Author Archives: Bora Zivkovic

MedBlogging of the Week

Grand Rounds 3.20 are now up on Tales from the Emergency Room and Beyond…
Change of Shift, Volume 1, Number 17, a Valentine’s Day edition, is up on Nurse Ratched’s Place

More Basic Concepts

Basic Concepts, Ecology: Know Your Biomes I

Yummy!

Liveblogging a chocolate tasting

Do We Need An Anti-Creationist Think-Tank?

Do We Need An Anti-Creationist Think-Tank?Two years (January 28, 2005) have passed, but I am still not sure what the correct answer to this question is:

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Will ‘Beagle’ sail for the Darwin BiCentennial?

darwin.jpgDarwin Day – his 198th birthday – is coming up soon, on February 12th. Are you planning on writing a post on that day?
Last year I put together a linkfest of all the notable blogospheric contributions for the Darwin Day. Although the number of science blogs has increased greatly since then, I intend to make this year’s linkfest as well. I’ll use Technorati and Google Blogsearch to find the posts, but you can make it easier for me by e-mailing me the URL.
Don’t forget that two years from now – the 200th birthday – there will be many celebrations around the world. There will be conferences. There will be new books published. Special editions of magazines. Media coverage of various kinds. Probably a blogospheric frenzy of some sort.
And, with your help, there will be a replica of the “Beagle” sailing around the world, re-tracing the route of its 19th century namesake, carrying around scientists, teachers and journalists who will be doing original research, comparing today’s biodiversity with that described by Darwin on his voyage, reporting about it in real time via various modern communicaitons technologies, and – since it is a small ship and nobody can act as dead weight – pulling the ropes, hoisting the sails, cooking the meals and cleaning the deck!
Beagle%20plans700.jpgThe highest bid so far is still $100. If you donate more to the project by the end of this 10-day drive (today is the 7th day), the book will be yours!

Anti-atheist Bigotry in Prime Time

Revere, PZ, Larry and Ed all agree with each other, which means they must all be correct on this story as this does not happen so often. But the extraordinarily stupid and hateful anti-atheist show CNN had the other day is so obviously wrong at every level and from every angle. CNN should suffer for this and made to crawl and apologize and fire a few people involved and cry and plead and promise they’ll never do something like this again and made an example for all the other cable and network news shows.

Horse Genome Assembled!

Just got this exciting news by e-mail:

