Category Archives: Blogging

Incendiary weekend post on bloggers vs. journalists

When I see news on MSM I check with trusted bloggers if the news is to be believed. Trusted bloggers? Takes time and work to find out who.
I automatically do NOT believe anything coming from corporate media. I check blogs to see what they say if I catch some news on MSM first (rarely these days). Some blogs can be trusted 100% of the time, some 90%, some occasionally, some never. It takes time and effort to figure out who is who, but that effort is worth it – you get immunized from MSM lies. You also learn the skills of critically reading between the lines of MSM and evaluating their “news” for accuracy and validity yourself.
And you always check a multitude of trusted bloggers, never just one, no matter how trusted. So, why should people trust a single MSM source? Beats me! I don’t even trust the multitudes.
And some blogs are just for entertainment, filling the function of comics pages in the newspaper. Usually funnier than Family Circus. Not everything is politics. That’s perfectly OK.
More importantly, collections of bloggers and all of their readers put together can organize actions that have real-world power. And that is just the beginning.

Who has power?

Who has power?
Elected officials: they write, vote for and sign laws, they decide how much money will be collected from whom and how it will be spent, they decide on starting and stopping wars, i.e., lives and deaths of people.
Who else has power?
Anyone who can affect the decision of an elected official, e.g., to change a vote from Yes to No or vice versa.
How does one do that?
By having money and using it wisely.
How does one use money to affect policy?
One: by directly lobbying the elected officials. Two: by buying off the media.
I understand how One works, but Two?
Elected officials think that the press reflects the thinking of the people. Afraid of losing re-election, they will do what the people say to them via media.
But the media does not reflect what people think!
Correct, but elected officials did not know this until recently, and thus used the press as a proxy to get information about the popular sentiment.
But didn’t constituents always have the ability to contact their representatives directly?
Yes, but most don’t know this fact, and very few use the opportunity. One constituent letter has no power in comparison to the strength of all the national media outlets. And often constituents are not aware that their opinion on a matter is not unique, so they are shy about voicing it.
So, money wins. What can we do?
The world is changing. When a senatorial office cannot do any business because their phones are ringing off the hook continuously for several days, their faxes are clogged, their e-mail inboxes are full of thousands of messages, and their mail is brought into the office in large bags or boxes, all of them from constituents, all asking the elected official to change the vote from Yes to No, they perk up and pay attention. This is a completely new and surprising level of constituent interest that baffles them. But they listen. And they tend to do what their constituents tell them. Sooner or later they will realize that what press is saying has nothing to do with what citizens really want. The press has lost all its credibility with the people, it is now also slowly losing credibility with the people in power.
This kind of thing has already happened a number of times over the past couple of years. Laws have been passed or blocked because of such concerted action. People won or lost elections due to having a tin ear or not when voters chimed in on their office telephones.
But where did that action come from?
From organized groups of people.
How did they get organized?
They found out about each others’ existence online, realized they are not alone or in a minority, they built their own communities online (mostly on blogs, but also forums, mailing groups, social networks…), and this is where they organized the actions. From outside, it looks like a handful of bloggers incited a citizen revolt. But from the inside, it is the citizens who organized themselves using those blogs as tools. Bloggers are not Martians who just fell on Earth. Bloggers are citizens, silent until now. Popular blogs are just tip of the iceberg – the community boards for citizen organizing.
What about money?
Money is not the source of power any more, or at least not as much as it used to be, and it is going to be so more and more in the future. If an elected official gets money from a lobbyist one day for the Yes vote, and gets 10,000 calls from constituents next day for the No vote – who is he going to listen to if he wants to get re-elected? If he has any brains, he will listen to the voters. Voters will vote next time, voters will fund the campaign as much as necessary, and voters never forget. Lobbyists can shove it. Easy arithmetic.
Media?
Irrelevant any more. Citizens discovered a way to find information outside of press. Using this information, those same citizens discovered a way to go directly to elected officials to exert their influence. And not listening to them always incurs a steep price at the polls later on.
So, why have money any more?
To have a place to live in, to have food, clothes, hobbies, travel the world, learn…. It is not money that will be the source of power in the future, but the strength of the community you belong to – how many people you know (and they know you) who hold the same beliefs as you and are willing to perform necessary action as needed. That is the source of power in the future. Networking, not hogging money. A large network of people will both, as a collective, have more money than a single entity, and will also need less money to achieve the goal in the first place as they can keep their elected officials hostages – as the Founders envisioned – just by being organized and vocal.

‘University professors turn to the blogosphere, for classes and recognition’

From Michigan Daily: University professors turn to the blogosphere, for classes and recognition:

In recent years, academics across the country have started using blogs to relay information and ideas. Many are now incorporating the medium into their classes, asking students to take to their keyboards and post thoughts or resources on course material.
——————–
The time commitment means professors need to prioritize when it comes to blogging. Those who write personal blogs do so outside of their teaching requirements, but as blogs become more popular, the question of their role in academic research and publishing becomes more complex.
———————
“It’s so new that (universities) haven’t quite incorporated it yet into the three areas that we’re responsible for — teaching, research and service,” Perry said. “But it really kind of overlaps in all those areas.”
Perry said he believes that blogging could be considered applied research.
But in an interview, University Provost Teresa Sullivan said that blogging lacks an important element, which generally elevates the credibility of a publication: peer review.
“Peer review is an important quality marker,” said Sullivan. “With electronic media now, anybody can publish anything.”
While the University doesn’t view blogs as a form of official research or publishing, Sullivan said she encourages professors to use them, even if they express controversial opinions or ideas.
“That’s what universities are about,” Sullivan said. “The university is the place where you’re free to put ideas out there, and we’re tolerant of other people’s ideas but it also means you’ve got to be ready for somebody to go after you and attack your ideas.”
————————-
Blogs considerably raise the profile of University professors, which is good for the University. Through their archive of posts, professors advertise their expertise in a given field. Establishing that authority leads calls from the media — and the University’s name appearing in print.

A good, positive article, including quotes from some well-known academic bloggers. Except for the very first sentence:

The booming blogosphere is a world dominated by celebrity gossip, confessionals and radical opinions.

