Monthly Archives: October 2009

New jobs in North Carolina at CREE, producing LED lights

Yesterday, North Carolinians woke up to some very unpleasant news that Dell decided to close its computer manufacturing plant in Winston-Salem, Forsyth Co, NC by the end of this year and lay off its entire workforce of 905 employees.
While I may not like it, I can understand the economics of shutting down a textile mill or a furniture plant. It’s a new world we are living in. But Dell? Computers?! If the leading computer manufacturer is suffering during the recession, what can anyone else hope for? Is there any industry that can still compete and grow?
And it seems that the answer may, perhaps, be Yes – the green industry.
Ginny Skalski, a good friend and local uber-social-networking-maven recently got a job with CREE as their social media person. And she invited me and Ashley Sue Allen to attend yesterday’s press conference:
Cree1.jpg
My first surprise was the size of the Cree campus in RTP – it is enormous. I was not aware until yesterday that this is a 20 years old company and how big it was.
As a blogger, I was, forwardthinkingly (is that a word?) of them, seated up front with the media, sitting right next to state Rep. McKissick of Durham and not needing a telephoto lens or zoom to take this picture of Governor Beverly Purdue who was sitting just a few feet in front of me:
Cree2.jpg
What was the press conference about? The announcement by Cree of almost 600 new job openings, about half of them to be filled by the end of the year, some in RTP and most in their plant in Mecklenburg County. As Cree’s CEO Chuck Swoboda said, Cree started at home – by replacing all the incandescent and fluorescent lightbulbs with their own LED lights in all of their own buildings. I have to say that I did not notice any difference in lighting – the room was bright and warmly lit and welcoming:
Cree3.jpg
Governor Purdue greeted the good news by saying that she also started at home – making her own house energy-efficient and outfitted by LED lights….which she also did not notice when they were installed: the light looks just like the incandescent light (and much more pleasant than the metallic fluorescent light).
She also connected the news to the importance of education. Cree was started by a group of students at NCSU 20 years ago and she stressed how such inventions, as well as jobs in such companies, require a strong educational system in the State.
Cree4.jpg
Cree set up a little demo in the back of the room where we could see (and have demonstrated) the difference between incandescent, fluorescent and LED light as well as get information about the energy savings, longevity of the lights, ease of installing them into the existing sockets, and environmental impact:
Cree5.jpg
Cree6.jpg
In the end, before I left, Ginny showed me some cool colors that LEDs come from. I have used the infrared LEDs in my research many years ago, and was interested to learn about the advancements in technology since then, as well as other uses for LEDs apart from home and business lighting, e.g., in research, medicine and defense.
Cree7.jpg
Cree8.jpg
Read more coverage of the event in News & Observer and Triangle Business Journal. You can see a little bit of me in this picture, all the way in the back, while the mainstream media journalists were interviewing Governor Purdue.

Continue reading

Today’s carnivals

Carnival of the Blue #29 is up on Cephalopodcast
The 121st Meeting of the Skeptics’ Circle is up on The Mad Skeptic
Scientia Pro Publica 13: Nobel Prize Edition is up on Living the Scientific Life
Friday Ark #264 is up on Modulator
Grand Rounds Vol 6, No 3: The Art of Medicine and Nursing is up on Pallimed

New and Exciting in PLoS ONE

There are 17 new articles in PLoS ONE published last night. As always, you should rate the articles, post notes and comments and send trackbacks when you blog about the papers. You can now also easily place articles on various social services (CiteULike, Mendeley, Connotea, Stumbleupon, Facebook and Digg) with just one click. Here are my own picks for the week – you go and look for your own favourites:
Was Dinosaurian Physiology Inherited by Birds? Reconciling Slow Growth in Archaeopteryx

Background
Archaeopteryx is the oldest and most primitive known bird (Avialae). It is believed that the growth and energetic physiology of basalmost birds such as Archaeopteryx were inherited in their entirety from non-avialan dinosaurs. This hypothesis predicts that the long bones in these birds formed using rapidly growing, well-vascularized woven tissue typical of non-avialan dinosaurs.
Methodology/Principal Findings
We report that Archaeopteryx long bones are composed of nearly avascular parallel-fibered bone. This is among the slowest growing osseous tissues and is common in ectothermic reptiles. These findings dispute the hypothesis that non-avialan dinosaur growth and physiology were inherited in totality by the first birds. Examining these findings in a phylogenetic context required intensive sampling of outgroup dinosaurs and basalmost birds. Our results demonstrate the presence of a scale-dependent maniraptoran histological continuum that Archaeopteryx and other basalmost birds follow. Growth analysis for Archaeopteryx suggests that these animals showed exponential growth rates like non-avialan dinosaurs, three times slower than living precocial birds, but still within the lowermost range for all endothermic vertebrates.
Conclusions/Significance
The unexpected histology of Archaeopteryx and other basalmost birds is actually consistent with retention of the phylogenetically earlier paravian dinosaur condition when size is considered. The first birds were simply feathered dinosaurs with respect to growth and energetic physiology. The evolution of the novel pattern in modern forms occurred later in the group’s history.

Molecular Signatures Reveal Circadian Clocks May Orchestrate the Homeorhetic Response to Lactation:

Genes associated with lactation evolved more slowly than other genes in the mammalian genome. Higher conservation of milk and mammary genes suggest that species variation in milk composition is due in part to the environment and that we must look deeper into the genome for regulation of lactation. At the onset of lactation, metabolic changes are coordinated among multiple tissues through the endocrine system to accommodate the increased demand for nutrients and energy while allowing the animal to remain in homeostasis. This process is known as homeorhesis. Homeorhetic adaptation to lactation has been extensively described; however how these adaptations are orchestrated among multiple tissues remains elusive. To develop a clearer picture of how gene expression is coordinated across multiple tissues during the pregnancy to lactation transition, total RNA was isolated from mammary, liver and adipose tissues collected from rat dams (n = 5) on day 20 of pregnancy and day 1 of lactation, and gene expression was measured using Affymetrix GeneChips. Two types of gene expression analysis were performed. Genes that were differentially expressed between days within a tissue were identified with linear regression, and univariate regression was used to identify genes commonly up-regulated and down-regulated across all tissues. Gene set enrichment analysis showed genes commonly up regulated among the three tissues enriched gene ontologies primary metabolic processes, macromolecular complex assembly and negative regulation of apoptosis ontologies. Genes enriched in transcription regulator activity showed the common up regulation of 2 core molecular clock genes, ARNTL and CLOCK. Commonly down regulated genes enriched Rhythmic process and included: NR1D1, DBP, BHLHB2, OPN4, and HTR7, which regulate intracellular circadian rhythms. Changes in mammary, liver and adipose transcriptomes at the onset of lactation illustrate the complexity of homeorhetic adaptations and suggest that these changes are coordinated through molecular clocks.

Evolution with Stochastic Fitness and Stochastic Migration:

Migration between local populations plays an important role in evolution – influencing local adaptation, speciation, extinction, and the maintenance of genetic variation. Like other evolutionary mechanisms, migration is a stochastic process, involving both random and deterministic elements. Many models of evolution have incorporated migration, but these have all been based on simplifying assumptions, such as low migration rate, weak selection, or large population size. We thus have no truly general and1 exact mathematical description of evolution that incorporates migration. We derive an exact equation for directional evolution, essentially a stochastic Price equation with migration, that encompasses all processes, both deterministic and stochastic, contributing to directional change in an open population. Using this result, we show that increasing the variance in migration rates reduces the impact of migration relative to selection. This means that models that treat migration as a single parameter tend to be biassed – overestimating the relative impact of immigration. We further show that selection and migration interact in complex ways, one result being that a strategy for which fitness is negatively correlated with migration rates (high fitness when migration is low) will tend to increase in frequency, even if it has lower mean fitness than do other strategies. Finally, we derive an equation for the effective migration rate, which allows some of the complex stochastic processes that we identify to be incorporated into models with a single migration parameter. As has previously been shown with selection, the role of migration in evolution is determined by the entire distributions of immigration and emigration rates, not just by the mean values. The interactions of stochastic migration with stochastic selection produce evolutionary processes that are invisible to deterministic evolutionary theory.