Data on Equine Genome Freely Available to Researchers Worldwide
BETHESDA, Md., Wed., Feb. 7, 2007 – The first draft of the horse genome sequence has been deposited in public databases and is freely available for use by biomedical and veterinary researchers around the globe, leaders of the international Horse Genome Sequencing Project announced today.
The $15 million effort to sequence the approximately 2.7 billion DNA base pairs in the genome of the horse (Equus caballus) was funded by the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), one of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). A team led by Kerstin Lindblad-Toh, Ph.D., at the Eli and Edythe L. Broad Institute of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University, in Cambridge, Mass., carried out the sequencing and assembly of the horse genome.
Approximately 300,000 Bacterial Artificial Chromosome (BAC) end sequences, which provide continuity when assembling a large genome sequence, were contributed to the horse sequencing project by Ottmar Distl, D.V.M., Ph.D. and Tosso Leeb, Ph.D., from the University of Veterinary Medicine, in Hanover, Germany and Helmut Blöcker, Ph.D., from the Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research in Braunschweig, Germany. Production of the BAC end sequences was funded by the Volkswagen Foundation and the State of Lower Saxony.
Sequencing of the domestic horse genome began in 2006, building upon a 10-year collaborative effort among an international group of scientists to use genomics to address important health issues for equines, known as the Horse Genome Project ( www.uky.edu/Ag/Horsemap/ ). The horse whose DNA was used in the sequencing effort is a Thoroughbred mare named Twilight from Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y. Researchers obtained the DNA from a small sample of the animal’s blood. To download a high-resolution photo of Twilight, go to http://www.genome.gov/pressDisplay.cfm?photoID=20008.
Twilight is stabled at the McConville Barn, Baker Institute for Animal Health, College of Veterinary Medicine, at Cornell University, with a small herd of horses that have been selected and bred for more than 25 years to study the mechanisms that prevent maternal immunological recognition and destruction of the developing fetus during mammalian pregnancy. The research, conducted by Cornell professor Doug Antczak, V.M.D, Ph.D., and funded by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, has implications in reproduction, clinical organ transplantation and immune regulation.
In addition to sequencing the horse genome, researchers produced a map of horse genetic variation using DNA samples from a variety of modern and ancestral breeds, including the Akel Teke, Andalusian, Arabian, Icelandic, Quarter, Standardbred and Thoroughbred. This map, comprised of 1 million signposts of variation called single nucleotide polymorphisms, or SNPs, will provide scientists with a genome-wide view of genetic variability in horses and help them identify the genetic contributions to physical and behavioral differences, as well as to disease susceptibility. There are more than 80 known genetic conditions in horses that are genetically similar to disorders seen in humans, including musculoskeletal, neuromuscular, cardiovascular and respiratory diseases. The SNPs are available at the Broad Institute web site ( www.broad.mit.edu/mammals/horse/snp ) and will be available shortly from NCBI’s Single Nucleotide Polymorphism database, dbSNP ( www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/SNP ).
The initial sequencing assembly is based on 6.8-fold coverage of the horse genome, which means, on average, each base pair has been sequenced almost seven times over. Researchers can access the horse genome sequence data through the following public databases: GenBank ( www.ncbi.nih.gov/Genbank ) at NIH’s National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI); NCBI’s Map Viewer ( www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov ); UCSC Genome Browser ( www.genome.gucsc.edu ) at the University of California at Santa Cruz; and the Ensembl Genome Browser ( www.ensembl.org ) at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in Cambridge, England. The data is also available from the Broad Institute Web site ( www.broad.mit.edu/ftp/pub/assemblies/mammals/horse/ ).
Over the next several months, researchers plan to further improve the accuracy of the horse genome sequence and expect to deposit an even higher resolution assembly in public databases. Comparing the horse and human genomes will help medical researchers learn more about the human genome and will also serve as a tool for veterinary researchers to better understand the diseases that affect equines. A publication analyzing the horse genome sequence and its implications for horse population genetics is being planned for the future.
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We can start working equine research now!

My picks from ScienceDaily

Human Proteins Evolving Slowly Thanks To Multitasking Genes:

Many human proteins are not as good as they might be because the gene sequences that code for them have a double role which slows down the rate at which they evolve, according to new research published in PLoS Biology. By tweaking these dual role regions, scientists could develop gene therapy techniques that produce proteins that are even better than those found in nature, and could one day be used to help people recover from genetic disorders.

More….

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Happy birthday, Sinclair Lewis

From today’s Quotes Of The Day

Sinclair Lewis was born at Sauk Centre, Minnesota on this day in 1885. He was an avid and somewhat romantic reader as a boy, he attempted to run away from home at age thirteen to be a drummer boy in the Spanish-American War. He graduated from Yale in 1908 and set to work writing romantic poems and stories. He was awarded, but refused, a Pulitzer in 1926. He was the first American to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature, a prize he accepted. The Nobel Committee praised “his vigorous and graphic art of description and his ability to create, with wit and humour, new types of characters”, but at least four of his novels were banned at various times.

There are two insults no human being will endure: that he has no sense of humor, and that he has never known trouble.
He who has seen one cathedral ten times has seen something; he who has seen ten cathedrals once has seen but little; and he who has spent half an hour in each of a hundred cathedrals has seen nothing at all.
The trouble with this country is that there are too many people going about saying, “The trouble with this country is…”
When audiences come to see us authors lecture, it is largely in the hope that we’ll be funnier to look at than to read.
When facism comes to America it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross.
Advertising is a valuable economic factor because it is the cheapest way of selling goods, particularly if the goods are worthless.

– All from Sinclair Lewis, 1885 – 1951

Clock Quotes

It is better to sleep on things beforehand than lie awake about them afterward.
Baltasar Gracian

EduBlogging of the Week

105th edition of the Carnival of Education is up on This Week In Education.
The 58th edition of the Carnival of Homeschooling is up on About:Homeschooling

Blogrolling for today

Do You Mind?