But we know that corporate journalists have to say something offensive whenever they mention blogs, as a loyalty test, lest they be expelled from their guild.

Do you comment on your own blog?

Comment threads on blogs are an important aspect of the blogging culture. But I disagree that it is a defining aspect – there are many excellent blogs out there with no commenting allowed. Such blogs usually have a prominently displayed contact information for direct e-mailing to the author. One can always link to and trackback on one’s own blog in response: blog-to-blog conservation is just as important to the blogosphere as a whole, if not more, than comments on any individual post. Other blogs have their feeds exported to LiveJournal or FriendFeed where one can post comments as well.
See how Dorothea Salo explains (not for the first time) why her blog has no commenting function. John Hawks explains it at the end of this post.
Then, there are hybrids – for instance some posts have comments and some don’t on Leiter Reports. Or, you cannot comment on Talking Points Memo, but you can on other parts of the site, e.g., on TPMMuckraker, TPMDC and TPMCafe.
But if you allow comments on your blog, how do you, yourself, behave in your own comment threads?
This post tries to make a classification of commenting tactics of blog owners. I think I mix them up, using one or another as I see fit, depending on the context, etc.
What do you do on your blog? What type of host’s behavior you prefer to see on a blog’s comment thread? Do bloggers who never respond irk you to no end?

Nature Network Hubs

Hubs on Nature Network are multiplying. First, there was a Boston hub, then a London hub, and now a brand new New York City hub. Toronto and Berlin are itching to be the next.
On the other hand, the Research Triangle group is still pretty small. I think it’s due to a different geography. Boston, London and NYC are huge cities with lots of people, including many scientists and bloggers. The areas outside of those cities – the ‘countryside’ – are really not that relevant to the sizes of those hubs – add a few people here or there.
On the other hand, North Carolina is a large state, in area and population, but there is no humongous city in it – all the scientists and bloggers are spread all over the state. Why would people from Asheville, or Charlotte, Greensboro, Winston-Salem or Wilmington join the Triangle hub when they don’t live there? I think we should expand the Triangle list to include the entire state and rename the group ‘North Carolina’ people. After all, no state has more bloggers on scienceblogs.com than NC, not even close, yet no NC city can come close to one of the Big Cities elsewhere.
In the meantime, if you are in NC, no matter where in it, please join the Triangle location and increase our numbers, so we can compete for a Hub in the future.

Blogroll Amnesty Day

BAD2-2-1.jpg
skippy and Jonn Swift and Blue Gal are spearheading the Blogroll Amnesty Day (read the detailed instructions in there) again this year.
This weekend, a long weekend starting today and lasting four days, you are supposed to use the above logo, link to the Blogroll Amnesty Day post and link to five blogs that have either smaller traffic or narrower reach than you, or at least are new and unknown to your readers. Then e-mail your permalink to skippy.
Let’s promote the new and smaller voices that you think should be known by a wider audience!
I could, of course, list 50 or 500, but I’ll stick to the rules and, after agonizing for a long time, suggest these five blogs for you to check out:
Urban Science Adventures!
FYI: Science!
Endless Forms
Dara Sosulski’s blog
The Extrovert Scientist

Triangle science blogging battalion gets reinforcements

Stephanie Willen Brown, aka CogSci Librarian is moving to Chapel Hill!
Blogger meetup!

New year – everyone wants new banners

I think that my banner is the best banner ever and it’s not going anywhere. But perhaps you can help Miriam or Scicurious and Evil Monkey if you feel artistic and are good with Photoshop….

Look! New Homepage!

Ain’t it nifty?
Not to mention the brand-new scienceblogs.com shop (about which DrugMonkey is very excited).
So, what do you think? Pros? Cons? Likes? Dislikes?

Teens and Online Social Networks

How many of you have been blogging since June 1997?
Not many, I think. But danah boyd has. And she’s been studying online social networks almost as long, first starting with Friendster, then moving on to MySpace and Facebook as those appeared on the horizon and became popular.
Recently, danah defended her Dissertation on this topic and, a few days ago, posted the entire Dissertation online for everyone to download and read – Taken Out of Context: American Teen Sociality in Networked Publics (pdf):

Abstract: As social network sites like MySpace and Facebook emerged, American teenagers began adopting them as spaces to mark identity and socialize with peers. Teens leveraged these sites for a wide array of everyday social practices – gossiping, flirting, joking around, sharing information, and simply hanging out. While social network sites were predominantly used by teens as a peer-based social outlet, the unchartered nature of these sites generated fear among adults. This dissertation documents my 2.5-year ethnographic study of American teens’ engagement with social network sites and the ways in which their participation supported and complicated three practices – self-presentation, peer sociality, and negotiating adult society.
My analysis centers on how social network sites can be understood as networked publics which are simultaneously (1) the space constructed through networked technologies and (2) the imagined community that emerges as a result of the intersection of people, technology, and practice. Networked publics support many of the same practices as unmediated publics, but their structural differences often inflect practices in unique ways. Four properties – persistence, searchability, replicability, and scalability – and three dynamics – invisible audiences, collapsed contexts, and the blurring of public and private – are examined and woven throughout the discussion.
While teenagers primarily leverage social network sites to engage in common practices, the properties of these sites configured their practices and teens were forced to contend with the resultant dynamics. Often, in doing so, they reworked the technology for their purposes. As teenagers learned to navigate social network sites, they developed potent strategies for managing the complexities of and social awkwardness incurred by these sites. Their strategies reveal how new forms of social media are incorporated into everyday life, complicating some practices and reinforcing others. New technologies reshape public life, but teens’ engagement also reconfigures the technology itself.

Definitely worth a read for everyone interested in the Web, the social networks, and in the use of those in working with kids and teens (e.g., in education).

Welcome the newest SciBling!

Frank Swain just moved in this morning, so the boxes are still unpacked. You can see his old work on sciencepunk.com, Guardian Science Blog and Sence About Science, but from now on, he’ll be writing on Science Punk, so go there and say Hello!

Blogrolling: FYI: Science!