Clock Quotes

Many of us spend half our time wishing for things we could have if we didn’t spend half our time wishing.
– Alexander Woollcott

Field Trip! Water, sewage and flowers

This was a very busy day. I went to five science-related places/events today (and one yesterday).
The first three, this morning, were part of an education school trip with my daughter’s class and her science teacher.
First we visited the OWASA Water Treatment Plant which provides tap water for about 80,000 people in Chapel Hill and Carrboro, NC, followed by a tour of their Wastewater Treatment Plant. Last time I visited a water treatment plant was about 30 years ago, in Belgrade (which has 2 million people using the water), so it was exciting to see how technology has evolved over the years – with greater quality control, much greater energy efficiency and, most importantly, with much more environmentally friendly impact.
Everything is recycled – a byproduct of one part of the process (e.g., methane) becomes a fuel for another part, etc. Water gets recycled within the plant, solid particles are sterilized and given away as fertilizer, the cleaned wastewater is sterilized and ‘reclaimed water’ which does not meet the tap water standards is given away for irrigation, heating and other uses. Even the end-product of wastewater cleaning gets additional stuff done to it – sterilization by UV light and oxygenation before it is dumped into a creek, in order to help the wildlife living in it.
Interesting stuff sometimes flows down the sewer pipes. The large inorganic objects get caught first and our tour-guide just the other day discovered a rubber duckie! No alligators.
Then we went to The North Carolina Botanical Garden for a picnic lunch. It’s been a long time since I last visited and it was great to see how much they added over the years. Though late fall, there was plenty to see and a number of plants were in full bloom. Will have to come back soon with the whole family.
About the other two events, afternoon fare, you’ll have to wait for my reports tomorrow.

Tweetlinks, 10-08-09

Follow me on Twitter to get these, and more, in something closer to Real Time:
Geobloggers – who is coming to #scio10? There is a session proposed that you may want to join in
How @TomLevenson rakes Megan McArdle over hot coals on disingenuous science reporting: It’s not that McArdle can’t read…it’s that she can’t (won’t) think: part four (and last, thank FSM). (part 4, links to 1,2,3)
Spoor of South African Dinos Analyzed
BLT Kama Sutra
Rules to Eat By
Darwin: 3 Poems
Lisa Sanders was on State Of The Nation at noon at wunc 91.5FM today.
Book Review: Don’t Be SUCH A Scientist
Open Access Policy for York University Librarians and Archivists
Thanks to HP for helping students through my Giving Page

Clock Quotes

The great man is the man who does a thing for the first time.
– Alexander Smith

Tweetlinks, 10-07-09

Follow me on Twitter to get these, and more, in something closer to Real Time:
Buying a Coke in Africa: are there lessons for malaria?
The Paleo Paper Challenge in the Blogosphere (see also)
RT @anthonymobile: The Open Laboratory 2008 anthology of science blogs is one of the most fun things i’ve read in ages
Uses and Abuses of Nobel Causes
“One day it’s bound to happen. The same person will get an igNobel one day and then a Nobel the following week. For the same research.”
Review of “Creation” by science educator James Williams
2009 #Nobel09 Prize in Chemistry: *really* a chemistry prize & The Awesome Power of Natural Products: Venkatraman Ramakrishnan, Thomas Steitz, and Ada Yonath win 2009 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
A big shift in in news: from “site” to “application…”: Research: Social media publications may have advantage over traditional news sites
Eight Public Media 2.0 Projects That Are Doing it Right – w00t! for Scienceblogs.com!
Pre OA Week Activites in Ireland
Readers expect news to find them: “If the news is that important, it will find me.”
What is relevant to my research right now?
Old Media vs. New Media: Let’s call this one off: “The war ended. The prophets turned out to be correct.”
Worth a Thousand Birds
Rational Irrationality – The real reason that capitalism is so crash-prone
Thanks to Russ for helping students through my Giving Page

Science on Tap: The Chemistry of Beer

Next Periodic Tables, a Durham, NC version of Science Cafe, will happen on October 13, 2009 at 7pm at the Broad Street Café:

Science on Tap: The Chemistry of Beer
Join us as we tap into the science of brewing beer and discover how a few simple ingredients (yeast, water, hops and grains) can make a variety of brews. We’ll also discuss the importance of sterilization and the microbiology of yeast culturing.
Speakers: Triangle Brewing Company and Brew Master Store

The origins of projectile weaponry – Sigma Xi pizza lunch

From Sigma Xi:

We’ll reconvene at noon, Tuesday, Oct. 20, at Sigma Xi, the Scientific Research Society, with a peek at one of the many ways technology helped our species survive and prosper long ago.
Steven Churchill, an associate professor of evolutionary anthropology at Duke University, will discuss the origins of projectile weaponry, and how that fit with the emergence of other aspects of modern human behavior. He’ll talk about his fascinating forensics work exploring ways our ancestors may have used weapons against evolutionary cousins who no longer roam this planet.
American Scientist Pizza Lunch is free and open to science journalists and science communicators of all stripes. Feel free to forward this message to anyone who might want to attend. RSVPs are required (for a reliable slice count) to cclabby@amsci.org
Directions to Sigma Xi:
http://www.sigmaxi.org/about/center/directions.shtml

The Swedish Research Council mandates Open Access

Press release (in Swedish – translation from the Swedish by Ingegerd Rabow):

The Swedish Research Council requires free access to research results.
In order to receive research grants the Research council requires now that researchers publish their material freely accessible to all.
The general public and other researchers shall have free access to all material financed by public funding,
The thought behind the so called Open Access is that everybody shall have free and unlimited access to scientifically refereed articles, The Research Council has now decided, that researchers who are granted research funding from the Council shall publish their refereed texts in journals and at conferences in this way.
“We are of the opinion that texts presenting research funded by public funds shall be freely available to all,” says professor Pär Omling Director General of the Swedish Research Council. “Open Access is an important prerequisite for the dissemination of research results to the benefit of society.”
Researchers are required to guarantee that everything published shall be freely available according to to Open Access not later than six months after publication.
The Council’s decision regarding Open Access has been taken in close cooperation with SUHF, the Association of Swedish Higher Education. To promote free dissemination of research results is not and isolated Swedish occurrence, The so called Berlin Declaration aiming to implement Open Access has been signed by several large, mainly European research funders.
The Open Access-mandate covers so far only refereed journal articles and conference reports, not monographs and book chapters. The mandate will be included in the new grant conditions from 2010..
For more information, contact
Håkan Billig, main secretary for the Medical Council, tel +46 8-546 44 294, e-post hakan.billig@vr.se
Pär Omling, Director General the Swedish Research Council, tel +46 8-546 44 185, e-post par.omling@vr.se

Clock Quotes

Our passions are like convulsion fits, which, though they make us stronger for a time, leave us the weaker ever after.
– Alexander Pope

Tweetlinks, 10-06-09

Follow me on Twitter to get these, and more, in something closer to Real Time:
Genes, Categories and Species, by Jody Hey, a book review.
Some wicked multimedia tools…
In the past, when a country switches from dollar to euro we invent a reason to bomb it. Too late now: The demise of the dollar
Immersion In Nature Makes Us Nicer
These are @justarikia’s Top 5 Favorite Music Videos Involving Robots – what are yours? ‘We are the robot’?
Our screwed-up malpractice system. Whose fault is that? Let’s try ‘nobody’.
How to sell news on the web: A checklist
Why Blog? A study
Darwin, ‘Ardi’, and the African Apes
How House, M.D. is affecting patients’ expectations of medical care
The Future of Health Care Is Social
Women in Science: A Spot at the Bench
Excellent explanation of telomeres (with a jab at IntelligentDesignCreationists getting it wrong)
RT @mistersugar Join me for #sconc happy hour Thur 10/8 5:30pm @ West End Wine Bar, Durham to meet Lisa Sanders M.D., medical narrative guru
Patient experience – Gel Health 2009 conference Oct.22-23. in NYC
Excellence Everywhere: A Resource for Scientists Launching Research Careers in Emerging Science Centers
‘The Spirit of Open Access’ Haiku Contest
Why I Sent A Guy With A Normal EKG To The Cath Lab
Text Messaging Shows Promise as a Survey Tool – interview with Eszter Hargittai
Re-engineering the Scientific Journal
Trackway Analysis Shows How Dinosaurs Coped With Slippery Slopes
ScienceOnline2010: amazing program almost finalized: Last chance to volunteer to do something.
What is a BarCamp? – where they train bartenders? No.
JMP scientific statistic software is 20 years old today
Scrabble Computer Keyboard – Want!
Plants, Empire and the Ignorance of Western Civilization
Getting a Ph.D. for the money?
Commenting on PLoS: Get noticed

DonorsChoose update

As you are likely aware, the DonorsChoose campaign is in full swing here on Scienceblogs.com.
What you may not be aware is that Seed Media Group is in, with some nice prizes to the donors:

You can forward the donation receipt to scienceblogs@gmail.com for a chance to win some Swag Bags from ScienceBlogs, complete with Seed moleskin notebooks and tote bags, ScienceBlogs mugs and USB drives, and books from Yale University Press and Oxford University Press – we’ll draw a winner or winners every week in October.