Introspection of a Struggling Mad Scientist

Forensic Science Blog

Seeds Aside

Nature Woman

Mon@rch’s Nature Blog

Coffee & Conservation

75 degrees South

Dogwood Alliance

North Carolina Sierra Club

I Love Colonoscopies

Chapel Hill/Carrboro Bloggers MeetUp

Yes, there is a Blogger MeetUp tomorrow (Wednesday) night. New place and time: 6:30 p.m. @ Milltown Bar & Restaurant (map). No particular topic this week (still preparing for all the topical meetings later on this season). See you all there.

Seasonality of Pre-term Births

Matt found a conference paper that shows that the risk of pre-term birth is the lowest in spring, rising through summer and fall and the greatest in winter.
The paper, IMHO erroneously, focuses on the time of conception (because it is an easy marker used to calculate the supposed birth-date). Matt correctly shifts the discussion to the time of birth. After all, pre-term births are much more likely to be caused by something happening around that time than anything at the time of conception.
On the other hand, Matt, though cautiously and almost tongue-in-cheek, makes an attempt at an adaptive explanation. To do this, he had to consider not just the time of birth but also the duration of pregnancy which brings us back to the consideration of the time of fertilization.
I don’t think there is an adaptive explanation (Matt thinks so, too, but tries to come up with one anyway). Pre-term births are not healthy shorter pregnancies. They are pathological events. I don’t think that natural selection works on preserving pathological events.
Both in the primitive state, and in today’s modern society, winter is the most stressful time of year (remember that silly formula for January 20-something being the most stressful day of the year?). Spring is the best time of year: people are coming out of their Winter Blues (or even full-fledged SAD), there is an abundance of food and it is not as hot and scorched-earth yet. The timing of birth is determined by the fetus, not the mother, but the fetus will often respond to the perceived stress of the mother.
Out of the left field: Perhaps the increase of pre-term births in industrial societies (compared to developing world and/or the past times) has something to do with Christmas and its commercialization!

100 Eggs. Not good for a giant omelette, but fine for a Stone Soup.

I was just about to write about this story, but Grrrrl scoooped me and summarized it so well, I’ll just ask you to go there.
Oh, btw, it is about an incredible discovery of about one hundred dinosaur eggs and some tracks around them.

Recipes Wanted!

My daughter, as part of her school assignment on Vasco Da Gama, bought a bunch of stuff that Vasco brought to Europe from Asia. Now I have all those foodstuffs and do not know what to do with them.
Cucumber and melon were easy.
But, what would I do with a coconut, a jar of cinnamon sticks and a jar full of whole cloves?
Give me your recipes or links to recipes to good dishes that contain one (or two or all three!) of those ingredients. And, if those dishes turn out tasty, I may as well start on my foodblogging career!

More Basics….

There are two new additions to the Basic Concepts and Terms in Science list that appeared today:
Voltage Gate: What Is Ecology?
The World Fair: Epistemology (what is a flower?)
Any others?

Pope. Who?

Pope. Who?Lance wrote a brilliant post – An alien anthropologist discusses marriage with the Pope – which reminded me of an old (April 24, 2005) post of mine, which, perhaps, stood the test of time after all…

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Tar Heel Tavern

Slight changes in the hosting line-up for the Tar Heel Tavern:
Next Host: Scrutiny Hooligans

  • TTHT #104 (18 February 2007) Host: Writing for Nonprofits
  • TTHT #105 (25 February 2007) Host: Science and Politics
  • TTHT #106 (4 March 2007) Host: Slowly She Turned
  • TTHT #107 (11 March 2007) Host: Scrutiny Hooligans
  • TTHT #108 (18 March 2007) Host: ?
  • TTHT #109 (25 March 2007) Host: ?
  • TTHT #110 (1 April 2007) Host: Scrutiny Hooligans
  • TTHT #110 (8 April 2007) Host: ?
  • TTHT #111 (15 April 2007) Host: ?
  • TTHT #112 (22 April 2007) Host: ?
  • TTHT #113 (29 April 2007) Host: Writing for Nonprofits
  • Let me know if you want to host!

    Wingnuts really are imploding!

