Heel Tavern will be #100, hosted by Ogre, and with a theme “Winter”. Send your entries by Saturday and let me know if you want to host a future edition.

What we did tonight….

We (Anton, Brian and I) packed hundreds of beautiful bags full of goodies for the conference-goers.
Then, when we were done, we celebrated with a brand new bottle of Croatian slivovitz, tasting just like home, courtesy of Anton’s Cleveland friend. Thanks, Anton, the bottle safely made it home and is not empty yet!
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SBC – NC’07: Skills Session

Just finished with the Skills Sessions. About a dozen new blogs were started there. Everyone works at their own pace, so I’ll give them a few days to get their feet wet before I link to them, blogroll them and ask you all to give them some commenting love! They look really promising so far!
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SBC – NC’07

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Jason Lundberg, Janet Chui, Kipp Bodnar and Denise Haviland are coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Is this Possible (and True)?

Criticize Congress go to jail?

“In what sounds like a comedy sketch from Jon Stewart’s Daily Show, but isn’t, the U. S. Senate would impose criminal penalties, even jail time, on grassroots causes and citizens who criticize Congress.
“Section 220 of S. 1, the lobbying reform bill currently before the Senate, would require grassroots causes, even bloggers, who communicate to 500 or more members of the public on policy matters, to register and report quarterly to Congress the same as the big K Street lobbyists. Section 220 would amend existing lobbying reporting law by creating the most expansive intrusion on First Amendment rights ever. For the first time in history, critics of Congress will need to register and report with Congress itself.

Update: Conversation continues:
Someone’s Trying to Play Us
Why astroturf disclosure legislation is needed
Was I duped by Astroturf?

Evolution of Biological Diversity

Evolution of Biological DiversityPart 12 of my BIO101 lecture notes. As always, click on the web-spider icon to see the original post (from June 04, 2006). Correct errors and make suggestions to make this better. Perhaps this entire series can be included in the “Basic Concepts” series.

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SBC – NC’07

NCSciBlogging.jpg
Steve Gunn, the Metro Editor at the Charlotte Observer, Erika Wittchen and John Beimler are coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Clock Quotes

Not being able to sleep is terrible. You have the misery of having partied all night… without the satisfaction.
Lynn Johnston (1947 – ), For Better or For Worse, 07-22-06

Conference Blogging

I will mirror this post on the Science Blogging Conference homepage. Let me know if I missed you (i.e., if you ever mentioned or intend to mention the conference on your blog). This will be updated until everyone is exhausted! Because it is going to be so long, I’ll keep most of it under the fold (click on “Read more…”):

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SBC – NC’07

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Charles Harris from Natural History Magazine, Lorraine Cramer of Microblogology and Mary-Russell Roberson are coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Important Blogospheric News

My blogfather Publius is moving! Legal Fiction is over (though it appears the valuable archives will remain available). He is joining the excellent crew at Obsidian Wings – Congratulations!
And PZ is promising to reduce the volume of his blogging as he is writing a book, which we will all eagerly await. His announcement was followed by another seven posts immediately after! Self-control did not last long, I guess….