Check out all the Sciblings’ challenges and pick some to give – a little bit by many people will go a long way.
As you can see, our challenges are currently in second place overall, behind a large group of “General Blogs”, leaving Twitter, Discover Blogs, Fashion Blogs, Gawker Media, Tech Blogs, BlogHer and others behind. Can we get to the #1 spot by the end of the month?
Of course, I would love it the best, if you donate to one of my challenges.
So far, two donors have given three donations to my challenges, with the total of $204.
Challenges The Joy Of Science!!!!!, Headline: Worms Tutor First Graders!, Alternative Energy and Conservation, The Lights In The Sky Are Stars, No Books Go Notebooks and Biology Games to Make Level 3’s and 4’s have been fully funded – all this week, and thanks to, among other, my donors.
How do you choose where to give?
You can take a look at those challenges that have very little time left:
First Graders Flip Over the Video on Their Blog has only 5 days left to go. Kinder-Garden has 10 and Flip For Learning! has 18 days to go. If not funded in time, those projects will not happen this year!
Or you can see which challenges require only a little bit of money to get fully funded:
Space and Beyond is missing only $58 to get fully funded. 1,2,3 – Look at Me (Learning Math) needs only $94 and Tick Tock : Time to Tell Time needs $102.
Or see which challenges work double, i.e., with various corporate sponsors doubling your contributions.
And if all of my challenges get funded soon, I’ll add some more. We have a whole month to help as many children and teachers as possible. Thank you.

New and Exciting in PLoS ONE

There are 21 new articles in PLoS ONE today. As always, you should rate the articles, post notes and comments and send trackbacks when you blog about the papers. You can now also easily place articles on various social services (CiteULike, Mendeley, Connotea, Stumbleupon, Facebook and Digg) with just one click. Here are my own picks for the week – you go and look for your own favourites:
From the Eye of the Albatrosses: A Bird-Borne Camera Shows an Association between Albatrosses and a Killer Whale in the Southern Ocean:

Albatrosses fly many hundreds of kilometers across the open ocean to find and feed upon their prey. Despite the growing number of studies concerning their foraging behaviour, relatively little is known about how albatrosses actually locate their prey. Here, we present our results from the first deployments of a combined animal-borne camera and depth data logger on free-ranging black-browed albatrosses (Thalassarche melanophrys). The still images recorded from these cameras showed that some albatrosses actively followed a killer whale (Orcinus orca), possibly to feed on food scraps left by this diving predator. The camera images together with the depth profiles showed that the birds dived only occasionally, but that they actively dived when other birds or the killer whale were present. This association with diving predators or other birds may partially explain how albatrosses find their prey more efficiently in the apparently ‘featureless’ ocean, with a minimal requirement for energetically costly diving or landing activities.

Edge Detection in Landing Budgerigars (Melopsittacus undulatus):

While considerable scientific effort has been devoted to studying how birds navigate over long distances, relatively little is known about how targets are detected, obstacles are avoided and smooth landings are orchestrated. Here we examine how visual features in the environment, such as contrasting edges, determine where a bird will land. Landing in budgerigars (Melopsittacus undulatus) was investigated by training them to fly from a perch to a feeder, and video-filming their landings. The feeder was placed on a grey disc that produced a contrasting edge against a uniformly blue background. We found that the birds tended to land primarily at the edge of the disc and walk to the feeder, even though the feeder was in the middle of the disc. This suggests that the birds were using the visual contrast at the boundary of the disc to target their landings. When the grey level of the disc was varied systematically, whilst keeping the blue background constant, there was one intermediate grey level at which the budgerigar’s preference for the disc boundary disappeared. The budgerigars then landed randomly all over the test surface. Even though this disc is (for humans) clearly distinguishable from the blue background, it offers very little contrast against the background, in the red and green regions of the spectrum. We conclude that budgerigars use visual edges to target and guide landings. Calculations of photoreceptor excitation reveal that edge detection in landing budgerigars is performed by a color-blind luminance channel that sums the signals from the red and green photoreceptors, or, alternatively, receives input from the red double-cones. This finding has close parallels to vision in honeybees and primates, where edge detection and motion perception are also largely color-blind.

The Impact of Nature Experience on Willingness to Support Conservation:

We hypothesized that willingness to financially support conservation depends on one’s experience with nature. In order to test this hypothesis, we used a novel time-lagged correlation analysis to look at times series data concerning nature participation, and evaluate its relationship with future conservation support (measured as contributions to conservation NGOs). Our results suggest that the type and timing of nature experience may determine future conservation investment. Time spent hiking or backpacking is correlated with increased conservation contributions 11-12 years later. On the other hand, contributions are negatively correlated with past time spent on activities such as public lands visitation or fishing. Our results suggest that each hiker or backpacker translates to $200-$300 annually in future NGO contributions. We project that the recent decline in popularity of hiking and backpacking will negatively impact conservation NGO contributions from approximately 2010-2011 through at least 2018.

Reassortment Patterns in Swine Influenza Viruses:

Three human influenza pandemics occurred in the twentieth century, in 1918, 1957, and 1968. Influenza pandemic strains are the results of emerging viruses from non-human reservoirs to which humans have little or no immunity. At least two of these pandemic strains, in 1957 and in 1968, were the results of reassortments between human and avian viruses. Also, many cases of swine influenza viruses have reportedly infected humans, in particular, the recent H1N1 influenza virus of swine origin, isolated in Mexico and the United States. Pigs are documented to allow productive replication of human, avian, and swine influenza viruses. Thus it has been conjectured that pigs are the “mixing vessel” that create the avian-human reassortant strains, causing the human pandemics. Hence, studying the process and patterns of viral reassortment, especially in pigs, is a key to better understanding of human influenza pandemics. In the last few years, databases containing sequences of influenza A viruses, including swine viruses, collected since 1918 from diverse geographical locations, have been developed and made publicly available. In this paper, we study an ensemble of swine influenza viruses to analyze the reassortment phenomena through several statistical techniques. The reassortment patterns in swine viruses prove to be similar to the previous results found in human viruses, both in vitro and in vivo, that the surface glycoprotein coding segments reassort most often. Moreover, we find that one of the polymerase segments (PB1), reassorted in the strains responsible for the last two human pandemics, also reassorts frequently.