    If they think that something like this will endear them to anyone not certifiably insane (via PZ), or to think that WorldNutDaily is not satire… It’s like when you catch your kid in a lie and he starts spinnikng and digging himself depeer and deeper. Exept that thse guys, like wounded beasts, can be dangerous.

    Save The World From Bad Poetry…

    …by sending a Darwin (or a Lincoln, or more) to the Beagle project. Day six.

    Quality of Wakeful Life affects the Quality of Sleep

    Slow-wave Activity During Sleep Affected By Quality, Intensity Of Wakefulness:

    A study published in the February 1st issue of the journal SLEEP provides a first direct demonstration that the “quality” and “intensity” of wakefulness can affect slow-wave activity (SWA) during subsequent sleep.
    According to Chiara Cirelli, MD, PhD, of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, one of the authors of the study, the importance and novelty of the paper lies in the demonstration that the crucial factor linking physiological waking activity to sleep SWA is synaptic plasticity, notably synaptic potentiation, mediated by brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) signaling.
    “Namely, the study shows that wakefulness associated with exposure to an enriched environment and with high levels of exploratory activity, a condition well known to trigger plastic changes in the brain, leads to increased BNDF expression and increased sleep pressure as compared to wakefulness with low exploratory activity,” said Cirelli. “More stringently, the study finds that the amount of exploratory behavior during wakefulness can predict the extent to which BDNF is induced in the cerebral cortex, as well as the extent of the SWA response during subsequent sleep.”

    This feeds very nicely with the excellent paper I reviewed recently.
    Also, what does it say about the erotic dreams? And yes, I will review the companion paper on the sexual content of daydreaming as well.

    The Blogging World….

    Wow – what a little tempest! The first response to the local NBC affilate’s invitation to the “Blogger Ascertainmnent” by me, Paul Jones and Brian Russell provoked David Kirk to respond in NBC’s defense. To that, Paul Jones, Brian Russell and Paul Jones again responded, and the NBC guy trying to get this organized commented on each of those threads.
    Despite it being on Monday at noon (unless they show they are smarter then we give them credit for and change the time, venue and availability of food and drinks), I am thinking about going anyway (I signed up as “Maybe” for now). The NBC’s folks are right now on a fast and steep learning curve of a dizzying speed, trying to figure out how to deal with bloggers. Perhaps I can help them out by going there (and I see that several more folks have signed up in the meantime). After all, we want to cooperate with the MSM – blogs are not their competitors unless the MSM outlets position themselves that way, and they need help in understanding the new media model.
    In other news, I was in a really foul mood yesterday, itching for an Usenet-style fight. I tend to keep my blog pretty clean, so I went and fouled up a friend’s blog which got infested with the slimiest of wingnuts. Sorry, Tom! I’m in a better mood now, so I do not intend to go there again. Will wait for another post of Tom’s to go and say something nice for a change.

    My picks from ScienceDaily

    Lots of cool stuff today:
    Nature Could Have Used Different Protein Building Blocks, Chemists Show:

    Chemists at Yale have done what Mother Nature chose not to — make a protein-like molecule out of non-natural building blocks, according to a report featured early online in the Journal of the American Chemical Society. Nature uses alpha-amino acid building blocks to assemble the proteins that make life as we know it possible. Chemists at Yale now report evidence that nature could have used a different building block — beta-amino acids — and show that peptides assembled from beta-amino acids can fold into structures much like natural protein.

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    Inbreeding is Not Always Bad

    For Some Species, An Upside To Inbreeding:

    Although breeding between close kin is thought to be generally unfavorable from an evolutionary standpoint, in part because harmful mutations are more easily propagated through populations in this way, theory predicts that under some circumstances, the benefits of inbreeding may outweigh the costs.
    Researchers have now reported real-life evidence in support of this theory. Studying an African chiclid fish species, Pelvicachromis taetiatus, in which both parents participate in brood care, the researchers found that individuals preferred mating with unfamiliar close kin rather than non-kin.

    Actually, this same result was obtained in Japanese quail about 20 years ago or so. The quail breeding colony I worked with is extremely inbred and is thriving. Contrary to expectations of some others in the lab who were trained in classical population genetics, I was confident that we are not going to see a sudden crash of our population due to inbreeding and I was right for all these years.