Every now and then I bump into a brand new science blog that immediately grabs my attention for some or other aspect of total coolness (or is it ‘hotness’ these days?). And then I want to promote, promote, promote until everybody and their mother reads that blog. Here is the latest brilliant discovery I made – FYI: Science!
Check out some of the first posts, for instance:
Of pedigrees and people

….But those mutations have to come from somewhere… specifically, my parents.
So my parents had to know about all of this. I sat them down and explained everything to them. I drew them a pedigree of our family history. And, for the first time that I can remember, my mom looked at me and said, “So this is why that biology degree is useful.”
To make a long story short, my dad is a carrier of a mutated gene (meaning he has 1 copy) and my mom also has two copies of the mutated gene. She’s being treated for some of the issues that go along with hemochromatosis and is doing well. I explained everything to my sister, who promptly went to her doctor’s office bearing a copy of the pedigree I’d drawn. (He loved it – he said it was the first time a patient had ever brought him a pedigree.) She, like my dad, is a carrier – she has 1 copy of the gene. Neither my dad nor my sister will have issues with the disease. My mom and I will be monitored, and hopefully that will be enough to let us lead long, healthy lives….

Throw another maggot on the barbie, mate

…..Their hamburgers arrived, and as they were chatting, Brad noticed a large fly some distance away. (Being an entomologist, he noticed these things.) They continued to chat and eat, and he found his eyes darting back to the fly every few seconds. The fly was heading towards them, and as it neared, he found himself impressed by the size of the fly. It was large even for Australian standards. As he lifted the hamburger to his mouth for another bite, the fly flew straight towards him. When it was about a meter away, the fly actually turned around midair – and a giant stream of maggots shot out of the fly’s rear end towards his hamburger.
Seriously.
The Australian scientist was amused, but not as startled as Brad! He explained that this species of fly needed meat in which to lay its eggs. If it did not find meat in time, the eggs would hatch inside the mother’s abdomen and begin eating her from the inside out. This resulted in a certain desperation on the mother’s part, so she’d aim them at anything that gave off the scent of meat…..

PCR – when you need to find out who the daddy is

…..In this era of “CSI” and other crime investigation shows, many people think that forensic science is easy, fast, and available for every crime. Of course, this isn’t the case. Forensic science is neither easy nor fast, and DNA evidence just is not always possible… there aren’t always nice neat bits of bodily evidence that can be used to track down a suspect or victim.
When there is bodily evidence, though, what exactly is it that investigators do with it? Sometimes there is just a tiny bit of blood, DNA, or hair – certainly not enough for investigation, and it’s certainly not as if you can just run to Target to get more DNA!….

So, go there, look around, bookmark and subscribe. It looks like great fun!

New scienceblogs.com blog – White Coat Underground

Can’t say “welcome a new SciBling” because he’s not new! PalMD is now flying solo! He moved out of the fraternity house and rented his own house: White Coat Underground. Go say Hello, bookmark, susbcribe, update your feeds, whatever you like to do, but keep reading Pal.

Hmmm, this blog may be interesting….

My year of flossing:

I flossed again last night.
I’m still waiting for that sense of ambient smugness (my loose translation here of arete, at least as it relates to the Artistotelian aspects of oral hygiene) that usually accompanies my occasional forays into a life of virtue. I think back here to my days spent as a jogger of sorts in the early 1990’s, days well remembered by some friends of mine if only for the gaily-colored yellow tights I would don before pounding up and down the streets of Sunnyvale, Calif. (In fact to this day the cognomen “Bananaman” is still thrown up in my face by some whenever I undertake a new exercise regimen.)
But at least the entwined senses of virtuous persecution and moral superiority were a wonderful relish to the less tangible benefits of sore knees and clownish apparel, all of which raises of course the question of whether a life lived in accordance with the dictates of smugness may be led in any way other than in relationship to the perceived failings of others. But persecution for my flossing has been so far minimal, and I am loathe to inquire too closely into the state of my neighbors’ gums.
(“Neighbors” is here used broadly in the whole Luke 10:25-37 sense, lest folks on the block feel the need to spend their time in my presence with their jaws clamped shut.)

Now THAT’S a niche blog if I ever saw one! Yet fun so far anyway.

Blog For Darwin


From Blog For Darwin:

February 12th-15th, 2009 participating bloggers around the world will be celebrating the bicentenary of Charles Darwin’s birth (February 12th, 1809) with a BLOG SWARM, in which posts will be aggregated on BLOG FOR DARWIN to be kept as a resource for educators, students, and others.
CLICK HERE or read below to learn how you can participate!

Yes, there’s a month left, but I hope you participate.

The Structure of Scientific Blogolutions!

Christina Pikas gave an interesting talk recently with the title: Detecting Communities in Science Blogs:

What she did was perform an analysis of link connections between science blogs to see if any clusters form. After some prompting, she wrote a blog post to explain the study a little more: A Structural Exploration of the Science Blogosphere: Director’s Cut:

The clusters were related to subject areas – very broad subject areas. One question in my mind was how much people would be outside of their home discipline in their reading/commenting… based on this network, certainly outside of their particular speciality, but still in the neighborhood with the exception of a few “a-list” science bloggers who everyone reads.
What was interesting – and most definitely worthy of further investigation – is this cluster of blogs written mostly by women, discussing the scientific life, etc. The degree distribution was much closer to uniform within the cluster, and there were many comment links between all of the nodes. This, to me, indicates other uses for the blogs and perhaps a real community (or Blanchard’s virtual settlement).

Very interesting – so, my reading is that biologist bloggers sorta, kinda tend to read other biologists, physicists may prefer other physicists, etc. In other words, the science blogs cluster by broad discipline (but not narrow discipline as much), the only exception being women bloggers who link to each other irrespective of scientific discipline and also tend to comment much more on each other’s blogs which indicates a different type of ‘community’.
I do not know if blogs within networks (e.g., scienceblogs.com, Nature Network, Discover…) tend to link preferably to each other within the network and to comment more on each other’s blogs (I would think so, as it’s easy and fast to see what the neighbors are doing) than to blogs on other networks and how would indie blogs fare in that.