500,000 Brazilian free-tailed bats fly out of a cave (video)

Using infra-red cameras:

From Wired

Clock Quotes

Sometimes we stare so long at a door that is closing, that we see too late the one that is open.
– Alexander Graham Bell

Tweetlinks, 10-05-09

Follow me on Twitter to get these, and more, in something closer to Real Time:
Warning, Revisited
How Twitter is changing the way wars are fought
Come hang out with me at ScienceOnline 2010
Nature Communications: A breakthrough for open access? (and discussion)
Using tequila to make diamonds – igNobel: Scientific Diagrams – How not to do it
2009 medicine Nobelists – their PLoS publications – they have all three published in PLoS.
Why Does Daniel Lyons Unnecessarily Opt-in To Stupid? (Contribution #1 of this)
Blogger Outreach Manifesto
Balloon Animals! (video) ROFL – is this Stuart Pivar’s YouTube channel? (to understand why this is idiotic, see:this, this and this for explanation).
Malaria in Africa: The net gains of keeping mosquitoes at bay
Openly atheist candidate for office (Ovittore) given a ‘religious test’ – not kosher!
Tell Me A Story of Science – see excellent discussion.
Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill ranked as America’s smartest metro area.
Blogs can be regulated by the Feds but not be protected from the Feds by Shield Laws
AcaWiki (first shown at ScienceOnline09) officially launched: a ‘Wikipedia for academic research.’
UNC doctor Stephen Gamboa will represent North Carolina in a meeting today with President Obama
The Conduct of Science is a Social Science
Weekly PLoS ONE News and Blog Round-Up
Honeybee Research in PLoS ONE
Japanase production of Spring Awakening on You Tube (video)
BusinessWeek’s Shirley Brady on online communities and crowdsourcing
But Plumber Chicks Are HAWT!
Journalists Become Trainers & Coaches for Local Communities
Why the Stimulus Should Have Been Called Rebuilding: U.S. Falling Behind in Trains and Internet
DonorsChoose Social Media Challenge 2009 Now Underway
Wow! Even high-end glossy magazines are shutting down! Conde Nast Shutters Gourmet After McKinsey Review and Media Decoder: Few Luxuries Left Inside Condé Nast
Best PR for #scio10 are interviews with past participants: 2008 and 2009

New and Exciting in PLoS ONE

There are 32 new articles in PLoS ONE today. As always, you should rate the articles, post notes and comments and send trackbacks when you blog about the papers. You can now also easily place articles on various social services (CiteULike, Mendeley, Connotea, Stumbleupon, Facebook and Digg) with just one click. Here are my own picks for the week – you go and look for your own favourites:
Dynamic Locomotor Capabilities Revealed by Early Dinosaur Trackmakers from Southern Africa:

A new investigation of the sedimentology and ichnology of the Early Jurassic Moyeni tracksite in Lesotho, southern Africa has yielded new insights into the behavior and locomotor dynamics of early dinosaurs. The tracksite is an ancient point bar preserving a heterogeneous substrate of varied consistency and inclination that includes a ripple-marked riverbed, a bar slope, and a stable algal-matted bar top surface. Several basal ornithischian dinosaurs and a single theropod dinosaur crossed its surface within days or perhaps weeks of one another, but responded to substrate heterogeneity differently. Whereas the theropod trackmaker accommodated sloping and slippery surfaces by gripping the substrate with its pedal claws, the basal ornithischian trackmakers adjusted to the terrain by changing between quadrupedal and bipedal stance, wide and narrow gauge limb support (abduction range = 31°), and plantigrade and digitigrade foot posture. The locomotor adjustments coincide with changes in substrate consistency along the trackway and appear to reflect ‘real time’ responses to a complex terrain. It is proposed that these responses foreshadow important locomotor transformations characterizing the later evolution of the two main dinosaur lineages. Ornithischians, which shifted from bipedal to quadrupedal posture at least three times in their evolutionary history, are shown to have been capable of adopting both postures early in their evolutionary history. The substrate-gripping behavior demonstrated by the early theropod, in turn, is consistent with the hypothesized function of pedal claws in bird ancestors.

High Resolution MEMS Accelerometers to Estimate VO2 and Compare Running Mechanics between Highly Trained Inter-Collegiate and Untrained Runners:

The purposes of this study were to determine the validity and reliability of high resolution accelerometers (HRA) relative to VO2 and speed, and compare putative differences in HRA signal between trained (T) and untrained (UT) runners during treadmill locomotion. Runners performed 2 incremental VO2max trials while wearing HRA. RMS of high frequency signal from three axes (VT, ML, AP) and the Euclidean resultant (RES) were compared to VO2 to determine validity and reliability. Additionally, axial rms relative to speed, and ratio of axial accelerations to RES were compared between T and UT to determine if differences in running mechanics could be identified between the two groups. Regression of RES was strongly related to VO2, but T was different than UT (r = 0.96 vs 0.92; p<.001) for walking and running. During walking, only the ratio of ML and AP to RES were different between groups. For running, nearly all acceleration parameters were lower for T than UT, the exception being ratio of VT to RES, which was higher in T than UT. All of these differences during running were despite higher VO2, O2 cost, and lower RER in T vs UT, which resulted in no significant difference in energy expenditure between groups. These results indicate that HRA can accurately and reliably estimate VO2 during treadmill locomotion, but differences exist between T and UT that should be considered when estimating energy expenditure. Differences in running mechanics between T and UT were identified, yet the importance of these differences remains to be determined.

Coral Fluorescent Proteins as Antioxidants:

A wide array of fluorescent proteins (FP) is present in anthozoans, although their biochemical characteristics and function in host tissue remain to be determined. Upregulation of FP’s frequently occurs in injured or compromised coral tissue, suggesting a potential role of coral FPs in host stress responses. The presence of FPs was determined and quantified for a subsample of seven healthy Caribbean coral species using spectral emission analysis of tissue extracts. FP concentration was correlated with the in vivo antioxidant potential of the tissue extracts by quantifying the hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) scavenging rates. FPs of the seven species varied in both type and abundance and demonstrated a positive correlation between H2O2 scavenging rate and FP concentration. To validate this data, the H2O2 scavenging rates of four pure scleractinian FPs, cyan (CFP), green (GFP), red (RFP) and chromoprotein (CP), and their mutant counterparts (without chromophores), were investigated. In vitro, each FP scavenged H2O2 with the most efficient being CP followed by equivalent activity of CFP and RFP. Scavenging was significantly higher in all mutant counterparts. Both naturally occurring and pure coral FPs have significant H2O2 scavenging activity. The higher scavenging rate of RFP and the CP in vitro is consistent with observed increases of these specific FPs in areas of compromised coral tissue. However, the greater scavenging ability of the mutant counterparts suggests additional roles of scleractinian FPs, potentially pertaining to their color. This study documents H2O2 scavenging of scleractinian FPs, a novel biochemical characteristic, both in vivo across multiple species and in vitro with purified proteins. These data support a role for FPs in coral stress and immune responses and highlights the multi-functionality of these conspicuous proteins.

Resilience of Coral-Associated Bacterial Communities Exposed to Fish Farm Effluent:

The coral holobiont includes the coral animal, algal symbionts, and associated microbial community. These microbes help maintain the holobiont homeostasis; thus, sustaining robust mutualistic microbial communities is a fundamental part of long-term coral reef survival. Coastal pollution is one major threat to reefs, and intensive fish farming is a rapidly growing source of this pollution. We investigated the susceptibility and resilience of the bacterial communities associated with a common reef-building coral, Porites cylindrica, to coastal pollution by performing a clonally replicated transplantation experiment in Bolinao, Philippines adjacent to intensive fish farming. Ten fragments from each of four colonies (total of 40 fragments) were followed for 22 days across five sites: a well-flushed reference site (the original fragment source); two sites with low exposure to milkfish (Chanos chanos) aquaculture effluent; and two sites with high exposure. Elevated levels of dissolved organic carbon (DOC), chlorophyll a, total heterotrophic and autotrophic bacteria abundance, virus like particle (VLP) abundances, and culturable Vibrio abundance characterized the high effluent sites. Based on 16S rRNA clone libraries and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) analysis, we observed rapid, dramatic changes in the coral-associated bacterial communities within five days of high effluent exposure. The community composition on fragments at these high effluent sites shifted towards known human and coral pathogens (i.e. Arcobacter, Fusobacterium, and Desulfovibrio) without the host corals showing signs of disease. The communities shifted back towards their original composition by day 22 without reduction in effluent levels. This study reveals fish farms as a likely source of pathogens with the potential to proliferate on corals and an unexpected short-term resilience of coral-associated bacterial communities to eutrophication pressure. These data highlight a need for improved aquaculture practices that can achieve both sustainable industry goals and long-term coral reef survival.