    Because parental work is energetically costly, and kinship generally favors cooperation, one possible explanation for kin preference in breeding in this species is that it offers a benefit by facilitating parental cooperation. And indeed, observations of behavior exhibited by this chiclid species showed that related parents were more cooperative and invested more resources in parenting than did non-related parents.
    Together, the findings suggest that, somewhat unusually, active inbreeding is advantageous in this fish species. The findings, reported by Timo Thünken and colleagues of the University of Bonn, appear in the February 6th issue of Current Biology.

    Actually, as quail live in tightly-knit coveys of about 10-12 individuals (and the Asian species, livig up in Siberia, may never split the coveys in spring due to thermoregulatory advantages of covey-living), this was exactly the explanation I had for the advatntages of inbreeding in our quail colony.
    You can read the actual paper here:
    Active Inbreeding in a Cichlid Fish and Its Adaptive Significance

    Clock Quotes

    The whole life of man is but a point of time; let us enjoy it.
    Plutarch (46 AD – 120 AD)

    The Lark-Mouse and the Prometheus-Mouse

    Two interesting papers came out last week, both using transgenic mice to ask important questions about circadian organization in mammals. Interestingly, in both cases the gene inserted into the mouse was a human gene, though the method was different and the question was different:

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    Frameshop Prediction

    Jeffrey Feldman write in Frameshop: Dem Who Reframes “War on Terror,” Wins in ’08:

    The Democratic candidate who wins the 2008 nomination for President will not be the candidate who simply puts forward the best policy proposal on Iraq or Iran or Afghanistan or any other individual military issue. The candidate who wins will be the candidate who reframes the entire debate on national security in progressive terms–the candidate who steps up and liberates the country from the destructive logic of the propaganda frame that President Bush calls “The War on Terror.”

    Read the whole thing. Also check his blow-by-blow analysis of framing of the recent DNC speech by Edwards and others and compare.

    Just smelling food will make you live shorter – if you are a fruitfly

    Just quickly for now without commentary:
    Totally cool paper in the last Science:
    S. Libert, J. Zwiener, X. Chu, W. VanVoorhies, G. Roman, and S.D.Pletcher
    Regulation of Drosophila lifespan by olfaction and food-derived odors
    :

    Smell is an ancient sensory system present in organisms from bacteria to humans. In the nematode Caeonorhabditis elegans, gustatory and olfactory neurons regulate aging and longevity. Using the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, we show that exposure to nutrient-derived odorants can modulate lifespan and partially reverse the longevity-extending effects of dietary restriction. Furthermore, mutation of odorant receptor Or83b results in severe olfactory defects, alters adult metabolism, enhances stress resistance, and extends lifespan. Our findings indicate that olfaction affects adult physiology and aging in Drosophila possibly through perceived availability of nutritional resources and that olfactory regulation of lifespan is evolutionarily conserved.

    From Nature News:

    Eating less can lengthen an animal’s life. But now it seems that — for flies at least — they don’t have to actually cut down on the calories to benefit. Fruitflies can boost their lifespan just by not smelling their food.
    The result suggests that flies might use their sense of smell — as well as the actual consumption of food — to help determine how rich their environment is, and how they should go about distributing their energy resources.
    From flies and worms to rats and mice, animals fed on restricted diets generally live longer than those given abundant food. No one is sure exactly why this is. One theory is that when times are tough and there is little food about, animals channel more of their resources into maintaining their everyday body function, at the expense of putting energy into reproducing. That can extend lifespan.
    Scott Pletcher of the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas, wanted to find out what governs this decision. Smell, he thought, might be one determinant. “We wanted to see whether we could use odor to trick the flies into thinking the environment was more nutrient-rich than it actually was,” says Pletcher.
    Normally, cutting a lab fly’s usual food intake in half lengthens its lifespan by about 20%, from 41 to 50 days. But exposing hungry flies to the scrumptious smell of yeast, a favourite food, took away some of this benefit, the team found. “About one-third of the beneficial effects on lifespan are lost,” says Pletcher.
    The yeasty odor had no effect on the lifespan of fully fed flies.