…you can check out any time you like, but you can never leave…

Hotel Scienceblogs, that is. Do you remember David Dobbs and the blog Smooth Pebbles here on Sb? Well, David left the Borg, blogged for a while at his own non-Sb version of Smooth Pebbles and now he’s back – with a new blog and a new title – Neuron Culture.
Welcome back, SciBling!

Change your bookmarks and feeds

Anne-Marie Hodge, the author of the delightful blog Pondering Pikaia has just started a new blog on the Nature Network and named it Endless Forms.
The Dispersal of Darwin has moved from Blogger to WordPress, so please adjust your bookmarks and feeds for both of them.

The Psychology of Cyberspace

The Psychology of Cyberspace is a course taught by John Suler in the Department of Psychology at the Science and Technology Center at Rider University. The website is a collection of a large number of thought-provoking essays on various aspects of human behavior online:

This hypertext book explores the psychological aspects of environments created by computers and online networks. It presents an evolving conceptual framework for understanding how people react to and behave within cyberspace: what I call “the psychology of cyberspace” – or simply “cyberpsychology.” Continually being revised and expanded, this hypertext book originally was created in January of 1996. See the article index which indicates the articles most recently added and revised.
In order to make these readings accessible to as many people as possible, I have written them in a style that is not overly abstract or technical. Important concepts in psychology and psychoanalytic theory appear throughout the book, but I try to present them in an “experience-near” rather than “experience-distant” way that I hope makes them useful in understanding everyday living in cyberspace. The emphasis is on practical concepts rather than purely academic ones. Other versions of these articles appear in various professional journals. These publications are indicated within the articles and in the article index.

The course/website also has a blog which, though not updated lately, contains some gems in the archives. Worth reading and bookmarking – all of it.

Radical Transparency

This article is almost two years old, but it is perhaps even more current today than it was when it first appeared:

Pretend for a second that you’re a CEO. Would you reveal your deepest, darkest secrets online? Would you confess that you’re an indecisive weakling, that your colleagues are inept, that you’re not really sure if you can meet payroll? Sounds crazy, right? After all, Coke doesn’t tell Pepsi what’s in the formula. Nobody sane strips down naked in front of their peers. But that’s exactly what Glenn Kelman did. And he thinks it saved his business.
———-snip———–
The Internet has inverted the social physics of information. Companies used to assume that details about their internal workings were valuable precisely because they were secret. If you were cagey about your plans, you had the upper hand; if you kept your next big idea to yourself, people couldn’t steal it. Now, billion- dollar ideas come to CEOs who give them away; corporations that publicize their failings grow stronger. Power comes not from your Rolodex but from how many bloggers link to you – and everyone trembles before search engine rankings. Kelman rewired the system and thinks anyone else could, too. But are we really ready to do all our business in the buff?
“You can’t hide anything anymore,” Don Tapscott says. Coauthor of The Naked Corporation, a book about corporate transparency, and Wikinomics, Tapscott is explaining a core truth of the see-through age: If you engage in corporate flimflam, people will find out.
———-snip———–
Secrecy is dying. It’s probably already dead.2 In a world where Eli Lilly’s internal drug-development memos, Paris Hilton’s phonecam images, Enron’s emails, and even the governor of California’s private conversations can be instantly forwarded across the planet, trying to hide something illicit – trying to hide anything, really – is an unwise gamble. So many blogs rely on scoops to drive their traffic that muckraking has become a sort of mass global hobby. Radical transparency has even reached the ultrasecretive world of Washington politics…
———-snip———–
All of which explains why the cult of transparency has so many high tech converts these days. Transparency is a judo move. Your customers are going to poke around in your business anyway, and your workers are going to blab about internal info – so why not make it work for you by turning everyone into a partner in the process and inviting them to do so?
———-snip———–
Some of this isn’t even about business; it’s a cultural shift, a redrawing of the lines between what’s private and what’s public. A generation has grown up blogging, posting a daily phonecam picture on Flickr and listing its geographic position in real time on Dodgeball and Google Maps. For them, authenticity comes from online exposure. It’s hard to trust anyone who doesn’t list their dreams and fears on Facebook.
———-snip———–
The new breed of naked executives also discover that once people are interested in you, they’re interested in helping you out – by offering ideas, critiques, and extra brain cycles. Customers become working partners.3 Kelman used to spend valuable work time arguing why the real estate business had to change; now his customers do battle for him, wading into Redfin’s online forums to haggle with old-school agents.
———-snip———–
Nearly everyone I spoke to had a warning for would-be transparent CEOs: You can’t go halfway naked. It’s all or nothing. Executives who promise they’ll be open have to stay open. The minute they become evasive about troubling news, transparency’s implied social compact crumbles.
———-snip———–
Which illustrates an interesting aspect of the Inter net age: Google is not a search engine. Google is a reputation-management system. And that’s one of the most powerful reasons so many CEOs have become more transparent: Online, your rep is quantifiable, findable, and totally unavoidable. In other words, radical transparency is a double-edged sword, but once you know the new rules, you can use it to control your image in ways you never could before.
———-snip———–
“Online is where reputations are made now,” says Leslie Gaines Ross, chief reputation strategist – yes, that’s her actual title – with the PR firm Weber Shandwick. She regularly speaks to companies that realize a single Google search determines more about how they’re perceived than a multimillion-dollar ad campaign. “It used to be that you’d look only at your reputation in newspapers and broadcast media, positive and negative. But now the blogosphere is equally powerful, and it has different rules. Public relations used to be about having stuff taken down, and you can’t do that with the Internet.”
But here’s the interesting paradox: The reputation economy creates an incentive to be more open, not less. Since Internet commentary is inescapable, the only way to influence it is to be part of it. Being transparent, opening up, posting interesting material frequently and often is the only way to amass positive links to yourself and thus to directly influence your Googleable reputation. Putting out more evasion or PR puffery won’t work, because people will either ignore it and not link to it – or worse, pick the spin apart and enshrine those criticisms high on your Google list of life.

Read the whole thing – all those good examples that I snipped out. Is this how you operate, either as a person or as a company/organization?

Now, THAT’S a science blog!

Introducing Sex, Drugs and Rockin’ Venom: Confessions of an Extreme Scientist by Dr. Bryan Grieg Fry, the venom biologist!