Adenotonsillectomy and Neurocognitive Deficits in Children with Sleep Disordered Breathing:

Sleep Disordered Breathing (SDB) is a common childhood disorder that encompasses a range of sleep-related upper airway obstruction. Children with SDB demonstrate significant neurocognitive deficits. Adenotonsillectomy is the first line of treatment for SDB and whilst this improves respiratory disturbance, it remains to be established whether neurocognitive gains also result. A total of 44 healthy snoring children aged 3-12 years awaiting adenotonsillectomy (SDB group), and 48 age and gender matched non-snoring controls from the general community, completed the study. All children underwent polysomnography and neurocognitive assessment at baseline and after a 6-month follow-up (after surgery in the snoring group). Our primary aim was to determine whether neurocognitive deficits in snoring children were significantly improved following adenotonsillectomy. Wide ranging neurocognitive deficits were found at baseline in SDB children compared to controls, most notably a 10 point IQ difference (P<.001) and similar deficits in language and executive function. Whilst adenotonsillectomy improved respiratory parameters and snoring frequency at 6 months post surgery, neurocognitive performance did not improve relative to controls. Adenotonsillectomy successfully treated the respiratory effects of SDB in children. However, neurocognitive deficits did not improve 6-months post-operatively.

Phylogenetic Analysis of Seven WRKY Genes across the Palm Subtribe Attaleinae (Areceaceae) Identifies Syagrus as Sister Group of the Coconut:

The Cocoseae is one of 13 tribes of Arecaceae subfam. Arecoideae, and contains a number of palms with significant economic importance, including the monotypic and pantropical Cocos nucifera L., the coconut, the origins of which have been one of the “abominable mysteries” of palm systematics for decades. Previous studies with predominantly plastid genes weakly supported American ancestry for the coconut but ambiguous sister relationships. In this paper, we use multiple single copy nuclear loci to address the phylogeny of the Cocoseae subtribe Attaleinae, and resolve the closest extant relative of the coconut. We present the results of combined analysis of DNA sequences of seven WRKY transcription factor loci across 72 samples of Arecaceae tribe Cocoseae subtribe Attaleinae, representing all genera classified within the subtribe, and three outgroup taxa with maximum parsimony, maximum likelihood, and Bayesian approaches, producing highly congruent and well-resolved trees that robustly identify the genus Syagrus as sister to Cocos and resolve novel and well-supported relationships among the other genera of the Attaleinae. We also address incongruence among the gene trees with gene tree reconciliation analysis, and assign estimated ages to the nodes of our tree. This study represents the as yet most extensive phylogenetic analyses of Cocoseae subtribe Attaleinae. We present a well-resolved and supported phylogeny of the subtribe that robustly indicates a sister relationship between Cocos and Syagrus. This is not only of biogeographic interest, but will also open fruitful avenues of inquiry regarding evolution of functional genes useful for crop improvement. Establishment of two major clades of American Attaleinae occurred in the Oligocene (ca. 37 MYBP) in Eastern Brazil. The divergence of Cocos from Syagrus is estimated at 35 MYBP. The biogeographic and morphological congruence that we see for clades resolved in the Attaleinae suggests that WRKY loci are informative markers for investigating the phylogenetic relationships of the palm family.

ScienceOnline’09 – interview with Arikia Millikan

The series of interviews with some of the participants of the 2008 Science Blogging Conference was quite popular, so I decided to do the same thing again this year, posting interviews with some of the people who attended ScienceOnline’09 back in January.
Today, I asked Arikia Millikan, the former Overlord here at Scienceblogs.com, to answer a few questions.
Welcome to A Blog Around The Clock. Would you, please, tell my readers a little bit more about yourself? Who are you? What is your (scientific) background?
twitter_arikia1.jpgFirst and foremost, I consider myself a scientist, though perhaps not in the traditional sense. I studied the “hard sciences” throughout my education and scientific principles govern my outlook on the world. But my lab bench is my laptop and I mostly conduct observational studies on the way people use the Web to communicate.
I do experiments, too. I spent about eight months “Cat Herding” at ScienceBlogs, and that was a pretty major experiment. The variables were ideas as well as “physical” changes to the appearance and functionality of the network. Tweak this, upgrade that, measure the changes with analytics and user responses, update methods accordingly. Way better than the lab-coat variety, IMO, because while conducting my experiments, I got to play with awesome scientists online.
I’m also a communicator. I began my undergraduate studies in the College of Engineering at the University of Michigan. The first week of classes, we were instructed to forget everything we ever learned about writing, because we were only going to perform “technical writing” from there on out. I didn’t like that. I remember thinking, “Science is hard enough for most people to understand, why would anyone purposely create a whole new language to further obfuscate the concepts, making it more abstract to the people who will eventually use products created by science?” So I got what I could from the program, which mostly was an ass-kicking in calc-based physics (but also a solid foundation in the fundamentals of computer programming), and my junior year I changed my major to psychology and joined the student newspaper. There I started the science beat and reported on scientific accomplishments and their societal implications.
What do you want to do/be when (and if ever) you grow up?
I want to be someone who, in the future when people look back at the evolution of the Internet, they’ll say, “Arikia Millikan played an important part in how awesome this is today.” I’d also like – and this is my total pipe dream goal — to write a tech column for Wired. It’s the one publication I subscribe to in print and I read it cover-to-cover every month.
Most importantly, I want to be someone who never stops learning about and benefiting from technology. I am not going to be the old curmudgeon musing about what new technologies the young whippersnappers are in a frenzy about at any given moment. I think that, in the process of learning, some people acquire mental blocks where they think they can’t learn new things, and this can be a very damaging state of mind. I’m 22 right now and I think I’m pretty quick to use and adapt to new gadgets, computer programs, and Web features as they emerge. But I want to be just as adept when I’m 72, Moore’s Law be damned.
What is your Real Life job?
I’m funemployed! I have an assortment of freelance jobs and gigs that keep me mentally occupied and sustain my existence in New York City. The project I’m the most excited about right now is that I’m working with Nate Silver, founder of FiveThirtyEight, as his research assistant. He’s in the process of writing a book about statistical predictions and there’s a large focus on science. So basically, I get to travel around the country accompanying him on interviews with the most awesome scientists I can find. Besides that, I build websites, I have a handful of top-secret projects I work on sporadically with some really talented people in Brooklyn, and I write things occasionally. Working with Nate, I’ve realized that I’d like to write a lot more. I’ve always been someone who has a lot to say, but sometimes it’s hard to say it when you’re constantly in the presence of scientific greatness. It’s like, who am I to write on a topic when there are tons of people already doing it way better than I ever could? I guess it’s kind of a lame excuse. I’ll try to try more and see what happens.
internets.jpgOh, and I pick up shifts here and there at The Internet Garage, a grungy public computer lab in Williamsburg, the hipster sector of Brooklyn. I provide Internet and technical support for customers and help them use the equipment here, all of which is either crappy or broken. It’s a pretty hilarious place. Most people think it’s a drug front. I assure you that it’s not, though the owners don’t seem to be remotely concerned with turning a profit. I kind of want to write a screenplay about the IG someday.
What aspect of science communication and/or particular use of the Web in science interests you the most?
Well, it’s the field of communication via the use of the Web as a science that interests me the most. The fact that the topic of conversation in the networks I study is science is just a bonus, really. On a recent trip to MIT with Nate, we met Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web. He talked to us about the emergent field of Web Science and drew us a circular flow chart that I’m going to frame and mount on my wall. Web Science is different than Computer Science in that it takes human behavior online into account and examines the way our behavior shapes the development of the Web itself. That’s the stuff that really gets me going. I want to know everything there is to know about this field.
How does (if it does) blogging figure in your work? How about social networks, e.g., Twitter, FriendFeed and Facebook?
Blogging and social networking tools are the subject of my work. They enable the individual to simultaneously be consumers of content and providers, and that’s a really powerful concept. I don’t blog too much myself, though I do use all of the above social networking tools on a daily basis. My primary use of them is personal, but it blurs with the professional. I don’t think the two necessarily have to be separate, and I think with the way voluntary information sharing is heading, it will soon be impossible to keep them separate. I think a lot of people are adamant about using sites like Twitter to enhance their professional careers and propagate their viewpoints, and that’s awesome. But I’m 22 and living in the craziest city in the world. Sometimes a girl just needs to Tweet about a guy she just saw with full-face tattoos or a gambling adventure in a speakeasy bar. The question Twitter begs to know is “What are you doing?” after all.
When and how did you discover science blogs? What are some of your favourites? Have you discovered any new cool science blogs while at the Conference?
cat herder.jpgTo be honest, I discovered them when the magazine intern position I applied for with Seed Media Group was filled, but they had an opening with this thing called “ScienceBlogs”. The first time I looked at the ScienceBlogs homepage, I had no idea what it was all about, and this turned out to be a large source of motivation in my work there. I figured that if I couldn’t tell what the deal with the site was or intuitively access the best and most relevant content, most other people couldn’t either. So I accepted the internship and set out to try to make ScienceBlogs better. In that process, I discovered that there was a more effective way for me to further scientific communication than by directly doing the communicating. And now I hope to make that my career.
Is there anything that happened at this Conference – a session, something someone said or did or wrote – that will change the way you think about science communication, or something that you will take with you to your job, blog-reading and blog-writing?
Attending ScienceOnline 2009 showed me that, though the Internet is a big, mysterious place where there are tons of opportunities for deception, people are generally who you would expect them to be. To “know” someone online, and then meet them in real life, you get insight into layers of one’s personality that, in the past, you may not have had access to. It makes just as much sense sometimes that a person has the exact opposite temperament online that they do IRL, than if their online and offline personalities are one and the same. Attending ScienceOnline last year reinforced the human component of what I do. Because, though it is about traffic and numbers and economics, the best part is knowing that you’re helping someone achieve his or her goals of science communication.
Thank you so much. See you again in January at ScienceOnline2010!
==========================
See the 2008 interview series and 2009 series for more.