    And one of th authors gives additional explanation on the Nature News blog:

    We measured the reproduction (fecundity) of OR83b flies and controls. Data is in fig 4a, there is no significant difference, when flies are fully fed. We did not present the data but the quality of eggs (percent that hatches, SL observation) seems to be unaffected. Even if flies would perform worser under stress (lay less eggs under stress for example) it is unlikely to be the cause of longevity, since during the longevity experiment, flies are not stressed in anyway.
    It is possibe that the dfference is small, so that we can not detect it, but in this case it is unlikly to be the cause of 56% longevity extension.
    Additionally, the work from Tatars lab for at least in some systems, uncoupled reproduction from longevity.

    Happy Bloggiversary!

    Happy First Blogiversary to The Neurophilosopher! Go say Hello!

    Sex On The (Dreaming) Brain

    Blogging on Peer-Reviewed Research

    Last week I asked if you would be interested in my take on this paper, since it is in Serbian (and one commenter said Yes, so here it is – I am easy to persuade):

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    Sitemeter and Technorati – don’t be shy to use them

    Sitemeter and Technorati - don't be shy to use them(November 28, 2005)

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    Why am I for Edwards and not for Obama (or Clinton for that matter)?

    People ask me that question often. Many assume that it is because Obama constantly invokes God in his speeches, while Edwards never does. But I know that religiosity is important in American politics today. Hopefully one day it will not be, or even better, overt religosity will become a handicap, i.e, being viewed by voters with suspicion. But that is not the reason why I made my choice the way I did.
    My response to people who ask me this question is to explain how the GOP over the past 20-30 years systematically moved the entire political discourse in the USA to the Right. What used to be the Center is now called “Left”. What used to be the Right is now called “Center” and what used to be unthinkable depths of almost-fascistic ultra-right-wing ideloogy is now called a “Respectable Right”.
    Obama, by appealing to “compromise” and “purpling” and “bipartisanship” is playing straight into the conservatives’ game – he is letting them shift the discourse further to the Right by redefining the new center. The Right has no intention of ever making a compromise: their definition of “compromise” is “you shut up and do as we say and smile”. Obama does not understand this. He is still naively giving them a benefit of the doubt that there is a trace of human decency still somewhere to be found in them.
    This strategy is often called “triangulation” but the average person I meet does not know or understand that word, so I feel compelled to explain it the way I just did above.
    On the contrary – and this is the biggest difference between the two of them (and Hillary Clinton is similar to Obama in this regard) – Edwards is aware (by being more experienced than Obama, or due to growing up in the South, or Elizabeth’s influence…) of the trick and is trying to counter it and to move the political landscape of the country back to the left, so the Left is Left, Center is Center and Right is Right again.
    I do not dislike Obama personally, and I do not dislike Clinton personally either. Most of their policy proposals are fine, and very similar to Edwards’. I am just worried about the future of the American politics if they are elected. They are liable to leave conservative ideology intact and within the domain of respectable, thus giving it a space to breath, to recuperate and, down the line, attack again.
    I don’t think Edwards will let that happen (and I would have no problem with Obama for Veep – he can learn on the job – though my personal favourite for VP is Richardson). He will go as far left as he can to still be able to win. Who knows how much more left he will go if he actually wins and has a Democratic Congress to work with? Perhaps this country can join the modernity of the civilized world in a few years after all.

    Do it for Science!

    beagle.jpgDo it for Charles Musters!
    Or do it for Charles Darwin.
    Or do it for the fun of sailing.
    But do it nonetheless:

    …send in a Darwin (£10) or a Jackson ($20), spread the word, encourage colleagues to bookmark the site and root through their labcoat pockets for a donation…

    Check the website and the blog. Then decide if you think this is a worthy cause.
    The donations have started coming in. The biggest so far is $100. If you give more by the end of the tenth day of this drive, you will become a lucky owner of a copy of The Open Laboratory.

    A Florida Tragedy

    Seventeen out of eighteen Whooping Cranes from the Operation Migration were killed by the recent storm in Florida. The one survivor is being tracked right now via radiotransmitter, so the health state is still not known.