Welcome the newest SciBling!

Go say Hello to Rebecca Skloot, the newest addition to the Scienceblogs.com family, and her blog Culture Dish.
Check out her About page and the first post.

Bloggers vs. Journalists Redux, part N

Some guy named Mulshine, who is apparently an ancient journalist (remember: generation is mindset, not age), penned one of those idiotic pieces for Wall Street Journal, willingly exposing his out-datedness and blindness to the world – read it yourself and chuckle: All I Wanted for Christmas Was a Newspaper:

This highlights the real flaw in the thinking of those who herald the era of citizen journalism. They assume newspapers are going out of business because we aren’t doing what we in fact do amazingly well, which is to quickly analyze and report on complex public issues. The real reason they’re under pressure is much more mundane. The Internet can carry ads more cheaply, particularly help-wanted and automotive ads.

Bwahahaha! Good old days, when we were the deciders of what you, the proles, deserved to know. And we did it right because we went to j-school!
Frank Wilson responds, by debunking, right out of the box, two of the claims that Mulshine made in his article (apparently out of his own ass):

I don’t think someone who uses the word prophesized in place of prophesied (perhaps he was thinking of proselytized) should be so quick to complain about pundint (which I, by the way, had never seen or heard of before now).
—————
Actually, the people in a given school district are likely to be very interested in and willing to sit through such meetings and read such reports very carefully, since they are interested parties, more interested, apparently, than a cub reporter trying to keep himself awake during the proceedings “by employing trance-inducing techniques.”

Also good stuff in the comments there:

My principal objection to Mr. Mulshine’s lamentation is that blogs have not killed newspapers. Newspapers have been committing slow suicide for years. The elimination of book coverage means that a large group of people – called readers – no longer find what they are looking for in newspapers.

…and…

There is indeed often nothing more boring than a public meeting, which is why bloggers can attend the public meeting, report interesting details, and fashion a long-form report that is far more compelling that the sad dessicated prose that often serves as newspaper journalism.
There was a recent Pew Reports statistic for this year: in 2008, for the first time, people turned to the Internet for news more than newspapers. Not only has it not occurred to some newspapers to hire bloggers to provide a fresher perspective for journalism, but they willfully make themselves obsolete by getting rid of articles after three weeks, not bothering to tag them with keywords or categories, not provide RSS feeds, and not permit comments. You will find all this on the blogosphere. In fact, I think it can be argued that blogs are doing a better job at tracking stories than newspapers at times because of these active technologies.

And Mark:

Sure, I’m biased as well, as is frankly anyone who picks up a pen to write (sadly a lost art) or taps out a missive on a keyboard; I spend a bit of time every day blogging about issues relevant to the world of residential real estate. While I don’t spend time on “junk blogs” (other than some pretty silly but nonetheless very entertaining fly fishing blogs) that perhaps Mr. Mulshine is referring to in his piece- on the contrary I’ve found that serious thinkers and authors writing blogs have had a lot more relevant information to share than Mr. Mulshine’s colleagues in the mainstream press, particularly in the mainstream newspaper press.

And Griff Wigley:

Paul Mulshine, opinion columnist for the Newark Star-Ledger, misses the point when he argues that citizens aren’t likely to voluntarily ‘cover,’ for example, city council meetings for their blogs in the same way that a reporter does for a newspaper.
Yes, it’s valuable to have Suzi Rook at the Northfield News, Dusty Budd at KYMN, and RepJ’s Bonnie Obremski sitting through public meetings and then reporting on them.
But it’s more valuable for their stories to be published in an eco-system of civic engagement where the media, public officials and citizens are all involved in the effort to inform so that better public outcomes can occur.

Official response from Herald de Paris:

The problem, however, is not that the Internet stole news from the broadsheets. First and foremost, dear Brutus (and here I am quoting another really good writer, of whom you have certainly heard), “The fault lies not in our stars, but in ourselves.” Sensationalized news, fictitious news, unconfirmed news .. Page Six – real newspapers did not go there. Ever. The death of the newspaper began the moment someone had the hair-brained idea to defy the public trust simply to increase circulation, because selling more papers meant higher advertising rates. Then, too, the newspaper has been dying a slow death for 30 or 40 years, and since this pre-dates the electronic format(s), this means CNN, and the proliferation of 24/7 cable news. The simple truth is, they could get the news to market faster and fresher than the broadsheets ever could. The problem, however, is that broadcast news doesn’t know what to do with itself on slow news days. This gave rise to ‘Breaking News’ stories about such vitally important items as what time Anna Nicole Smith’s baby had a bottle, and how much hair Brittney Spears shaved off. Blame OJ Simpson a little, too, for that riveting low-speed car chase on the LA freeway – complete with turn signals. The fatal blow, it would seem, might have been that newspaper executives took a cue from their school-aged grandchildren, and began to, “blog.” The B-word. *shudder*
The truth is, the electronic media is a wonderful tool for news, but only if you know what you are doing. At the Herald de Paris, we have what we call a virtual newsroom. Our writers and reporters provide us the latest news, sometimes written on a PDA or a mobile phone, and complete with photographs. We have a way to go in providing local media coverage, but we will get there. Since the print media printed yesterday’s news the night before yesterday, they can not touch the timeliness of the electronic media. But it does not stop at the Internet. The real brilliance of electronic media is in mobile technology – when the latest news, information, and features are all in your pocket – available for your reading at your will. To date, however the converse detriment to this new age is that there are economic barriers to electronic media that have yet to be overcome. As it stands, access to information is, and remains, a commodity. At the Herald de Paris, we think this is wrong, and so we are working on ways to overcome this. We don’t know if this is your so-called new model or not, but if you wish to call us geniuses, we’ll take it. You see, the newspaper industry at-large has been trying to mold the electronic information age in its image, when instead, they should have been learning how the technology could/can make what they do better. Geniuses or not, that’s what we are doing .. and so far, it is working brilliantly.