Clock Quotes

Our vision is to speed up time, eventually eliminating it.
– Alex Schure

Tweetlinks, 10-04-09

Follow me on Twitter to get these, and more, in something closer to Real Time:
Why Chicago Failed To Win The Olympics – because nobody but Americans wants yet another Games here….
I Unleash My Journalism Students To Critique Newsweek’s Daniel Lyons
The discovery of heredity – some ideas we take for granted are pretty recent discoveries.
Rethinking the Shape of Everyday Life
Changed your mind on ‘attending’, ‘maybe attending’ or ‘not attending’ ScienceOnline2010? Change your response
Twitter.org? and building models for social media
Sex Determination in Sea Monsters
Can your slides pass the “Glance Test”? Stanford Passed (and Failed) the Glance Test. Would you?
Twitter’s New ‘Lists’ Feature Finally Introduces Grouping, Offers An Alternative To The SUL
2009 Summit: Environmentally Responsible Development of Nanotechnology at the NC Biotechnology Center.
ScienceOnline2010 Program is looking better and better.

The Open Laboratory 2009 – the submissions so far

OpenLab logo.jpg
Here are the submissions for OpenLab 2009 to date. As we have surpassed 390 entries, all of them, as well as the “submit” buttons and codes and the bookmarklet, are under the fold. You can buy the 2006, 2007 and 2008 editions at Lulu.com. Please use the submission form to add more of your and other people’s posts (remember that we are looking for original poems, art, cartoons and comics, as well as essays):

Continue reading

Breakfast Science Cafe Raleigh – Bats in Peril?

Bats in Peril?
October 28, 2009
8:30 -10:00 am with discussion beginning at 9, followed by Q&A
Location: The Acro Cafe – 4th Floor of the Museum of Natural Sciences
Have you ever seen a bat flying around your house on a summer evening? Did you know that there are 17 different species of bats that live in North Carolina? Come to our breakfast café and learn about these amazing creatures and their biggest threat — white-nose syndrome, a deadly white fungus that grows around the noses of hibernating bats. Since its discovery in 2007, hundreds of thousands of bats (perhaps a million) have died from the disease, making it one of the worst wildlife disasters ever seen in North America
About the Speaker:
Lisa Gatens is Curator of Mammals at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences and has worked at the Museum for more than 10 years. She received her BS from West Virginia State College, her MS in Biology from Marshall University, and is currently taking classes at NCSU toward a PhD in Fisheries and Wildlife Science. Her research interests focus on small (non-volant) terrestrial mammals and bats, and she is currently looking at the affects of mercury accumulation in bats. RSVP to katey.ahmann@ncdenr.gov. For more information, contact Katey Ahmann at 919-733-7450, ext. 531.

Clock Quotes

Don’t be sad, don’t be angry, if life deceives you! Submit to your grief – your time for joy will come, believe me.
– Aleksandar Sergeyevich Pushkin (1799-1837)

Tweetlinks, 10-03-09

Follow me on Twitter to get these, and more, in something closer to Real Time:
New SEAPLEX videos: The North Pacific Gyre – Miriam Goldstein Talks Plastic Aboard SEAPLEX and The Garbage Patch – Chelsea Rochman studies Salps with SEAPLEX
Journalism as capitalism
Google Rules – A high school principal tries to harness the precepts of What Would Google Do?
How to build a meandering river in your basement
Clock gene and moonlight help corals to co-ordinate a mass annual orgy
Brooks is wrong on Beck—very wrong
SPARC Open Access Newsletter, issue #138 – Ten challenges for open-access journals
Will Books Be Napsterized?
Conference blogging redux
Debunking a historically inaccurate circulating e-mail: How old is Grandpa???
It’s Time To Hide The Noise – Sort all Tweets by recent/interesting? @jayrosen_nyu says that’s THE Live Web challenge.

Science Cafe Raleigh: Biomedical Technology in Sports

Crossing the Line? Biomedical Technology in Sports
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
6:30-8:30 pm with discussion beginning at 7:00 followed by Q&A
Location: Tir Na Nog 218 South Blount Street, Raleigh, 833-7795
In the end, it was a split second rather than an International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) ruling that kept double-amputee sprinter Oscar Pistorius from competing in the Beijing Summer Olympics. He didn’t hit the 400-meter qualifying time of 45.55 seconds, despite running a personal best 46.25 on his carbon-fiber prosthetic legs at a track meet in Lucerne, Switzerland. In this talk, National Humanities Center digital media specialist Phillip Barron explores ways that advances in biomedical science and technology are challenging our traditional notions of acceptable sports practices and offers some suggestions for how we can create rules of sport that sustain these technological innovations.
About the Speaker:
Phillip Barron works as a Digital Media Specialist at the National Humanities Center in Durham, where he is managing editor of the “On the Human” project. He is also the sole proprietor of the digital media design company, nicomedia, LLC. Trained in analytic philosophy, Barron is a scholar and award-winning digital media artist. His writings and photography have appeared in newspapers, magazines and academic journals.
RSVP to katey.ahmann@ncdenr.gov. For more information, contact Katey Ahmann at 919-733-7450, ext. 531.

Clock Quotes

In everyone’s life, at some time, our inner fire goes out. It is then burst into flame by an encounter with another human being. We should all be thankful for those people who rekindle the inner spirit.
– Albert Schweitzer

Video of Anne Frank Surfaces on YouTube

Anne Frank: the only existing film images (0:09-0:14):

July 22 1941. The girl next door is getting married. Anne Frank is leaning out of the window of her house in Amsterdam to get a good look at the bride and groom. It is the only time Anne Frank has ever been captured on film. At the time of her wedding, the bride lived on the second floor at Merwedeplein 39. The Frank family lived at number 37, also on the second floor. The Anne Frank House can offer you this film footage thanks to the cooperation of the couple.

More at Mashable.