    My picks from ScienceDaily

    Endangered Shortnose Sturgeon Saved In Hudson River:

    For the first time in U.S., and probably global, history a fish identified as endangered has been shown to have recovered — and in the Hudson River, which flows through one of the world’s largest population centers, New York City.

    Multiple Dimensions Shape Our Perception Of Mind, Harvard Study Suggests:

    Through an online survey of more than 2,000 people, psychologists at Harvard University have found that we perceive the minds of others along two distinct dimensions: agency, an individual’s ability for self-control, morality and planning; and experience, the capacity to feel sensations such as hunger, fear and pain.

    Rats On A Road Trip Reveal Pollution-heart Disease Risk:

    Rats that rode in a truck on the New York State Thruway between Rochester and Buffalo and were exposed to the same highway pollution that motorists encounter, showed a drop in heart rate and effects on the autonomic nervous system, according to a study published this month in the journal Inhalation Toxicology.

    Clock Quotes

    Laugh and the world laughs with you, snore and you sleep alone.
    Anthony Burgess (1917 – 1993)

    Ready for another liveblogged colonoscopy?

    A good reason not to de-blogroll blogs on hiatus – they may come back as much as TWO YEARS later. Like the I Love Colonoscopies blog just did. I know you want to click on that link and explore the archives. Go ahead!

    Basic Terms and Concepts in Math and Science

    I don’t know how many of you check out the constantly growing list of links to posts that cover Basic Terms And Concepts in Science, but you should. Our Seed Overlords are cooperating and will soon set up a place where all those posts will be re-posted, commented upon, edited, etc. – a one-stop shopping for all basic stuff useful, for instance, in teaching at all levels from Kindergarden to Postdoc!
    Until then, here is my unofficial list – not the one compiled by Wilkins – that also includes some of my own posts, as well as some of the other people’s posts that I found useful in teaching myself.
    If you are a science blogger and your area of expertise is not represented – write a post and let us know about it (“us” being pretty much everyone on scienceblogs.com, but John Wilkins is the #1 person to go to). If you are a scientist, but not a blogger, I’m sure many of us will be happy to let you publish a ‘guest-post’ on a missing topic, written in a way that can be understood by lay-people and used in the classroom.
    Here is my ‘enhanced’ list, under the fold:

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    MSM: how to get on bloggers’ good side….or not

    About two days ago, about 120 local bloggers (their e-mail addresses probably taken from the local – and now obsolete – Triangle Bloggers MeetUp.org page) got an e-Vite to this:

    You are cordially invited to attend to the NBC 17 Triangle Blogger Community Ascertainment.
    What: NBC 17 holds community ascertainments once a month in our viewing area. A community ascertainment is a casual meeting with representatives from the community and NBC 17. They are also referred to as Listening Tours.
    We would like to invite you to our groundbreaking Blogger Ascertainment. We recognize the contributions bloggers are making to their readers and would like the opportunity to make a lasting connection with your important voice.
    This meeting will be dedicated to finding out more about the important issues in your community, and suggestions on how we might be able to serve them better.
    You talk…..we listen.
    These meetings will not be taped. Notes will be taken by our staff. Tours of the station will be conducted.

    It’s telling that only a handful people responded so far. Brian and Paul explain why that is so (and Brian also gives an example of the way WRAL does it better).
    I finally decided to respond, though the response window allows for only 375 characters so I had to cut my response in half:

    I’d like to ascertain you instead of being ascertained. I’d like to know more about what you want and what are you offering us. It is in the nature of bloggers to blog about these things. That staff takes notes suggests the obvious question: Are we going to post our own notes? How “closed door”, secretive and essentialy anti-all-that-blogs-are-about is this entire thing?

    Harry Potter Mania on Blogs

    Now that the Seventh Book is available for pre-order (and beating all the records, not to mention being #1 on Amazon), there is gooing to be a lot of blogospheric speculation about it, e.g., who dies, what happens and how it ends. So, between now and July 21st, as well as afterwards, read the Carnival of Harry Potter and submit your entries to it whenever you write something about it. The latest edition, posted last night, is up on Pensieve.

    Beagle Project, Day 4

    Yes, I will remind you about this every day for ten days until we get a winner!