Internet Guru:

Acting as if NO Internet news is trustworthy or professional is just as illogical as assuming that all print media work is the most perfect model. The truth of the matter is a large part of the product that the Old Media is trying to sell us is junk. Most journalists fail at their job. There are a few, of course, that are great. But, this is an illustration of humanity itself, isn’t it? Some will be good, the rest will fail. It’s Jefferson’s “aristocracy among men” defined.
The Internet is already producing its stars just as print media has, and it will continue to evolve, getting better with each succeeding day. Additionally, there’s no reason to expect that professional journalists will forever go away. There is also no reason to blindly believe in some fantastic future of every citizen becoming his own journalist. Somehow a new business model will find its way to the net and professional journalism will continue unabated.

Susan Duclos:

Well here is the deal as I see it… Reynolds is right, if enough independent, lowly bloggers, with a good vocabulary, were strewn our across America and willing to attend local meetings and go through documents which now are usually all published online, then yes, old media can and will be replaced.
Sure, many times, we bloggers find the news, paste important paragraphs and give our opinions which if we were real “journalists” writers would calling “analysis” instead of opinion, and bring the news to people who come to our sites.
Other times bloggers have been known to get their hands on PDF documents, produce them, go through them and show the blog reading public the portions of the reports that the major media “journalists” deliberately do not mention in their all important “analysis”.
The reason I started blogging was simple and addresses this whole debate in my mind.
Bloggers do give their opinions or analysis of any given situation, agreed, but bloggers do something that the professional journalists do not….we provide links to the original sources to which we use to determine our opinions and analysis.
We give our readers a chance to read the original reports, data, PDF’s, court papers, whatever the case may be, then those readers can decide for themselves if they agree with our “analysis” or if they come to a different conclusion.
We don’t hide relevant facts to make the pieces match our preconceived ideas….we provide sources, we link.
Before I started blogging, I heard the news, read some online news articles, but found what I was getting was the writers opinion and when I looked for the original source to be able to form my own opinion, you know where I found the links to the original sources?
Bloggers. Blogs. Before I even knew exactly what a blog was.
So, to Mr. Mulshine, a quick note….. if journalists want to stay relevant, they need to stop thinking their opinion is the only opinion, they need to start providing links to the original sources and stop expecting people to take their word as the word of God.
Otherwise, those army of Davids, are definitely going to start reporting original pieces and they will be trusted more because they will provide something the old media, the mainstream media, refuse to….. the facts to go along with a “journalist’s” opinion.

Cranford Pundit:

A lot of newspapers are taking steps to make themselves even less relevant. Like the food section that canned it’s editor and now cuts and pastes recipes from cooking.com (my sister’s paper does that), or the editorial page that cuts and pastes items from the DailyKos (my brother’s area newspaper is guilty of that). If they are supplying even more content that we can get for free who will their customers be besides the elderly and computerphobic?

William Beutler:

All right, well this question about usage of “pundit” vs. “pundint” is easily testable. Let’s go to Google BlogSearch:
* For a search on the single word pundit we find 705,874 results. Sorted for relevance, here are the top three results as of Sunday afternooon:
1. Daily Kos: Your Abbreviated Pundit Round-up
2. Gateway Pundit: Israeli Gaza Strikes Called ‘Holocaust’ By Hamas …
3. Daily Pundit » Sweets for the Sour
Already we can see that Mulshine should have chosen a different word to illustrate the alleged ignorance of Internet political commentators. Thanks to those like Instapundit, the word has enjoyed a strong currency in recent years, perhaps more so than any word besides “meme”.
* For a search on pundint we find 1,320 results with the top three by relevance as follows:
1. Campaign Retrospective: Goofiest “Pun-dint” Remarks
2. Dec 18, Pundint or Pundit : Common Errors in English
3. MacBigot Cached Glances » Blog Archive » It’s PUNDIT, not PUNDINT …
Remember, these are not necessarily the savviest bloggers (let alone, strictly, bloggers), just those which (the increasingly unreliable) BlogSearch coughed up first.

Pwned!
evolution-nextstep:

People like Mr Mulshine — which I suspect are numerous among the 50-and-up age bracket of the profession — don’t really like5 that the stupid, misspelling people he’s forced to sell his product to have the right to spout their opinion as to its quality. Unless you’re a really tony club, you don’t get to choose your customers.
Your goal for the Internet is the same as it was in print — produce content that’s either superior to or different than anyone else. You can now do so at a much faster rate — and if you were to take control of your product as I’ve suggested above, you could indeed do it better than anyone else. Make sure that you are not in the opinion, the “framing”, or the “shaping of opinion” business, for you now have tons of competition on the Internet and you’ll get6 creamed. If you, as an individual journalist, want to be in those businesses, fine. Separate yourself from journalism. I suggest above that journalism should separate itself from you.7 It is much harder to make the current model work on the Internet than I think it would be for the model I have described. A few companies are trying it; but I think someday soon the novelty will wear off if it hasn’t already.
A journalistic outfit that can produce the kind of content that I’ve described in this post — the hard news — reliably, according to a documented standard, by tightly-knit, trained, and (perhaps) certified professionals, and deliver that content and reliability on the Internet can cream the Internet competition. In addition, I think it can turn a profit for itself and its employees. There is little doubt in my mind of that. I’m not a sentimental person, though; I won’t cry at all if the current journalism industry’s business model collapses as seems likely. They will learn someday.

JD Johannes:

The subject of the quote from Glenn’s book, Army of Davids , was about how someone who actually understood the law and legislative process would make a better State House reporter than a recent college graduate with a journalism degree. In other words, an expert in law and legislation should be covering the State House. I even explained to Glenn how the business model would work–old fashioned syndication.
———————
The hear-say quote, and this particular usage by Mr. Mulshine, is one of the reasons why blogs have succeeded–the core news consumer does not like hear-say quotes and does not want bland executive summaries for the “casual reader.” The core news consumer wants hard news without bias, and expert opinion. Mr. Mulshine’s use of a misleading hear-say quote explains well the demise of his beloved newspaper.