Final notes on the Science Blogging Conference and Anthology

SBC%20logo.png
This is what I posted on February 23, 2006, about eleven months ago. As you can see, both from my post, and from the comments, the idea was to have some kind of BloggerCon devoted to science blogging, almost like a giant MeetUp where a bunch of science bloggers can get together, finally match the names (and online handles) with faces, chat and gossip, show off their work, and have lots of beer.
But, what’s the point (apart from the great fun that would be)? How does one sell this idea to sponsors? It seemed that this idea was doomed for a quick death.
But then, Anton Zuiker came into the picture. At one of the local blogger meetups, we talked about this idea and he, being wise and experienced about organization of conferences, had a much, much better idea: to mix science bloggers with others who are interested in science communication – scientists and students, science teachers, librarians, writers and journalists, journal editors and local elected officials, software developers and science museum staff. This way, we could have a very fertile and exciting exchange of ideas – bloggers showing what can be done with this technology and hearing what others want to see more; non-bloggers learning about the blogging potential and showing how they use the Internet in their endeavors.
Eleven months later, the idea is becoming a realization. Anton did the lion’s share of the work (especially the nasty financial aspects of it), but Brian (who designed the beautiful logo displayed on top of this post), Paul and I pitched in as much as we could and knew how.
The first (and we hope annual) Science Blogging Conference is this weekend. We are really starting tomorrow with a Skills Session, where 30 of the conference participants will start their own WordPress blogs.
As people start arriving from distant places (like Canada, UK, New York City, Seattle and California), we’ll get together for a dinner on Friday (sign up – we need to know the exact numbers).
The big show is on Saturday – check the exciting Program we have put together – it combines a formal (talks), semi-formal (mediated break-out sessions) and informal (a true Unconference session to be formed on the spot) parts. Of course, some of the best ideas come out of chats in the hallways between sessions and during meals, including the Saturday night dinners (sign up for dinner by editing the Wiki if you have not yet done so).
If you have ever written about this conference in the past, or intend to write in the future (including liveblogging), or take pictures, podcasts or videos, let me know so I can link to all of that in one place for easy access. Whenever you write (or post pictures on Flickr etc.), please use always the same tag: .
As you can see, we expected 150 participants, and, even after purging the list from people who said they could not come after all, we are still up to 170 participants right now (everyone over that number is on a waitlist). If you dig through the list of registrants, you will see that only about a quarter are bloggers and that we have achieved the diversity we wanted to see.
For those of you who are new to science blogging, you can use this page as your starting point for exploring. For those of you who are coming to the conference, there will be a great Swag Bag full of goodies waiting for you at the registration table on Saturday morning (if you already have something that’s in your bag, please share it or exchange with others, as we have more participants – 170+ – than bags – 150!)[Update – just in: we will have 225 bags, though not all will have every single item].
Just in time for the conference, we managed to pull off, at a breakneck speed, the first ever Science Blogging Anthology. Due to so many people linking to the announcement post (see the bottom of that post for reciprocal links which often contain interesting ideas or useful criticisms) has already been seen about 3000 times and the book page at Lulu.com has been seen 2217 times, has, after just 24 hours risen to the Lulu Sales Rank of 10,934 and got three 6-star reviews (yes, we also managed to sell a few copies so far). Keep spreading the word!
First few copies will be here at the conference, for show-and-tell and to try to get people to buy a copy. Next batch of prints, I understand, will go to people who were the first to order the book online. The next batch (some time next week?) will go to the authors of the 50 essays showcased in the anthology – for that, I need you to e-mail me your snail-mail address to give to Lulu.com so they know where to send your complimentary copy!
None of this would be possible without the generous support of our hosts and sponsors, including Ibiblio, Endeavors, UNC School of Medical Journalism, Lulu.com, Sigma Xi, The American Scientist, Blogads, Seed Scienceblogs.com, Seed Magazine, Ecco, Harper Collins, NC Museum of Life and Science, JMP Software, RTI International, Burroughs Wellcome Fund and Blogburst and PLoS-One.
This is so exciting! I hope you will enjoy the conference as much as I know I will!
And after the conference, I will sleep for a day or two, then get back to my dissertation and, hopefully, to a more serious style of blogging. It is not surpsising that recent visitors do not see why is this blog supposed to be a science blog as I have not written a substantive science post in weeks! I am itching to get back to that myself. Many posts are just waiting to be written and I hope you will still be here waiting for me to write them
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Evolution, Interactions, and Biological Networks

Here is a new paper that just came out on PLoS-Biology. What do you think?

Just Science?

So, RPM, Razib and Chris are promoting the idea of Just Science, meaning that from Monday, February 5, till the end of Sunday, February 11, we should write only about science itself, and not about pseudoscience, quackery, religion, politics of science etc.
This is my 1864th post on this blog. Out of that, there are perhaps 4-5 debunking some kind of Creationism, and 4-5 debunking some other pseudoscience. A drop in the ocean! There is a little bit more politics (but usually not of science), and several posts on religion/atheism. Everything else is either science or “chatter”, i.e., links to other people, personal stuff, meta-blogging of some kind, the conference/anthology announcements, etc. Thinking that people here would be quite unhappy if I blogged daily about politics (especially with my open support for John Edwards), I do most of that on my old blog.
Right now, I am in the midst of the last-minute preparations for the Science Blogging Conference. After that, I’ll sleep for a day or two. Then, I will eagerly return to my Dissertation and that is where my serious science writing will be focused.
For the blog, I’ll do whatever hits me on any particular day/hour/minute. I can refrain from bashing Creationists during the designated week, but I will not promise anything. I may write serious science or I may not. I have a few books I still need to write reviews of (including Dawkins and Dennett – so that violates the Just Science principle right there). Perhaps I can write one of the Basics posts during that week. I can try. But no promises. I blog at a whim.
But you tell me what you want to see…

SBC – NC’07

NCSciBlogging.jpg
Michelle Langston, John Streck and David Ketelsen are coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Liberal Blogging of the week

The 30th Carnival of the Liberals is up on Shakespeare’s Sister