    Just Science Week

    A number of science bloggers are doing the Just Science Week, pledging to write about science every day, and ONLY about science.
    While I was planning to write more about science anyway, I cannot promise not to blog about evrything and anything else that strikes my fancy at any given time – that is just not the way I blog. I could not resist an occasional foray into non-science blogging even back when I did my own “All Clocks All Week” stint, from August 14 till August 25 (check all the cool stuff in-between those two posts I linked to).
    So, I am not going to do it this week either, though I’ll gladly read what others write, and, as I mentioned, I have several pure-science posts in the works for this week anyway.

    Congrats, Phil

    First, PZ, now Phil Plait (aka Bad Astronomer) – the science bloggers are starting to invade the pages (online and hardcopy) of Seed Magazine. The lines are blurring. The old media model is crawling slowly towards the ash heap of history….

    Reality will bite you if you choose to ignore it

    Alan Sokal (famous for attacking the Lefty postmodernist abuse of science in the 1990s) and Chris Mooney (famous for attacking the Republican War on Science in the 2000s) sat down and wrote an excellent article in LA Times that came out today:
    Can Washington get smart about science?
    The article gives a historical trajectory of the problem, how it moved from political Left to the Right and what the new Democratic Congress is doing and still can do to bring back the respect for science, or for that matter, the appreciation for reality (which, no matter what the Bushies wish, they cannot make out of thin air):

    For, in the end, all of us — conservative or liberal, believer or atheist — must share the same real world. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria do not spare deniers of evolution, and global climate change will not spare any of us. As physicist Richard Feynman wrote in connection with the space shuttle Challenger disaster, “nature cannot be fooled.”
    To avoid nature’s punishment, we must take steps now to restore reality-based government.

    Much more eloquent and up-to-date than this related, but old rant of mine.

    NC blogging of the week

    The very first blog carnival, the Carnival of Vanities was invented here, in Chapel Hill.
    The very first state-based blog carnival, the Tar Heel Tavern was invented here, in Chapel Hill. There were about a hundred editions of this weekly carnival so far and the Second Anniversary is approaching fast.
    The latest 102nd edition was posted last night on Moomin Light. Next week, the carnival comes back home to my old, recently resurrected blog Science And Politics. Send me permalinks to your best post (or two) of the week by Saturday night, at: Coturnix AT gmail DOT com.
    Also, let me know if you want to host a future edition of the carnival. Let the tradition continue – meet the NC blogging friends, old and new, every week in a different virtual tavern.

    Godlessness of the week

    Carnival of the Godless #59 is up on Aardvarchaeology

    Clock Quotes

    A single day is enough to make us a little larger.
    Paul Klee (1879 – 1940)

    Blogrolling – added today

    I don’t know why the big boys are purging their blogrolls. I prefer to grow mine:

    Spheroid

    A Geocentric View

    Drawing The Motmot (classic archives)

    Drawing The Motmot (current)

    The Easthom Page

    Harter Learning

    Jim Buie’s blog

    An Online Communities Blog

    Robots Will Take Over!

    I am an Asportual male, too

    Perhaps not as bad as Zeno, but close.
    At least I used to watch, when I was a kid, whenever Yugoslav national teams in various sports played at big international competitions like Olympics, World Championships and European Championships. I watched Red Star soccer team demolish all of its European and World competition back in 1990. I watched Jausovec, Zivojinovic, Seles and Ivanisevic at Wimbledon and French Open.
    Perhaps there is a difference between inter-club competition and international competition and in the USA nobody cares about international competition. Since I never watched anything ‘domestic’ (e.g., the Yugoslav soccer league matches), I guess I would have been a complete Asportual male if I was growing up in the States as well (I just happened to hear that NCSU beat UNC in basketball today – a fact that I can report with no emotions whatsoever although I am an NCSU alum and I live in Chapel Hill – and that there is something really big in sports happening tomorrow so I have to be worried about traffic if I need to drive somewhere).
    On the other hand, since I was myself practicing and competing in karate and equestrian sports at one point or another, I watched much more of those sports at all levels, from local to international and everything in between. But there, when you are inside a sport, you actually personally know many competitors – you probably had beer with them many times, etc. It is a different ball-game altogether.