Fausta Wertz defends the article, but when creamed in the comments pretends that her praise is actually criticism, just in polite language. Yeah, right. Her article begins with:

My friend and fellow NJ Voices blogger Paul Mulshine has an excellent article at the Wall Street Journal…

Karen De Coster:

So many articles like this, so little time. Yes, here’s another one of these articles from the parade of old men who can’t understand why young people (and a lot of older folks) don’t want to read their irrelevant rags any longer. “Real journalist” Paul Mulshine bemoans the loss of the censured, state-fed, boorish organs called newspapers. Another horse breeder making a plea against the automobile. His rant in the Wall Street Journal is bitter, and he seems especially jealous of the success of Instapundit (Glenn Reynolds). The days of censured news organs are disappearing, so get over it, Mulshine.
Mulshine points to the fact that only the print newspapers can produce “real journalists.” This kind of vindictive arrogance only gets these dinosaurs the opposite of what they want. They hate their customers for evolving with the times and desiring a different product. So guess what? Their (former) customers are telling them to stick it. What he really means by “real” journalist is one who is employed by an approved voice in the mainstream media. Note his reference to “alternative” media – the quotation marks convey his contempt for people who haven’t had to spend 40 years moving their way up from floor sweeper and runner to “real” journalist because the glory of the digital age creates open access and possibilities for all, and at little or no monetary cost.
Mulshine doesn’t believe that people who get their news on the Internet can appropriately distinguish between good and bad journalism. Apparently, there exists a distinct definition of real journalism that is escaping me. He wants us to trust that which comes from the printed press, because surely, that must be “real.” A newspaper is a source you can trust.

Planet Moron:

The problem runs deeper than that, but it is not that all newspapers are terrible or that all bloggers are better. It’s that most newspapers are, by definition, average, as are most professional newspaper reporters and is why so many alleged news reports read like warmed-over press releases or why so much commentary is little more than half-informed political proselytizing. When we covered the TARP debate, we at least actually read the original 130-page document, the first 70 pages of which we were even sober. Judging by the professional news coverage that put us in a distinct minority (at least on the reading part).
The problem for newspapers is that people simply have more choices. There are excellent news reporters out there, but there are also excellent bloggers. Not here, but other places. And if you want to hold and attract readers, you’ll have to do more than talking about how you do “amazingly well,” and start actually doing amazingly well. It’s hard work, but if bloggers are willing to do it for a few Google AdSense pennies, professional newspaper reporters shouldn’t mind doing it for their day job.

BGrey:

I would suggest that rather than spending their time arguing the merits of their craft, “professional journalists” should embrace the digital migration that is well under way. And how might they do this? They should publish as much of their “high quality” journalism as they can through as many digital distribution outlets as they can so they get their fair share of those online car and job ads!

Now, the funniest part of all – Paul Mulshine responds! Oh my, oh my! Check out how nice and welcoming he is to his readers! How many comments he added a note to, calling the commenter a “moron”?

I’ve received so many comments from people who failed to read the Moron Perspective Warning that I am now starting this entry with it. Please read it and follow the simple instructions.

Ha? Giving instructions to commenters as to what to say? Who’s moronic now?
Robert Ivan has a great response:

To answer Mr. Mulshine’s question; What is the New Model for generating revenue? The answer for general interest newspapers and news sites is that there is none. NONE. That’s no mystery.
I heard Jay Rosen once say; “What would have been the correct business model for Tower Records when the Internet arrived? The correct answer would have been NONE”.

Correct. A hundred-and-change years ago you got paid to drive a pair of horses and a cart around. Now you pay if you want to do it – big money as this sport is expensive. Yes, there will be aficionados who will print their own personal newspapers just for fun, as a hobby. And there are still people who collect and know how to use slide-rules.
Newspapers will die. News-gathering and news-reporting will not. But it will not be done by people with J-school degrees. It will be done by people with expertise in the topic they report on, with fire in the belly to go out and do it, by people who perceive a need as they see a vacuum, a lack of coverage. That’s what motivates bloggers as well.
But Robert Ivan is onto something else, as well:

Will his insular remarks further hasten the decline of the newspaper industry? For the people that have not already been convinced, I feel they might. Journalism and Communications students are encouraged to create and explore blogs as viable forms of communication and reporting. They are encouraged to explore any new form of communication and business model. Mulshine craps on this exploration. Now what? we’re all wrong? None of us can spell pundit? What? Mulshine’s article does not insult an entire generation and a community 125 million strong, it reaffirms their notion that newspaper are clueless and irrelevant. What the heck was he thinking?