Tweetlinks, 10-02-09

Follow me on Twitter to get these, and more, in something closer to Real Time:
igNobels 2009
China Is Wordless on Traumas of Communists’ Rise
Turkey: student protester hurls shoe at IMF chief
Blogging a science conference: Interview with Alex Knoll
Friday Weird Science: The shark with two ‘heads’
How Google Wave could transform journalism
Do Vaccines Cause Autism? Correlation vs. Causation: video1 and video2
The eScience revolution – Rensselaer researchers to create semantic Web platforms for massive scientific collaboration
M.I.T. Taking Student Blogs to Nth Degree
Which university has the best looking library repository online?
Circadian and social cues regulate sodium channel trafficking in electric fish
The Shifting Demographic Landscape of Influenza
Futurity Imperfect – The science journalism community weighs in as a new website blurs the line between reporting and public relations.
At long last, meet Ardipithecus ramidus
Ardipithecus ramidus
What Newspaper Cartoonists Can Learn from Web Comics
Yes, a tiny but loud niche: The Wizard of Beck – David Brooks explains that rightwing radio is ethereal at best.
Love is like a zoom lens
1st review of Rebecca Skloot’s book
Rescuing The Reporters – Clay Shirky counts the number of news stories produced by his hometown paper with a staff of 59 – 9 stories by all 6 of their reporters. Similar to what Jay Rosen did recently.
If you missed it before – much liveblogging of #scio10 will probably occur in the FriendFeed room
Electronic publication of zoological names: Contributions to the Discussion on Electronic Publication II (pdf) //Hey, I was quoted in it!
World Science Festival 2009: Pioneers in Science: “Harold Varmus answers a question about PLoS and PubMed – video

New and Exciting in PLoS this week

Let’s check all seven PLoS journals today. As always, you should rate the articles, post notes and comments and send trackbacks when you blog about the papers. You can now also easily place articles on various social services (CiteULike, Mendeley, Connotea, Stumbleupon, Facebook and Digg) with just one click. Here are my own picks for the week – you go and look for your own favourites:
Circadian and Social Cues Regulate Ion Channel Trafficking:

Excitable cells, such as neurons and muscle cells, control behavior by generating action potentials, electrical signals that propagate along the cell membrane. Action potentials are generated when the cell allows charged molecules (ions) such as sodium and potassium to move across the membrane through specialized proteins called ion channels. By changing the number of ion channels in the plasma membrane, excitable cells can rapidly remodel their functional characteristics, potentially causing changes in behavior. To gain an understanding of how environmental events cause the remodeling of excitable cell membranes and the resulting behavioral adaptations, we studied the electric communication/navigation signals of an electric fish, Sternopygus macrurus. High amplitude signals facilitate communication and electrolocation, but are energetically costly and more detectable by those predators that can detect electrical signals. We found that Sternopygus increase signal amplitude at night, when they are active, and increase signal amplitude rapidly during social encounters. Electrocytes, the cells that produce the signal, rapidly boost the signal amplitude when they allow more sodium to cross the cell membrane, thereby generating larger action potentials. To increase sodium currents during the action potential, electrocytes rapidly insert additional sodium channels into the cell membrane in response to hormones released into circulation by the pituitary. By adding new ion channels to the electrocyte membrane only during periods of activity or social encounters and removing these channels during inactive periods, these animals can save energy and reduce predation risks associated with communication.

It’s not too Late for the Harpy Eagle (Harpia harpyja): High Levels Of Genetic Diversity and Differentiation Can Fuel Conservation Programs:

The harpy eagle (Harpia harpyja) is the largest Neotropical bird of prey and is threatened by human persecution and habitat loss and fragmentation. Current conservation strategies include local education, captive rearing and reintroduction, and protection or creation of trans-national habitat blocks and corridors. Baseline genetic data prior to reintroduction of captive-bred stock is essential for guiding such efforts but has not been gathered previously. We assessed levels of genetic diversity, population structure and demographic history for harpy eagles using samples collected throughout a large portion of their geographic distribution in Central America (n = 32) and South America (n = 31). Based on 417 bp of mitochondrial control region sequence data, relatively high levels of haplotype and nucleotide diversity were estimated for both Central and South America, although haplotype diversity was significantly higher for South America. Historical restriction of gene flow across the Andes (i.e. between our Central and South American subgroups) is supported by coalescent analyses, the haplotype network and significant FST values, however reciprocally monophyletic lineages do not correspond to geographical locations in maximum likelihood analyses. A sudden population expansion for South America is indicated by a mismatch distribution analysis, and further supported by significant (p<0.05) negative values of Fu and Li's DF and F, and Fu's FS. This expansion, estimated at approximately 60 000 years BP (99 000-36 000 years BP 95% CI), encompasses a transition from a warm and dry time period prior to 50 000 years BP to an interval of maximum precipitation (50 000-36 000 years BP). Notably, this time period precedes the climatic and habitat changes associated with the last glacial maximum. In contrast, a multimodal distribution of haplotypes was observed for Central America suggesting either population equilibrium or a recent decline. High levels of mitochondrial genetic diversity in combination with genetic differentiation among subgroups within regions and between regions highlight the importance of local population conservation in order to preserve maximal levels of genetic diversity in this species. Evidence of historically restricted female-mediated gene flow is an important consideration for captive-breeding programs.

Spread of Avian Influenza Viruses by Common Teal (Anas crecca) in Europe:

Since the recent spread of highly pathogenic (HP) H5N1 subtypes, avian influenza virus (AIV) dispersal has become an increasing focus of research. As for any other bird-borne pathogen, dispersal of these viruses is related to local and migratory movements of their hosts. In this study, we investigated potential AIV spread by Common Teal (Anas crecca) from the Camargue area, in the South of France, across Europe. Based on bird-ring recoveries, local duck population sizes and prevalence of infection with these viruses, we built an individual-based spatially explicit model describing bird movements, both locally (between wintering areas) and at the flyway scale. We investigated the effects of viral excretion duration and inactivation rate in water by simulating AIV spread with varying values for these two parameters. The results indicate that an efficient AIV dispersal in space is possible only for excretion durations longer than 7 days. Virus inactivation rate in the environment appears as a key parameter in the model because it allows local persistence of AIV over several months, the interval between two migratory periods. Virus persistence in water thus represents an important component of contamination risk as ducks migrate along their flyway. Based on the present modelling exercise, we also argue that HP H5N1 AIV is unlikely to be efficiently spread by Common Teal dispersal only.

Novel Vaccines to Human Rabies:

Rabies, the most fatal of all infectious diseases, remains a major public health problem in developing countries, claiming the lives of an estimated 55,000 people each year. Most fatal rabies cases, with more than half of them in children, result from dog bites and occur among low-income families in Southeast Asia and Africa. Safe and efficacious vaccines are available to prevent rabies. However, they have to be given repeatedly, three times for pre-exposure vaccination and four to five times for post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP). In cases of severe exposure, a regimen of vaccine combined with a rabies immunoglobulin (RIG) preparation is required. The high incidence of fatal rabies is linked to a lack of knowledge on the appropriate treatment of bite wounds, lack of access to costly PEP, and failure to follow up with repeat immunizations. New, more immunogenic but less costly rabies virus vaccines are needed to reduce the toll of rabies on human lives. A preventative vaccine used for the immunization of children, especially those in high incidence countries, would be expected to lower fatality rates. Such a vaccine would have to be inexpensive, safe, and provide sustained protection, preferably after a single dose. Novel regimens are also needed for PEP to reduce the need for the already scarce and costly RIG and to reduce the number of vaccine doses to one or two. In this review, the pipeline of new rabies vaccines that are in pre-clinical testing is provided and an opinion on those that might be best suited as potential replacements for the currently used vaccines is offered.

Drugs Associated with More Suicidal Ideations Are also Associated with More Suicide Attempts:

In randomized controlled trials (RCTs), some drugs, including CB1 antagonists for obesity treatment, have been shown to cause increased suicidal ideation. A key question is whether drugs that increase or are associated with increased suicidal ideations are also associated with suicidal behavior, or whether drug-induced suicidal ideations are unlinked epiphenomena that do not presage the more troubling and potentially irrevocable outcome of suicidal behavior. This is difficult to determine in RCTs because of the rarity of suicidal attempts and completions. To determine whether drugs associated with more suicidal ideations are also associated with more suicide attempts in large spontaneous adverse event (AE) report databases. Generalized linear models with negative binomial distribution were fitted to Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Adverse Event (AE) Reporting System (AERS) data from 2004 to 2008. A total of 1,404,470 AEs from 832 drugs were analyzed as a function of reports of suicidal ideations; other non-suicidal adverse reactions; drug class; proportion of reports from males; and average age of subject for which AE was filed. Drug was treated as the unit of analysis, thus the statistical models effectively had 832 observations. Reported suicide attempts and completed suicides per drug. 832 drugs, ranging from abacavir to zopiclone, were evaluated. The 832 drugs, as primary suspect drugs in a given adverse event, accounted for over 99.9% of recorded AERS. Suicidal ideations had a significant positive association with suicide attempts (p<.0001) and had an approximately 131-fold stronger magnitude of association than non-suicidal AERs, after adjusting for drug class, gender, and age. In AE reports, drugs that are associated with increased suicidal ideations are also associated with increased suicidal attempts or completions. This association suggests that drug-induced suicidal ideations observed in RCTs plausibly represent harbingers that presage the more serious suicide attempts and completions and should be a cause for concern.

Ensuring Integrity in Comparative Effectiveness Research: Accentuate the Negative:

In recent weeks, PLoS Medicine has published several research papers that challenge current health care practices.
One study found that a campaign to promote solar drinking water disinfection did not substantially decrease rates of childhood diarrhea [1]. Another found more than a doubled risk of hospitalization for bradycardia in older people taking cholinesterase inhibitors used to treat cognitive impairment [2]. A systematic review failed to find any randomized trials that support the internationally recommended retreatment regimen for tuberculosis [3]. Finally, a study of one of the main international registries for clinical trials, ClinicalTrials.gov, found that requirements to register clinical trials have not resulted in high publication rates [4].
A study that questions the accepted or desired way of doing things can be at least as important as one that supports a new approach. Physicians mindful of Hippocrates’ vow to “first do no harm” should take a keen interest in such studies, for while a new intervention that proves efficacious in clinical trials may pass slowly, if at all, through practical barriers to effective implementation, the demonstration that an existing practice is ineffective or potentially harmful can (or should) prompt a rapid change in research agendas, policy, and clinical care. Knowing what doesn’t work is particularly useful in efforts to control medical spending, where redirecting limited resources away from ineffective interventions is of obvious benefit.

Public Access to Genome-Wide Data: Five Views on Balancing Research with Privacy and Protection:

Just over twelve months ago, PLoS Genetics published a paper [1] demonstrating that, given genome-wide genotype data from an individual, it is, in principle, possible to ascertain whether that individual is a member of a larger group defined solely by aggregate genotype frequencies, such as a forensic sample or a cohort of participants in a genome-wide association study (GWAS). As a consequence, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and Wellcome Trust agreed to shut down public access not just to individual genotype data but even to aggregate genotype frequency data from each study published using their funding. Reactions to this decision span the full breadth of opinion, from “too little, too late–the public trust has been breached” to “a heavy-handed bureaucratic response to a practically minimal risk that will unnecessarily inhibit scientific research.” Scientific concerns have also been raised over the conditions under which individual identity can truly be accurately determined from GWAS data. These concerns are addressed in two papers published in this month’s issue of PLoS Genetics [2],[3]. We received several submissions on this topic and decided to assemble these viewpoints as a contribution to the debate and ask readers to contribute their thoughts through the PLoS online commentary features.

Needles in the Haystack: Identifying Individuals Present in Pooled Genomic Data:

In this report, we evaluate a recently-published method for resolving whether individuals are present in a complex genomic DNA mixture. Based on the intuition that an individual will be genetically “closer” to a sample containing him than to a sample not, the method investigated here uses a distance metric to quantify the similarity of an individual relative to two population samples. Although initial applications of this approach showed a promising false-negative rate, the accuracy of the assumed null distribution (and hence the true false-positive rate) remained uninvestigated; here, we explore this question analytically and describe tests of this method to assess the likelihood that an individual who is not in the mixture is mistakenly classified as being a member. Our results show that the method has a high false-positive rate in practice due to its sensitivity to underlying assumptions, limiting its utility for inferring the presence of an individual in a population. By revealing both the strengths and limitations of the proposed method, we elucidate situations in which this distance metric may be used in an appropriate manner in forensics and medical privacy policy.

DonorsChoose….

ScienceBlogs campaign is kicking some behind – we are ahead of the Fashion Blogs, Twitter and Gawker challenges!!!

Today’s carnivals – plants and animals

Berry Go Round #20 is up on Further thoughts
Festival of the Trees #40 is up on Local ecologist
Friday Ark #263 is up on Modulator

Clock Quotes

Time brings all things to pass.
– Aeschylus

Tweetlinks, 10-01-09

Follow me on Twitter to get these, and more, in something closer to Real Time:
Why newspapers fold – a case study: Lessons from the Rocky Mountain News – Text and video of speech delivered at UC Berkeley Media Technology Summit at Google in Silicon Valley – thinking like a newspaper, not like a media org.
UK teenager killed by tumour not Glaxo vaccine
Dramatic Growth of Open Access: September 30, 2009
What sort of ‘trigger’ are they waiting for?
It’s DonorsChoose time and Win a ScienceBlogs Swag Bag when you participate in the Donors Choose 2009 Challenge and ScienceBlogs has overtaken Twitter in the #donorschoose 2009 Social Media Challenge
Hooked on Science at NCSU
The Program page got too big to edit! New, smaller, nimbler page for you. ScienceOnline2010.
Travel Awards for ScienceOnline 2010
PLoS ONE Blog Pick of the Month – September 2009
Organize your ScienceOnline2010 carpooling and room-sharing by editing this wiki page
Electronic publishing is inevitable and even the ICZN is beginning to accept it
Interesting social media reading
Engineering the shiny digital future – Open Science, Citizen Science, the Future
Art vs. Science, Part Three: A little mystery is a good thing
If you are visiting RTP or Triangle as a whole (e.g., for ScienceOnline2010): Restaurant options near RDU, from quick and cheap to leisurely and upscale
Stimulus jolts Triangle science
Bad for bloggers: Why Did Sen. Schumer Attempt To Limit The Press Shield Law?
PETA has a bone to pick with DonorsChoose.

The Open Laboratory 2009 – the submissions so far

OpenLab logo.jpg
Here are the submissions for OpenLab 2009 to date. As we have surpassed 380 entries, all of them, as well as the “submit” buttons and codes and the bookmarklet, are under the fold. You can buy the 2006, 2007 and 2008 editions at Lulu.com. Please use the submission form to add more of your and other people’s posts (remember that we are looking for original poems, art, cartoons and comics, as well as essays):

Continue reading

Today’s carnivals

The 16th edition of the Carnival of Evolution is up on Pleiotropy
The Circus of the Spineless #44 is up on Quiche Moraine
I and the Bird #110 is up on Foovay’s Cauldron

The PLoS ONE Blog Pick of the Month for September 2009 is…

….to be found on the everyONE blog.

DonorsChoose – Classroom Science Around The Clock

As regular readers of Scienceblogs.com already know, October is the month when a bunch of us raises challenges to fund science, math and technology projects in schools.
Several of my Sciblings have already set up their challenges and a few more will add theirs soon, I know. There will be a healthy competition with some other blogging networks, of course 😉
You can find my challenges at Classroom Science Around The Clock, look at the projects – all coming from ‘High Poverty’ schools in North Carolina – and donate whatever you can. If many people pitch in a little bit each, these projects will get funded and kids will get supplies they need to learn science and math.
The widget, below, will be on my left sidebar throughout the month of October, so take a look there every time you visit my blog, see how the challenges are doing, and add a little where needed.

Also, many of my SciBlings explain this better than I do, so check their intro posts out: Janet (and more Janet), Chad, Sciencewomen, Razib, DrugMonkey, Dr.Isis, Grrlscientist, Pal MD and a geobloggers collective, comprised of Erik, Kim and Chris.

Today’s carnivals

Change of Shift: Vol. 4, Number 7 is up on Emergiblog

Clock Quotes

A hundred times every day I remind myself that my inner and outer life depends on the labors of other men, living and dead, and that I must exert myself in order to give in the measure as I have received and am still receiving.
– Albert Einstein