Yes, every time one of the journalistic dinosaurs (sorry, I love dinosaurs, but that word has become a synonym for large, lumbering lizards who are too dumb and too slow to adapt to avoid extinction) writes one of these articles about “dirty, ignorant bloggers”, that article is itself a stark example of exactly what is wrong with journalism and why people are dropping their newspaper subscriptions in droves. It is an unsupported, blithering lie which most of the audience knows is a lie. Way to go to lose the last crumbles of authority….
Yes, it is important to make a distinction between beat reporters (I always think they got that name because the editor beat them into going out into the rain to report), op-ed writers (aka pundits aka bloviators) and expert journalists (people who work on a single story for a long, long time, doing in-depth research and usually having their own expertise in the topic).
The thing is – bloggers can and do all three. Many bloggers are better thinkers and better writers than David Brooks, so David Brooks will need to get smarter and better if he’s to survive. Many bloggers are also bad, but most professional journalists are just as bad PLUS they have bad editors to answer to.
Many bloggers have expertise in the topic they write about. Look at my SciBlings – when one of them blogs about a science topic, that is written by a scientist who actually knows what he/she is writing about, unlike some poor journo who was told by the editor to do it and do it fast. Sure, some people mouth off idiocies about topics they know nothing about, but those bloggers will never be respected as voices of authority on that topic anyway. Getting a salary from a media organization does not guarantee that the journalist is any less idiotic and any more respected by the readers.
And yes, bloggers are doing beat reporting. I’ve been watching the hyperlocal blogging here in Orange County, Carrboro, Chapel Hill, Durham, etc. for several years now and there are lots of bloggers who go to town hall meetings and report, in great detail and with great expertise, about those meetings or other local events. Mulshine just never bothered to familiarize himself with the topic he was supposed to write about…
And then, there are accidental reporters. All of the people who write and read blogs, are on twitter, facebook or friendfeed, mostly posting techie or pop-culture stuff, or about food or knitting, nonetheless are getting a training in new journalism, however subconsciously – taking in, by osmosis, the ethics, the forms and the etiquette of online journalism. And when the opportunity arises, they know how to rise to the challenge. Examples?
All the folks who just happened to be in Mumbai at the moment of the attack? They are not journalists and do not think of themselves as journalists. Most probably do not want to be journalists. Yet, at that moment, they were witnessing something important, they got on Twitter and did the journalistic job marvelously. It is through them that we learned, faster and better than from MSM, what happened there. They were journalists for a week. They are probably back to “what I had for breakfast” tweets, and that’s fine. A lot of citizen journalism will not and need not be full-time.
Remember the Denver airport accident last week? Well, a guy twittered from that airplane. The world learned from him that it happened, some 18 minutes before any news organization did. Then, after just having survived his second airplane crash, his couple of tweets were mostly about his need for a strong drink and who could blame him. But then, once he recharged his batteries, had a stiff drink, and perhaps a short nap, he went back on twitter and gave a series of reports that no professional journalist could match, because he was actually there, and he has no editor to dictate what is and what isn’t appropriate.
Remember when the bridge fell down in Minnesota about a year or so ago? Where did we get the first news? From a blogger who lives in the first house next to the bridge. Is he a journalist? No, but for a couple of weeks he was – he went down and helped with recovery, interviewed people, took pictures, and posted all of that on his blog. And none of the professional journalists – print, photo, radio, TV – that showed up on the scene later could match him. Not just because he was the first. But also because he knew the geography better than they did. He got people to tell him stories they would never trust a journalist with, because he was a neighbor. His blog was a place to go for a week or two, because no journalist on the scene could come close to the quality of his reporting. Did he earn any money on this? Probably not (though some readers probably hit his PayPal button at the time). And then he went back to his normal life and his normal blogging topics.
Being online all the time, consuming and producing content, is sufficient training for quality journalism. We all constantly train each other, by providing examples, and by criticizing each other all the time. Add to this the expertise in the topic that a generalist journalist will not have, and read why Jay Rosen wrote that If Bloggers Had No Ethics Blogging Would Have Failed, But it Didn’t. So Let’s Get a Clue, and you will realize that graduation from J-school is not needed for quality journalism, and may even be a hindrance as the students there learn the ropes of doing the False Equivalence, Fair&Balanced, He-Said-She-Said journalism (which they brazenly defend in public – no shame!) which sucks and that’s why the readers are leaving the professional media and instead are trusting bloggers who have proven themselves with their honesty and expertise.
Who will provide the news? Some journalists will become bloggers. Some bloggers will become journalists – some full-time, others when the opportunity arises. All will be equal and will be judged by the quality of their work, not by degrees they got or companies they work for. Some old-style journalists will swim, some will sink when finally and suddenly encountering such stiff competition, and forced to abandon their schooling in order to do journalism right, for the first time in their lives. With or without them, the news will get reported anyway.
Update: Blogging Advice for the Frustrated Journalist :

I took a Mass Communications class at Moorhead State University in 1982. The professor, Marv Bossart, was a television anchor. One day he was discussing the future of journalism, and talked about how one day people would be reading the newspapers through their computers. This was back when graphics were rudimentary and computer terminals produced green screen with green text characters only. I couldn’t imagine how this would be appealing, but I was excited at the prospect. Long before Compuserve, AOL and Prodigy, Marv Bossart had seen a future in which instant publishing would be ubiquitous. Now, it seems as though print newspapers are going the way of blacksmiths.

Correct – do not conflate news with newspapers. Newspapers are news on paper. That model is dying. There are better ways to get news now that do not cost as much as paper, ink, presses, trucks and delivery men.
Update – a couple of interesting responses:
Tom Levenson:

All of this is prelude to the argument I want to take some time to craft, which is to push back- not all the way, but partly — on the notion that the blogosphere in and of itself is sufficient to take on the role traditional journalism has (at least in myth) played in the past. The reason why efforts like those undertaken in Minnesota and across the way from my office matter is that in a finite day the ubiquitous and self-correcting nature of what might be called the informal journalism of the internet exists synoptically — but people don’t. They — I, we — have finite time to perform the editorial work of chasing down contending versions of reality until some resolution sets in. We have only so much time to put together the range of stories we might find interesting or important in each day.
Someone will take care of all that, whether it be some part of the civic journalism movement, or mutating mass media. If we don’t create and use the tools that make the totality of our efforts accessible, then it seems to me likely that people like Rupert Murdoch et al. — who aren’t dumb, not matter what other qualities may attach themselves to them — will create the filters, packaging, production values and aggregation work that will capture much more of a share of audience than they should.

Dan Conover:

Most newspapers AVOID serious “watchdogging” on a regular basis and limit themselves to re-writing, publicizing, and (in the best cases) critically examining the substantive work of volunteer or non-profit watchdog groups.
Why do these groups give their work to newspapers and TV stations? Until recently, it was because those were the communications channels available to them. Why do they do it now? 1. Because those channels are still the biggest, and 2. Habit.
What percentage of your local news media bandwidth is actually devoted to ORIGINAL watchdogging by local journalists? I don’t have figures, but after 20 years in the business I’m here to report that the percentage is tiny. Watchdogging is expensive, it angers people with power and influence, it pisses off huge swaths of the audience you’re trying to serve, and effective watchdogging requires sustained study and careful analysis.
So even when a newspaper takes a couple of reporters and applies them to an “investigative” piece for months, their finished product typically relies on data sets that were developed over years by non-journalists watchdogging one particular institution, agency or industry. In most cases these studies were paid for not by “business models,” but by donors.
Which brings us to a fairly obvious conclusion:
Now that the real watchdogs have access to worldwide networked media and can go directly to the audience, why should they even bother going through the traditional news media filters?

Jon Swift’s Annual Compilation of the Best Blog Posts of 2008 (Chosen by the Bloggers Themselves)

This may take days to read, but it is worth it….

How to Blog?

Slate has this good article with the same title (yes, read it if you are interested in becoming or becoming a better blogger). I agree with everything in it, except for one piece of advice that I often see bandied about but think is totally wrong:

Don’t be too wordy. HuffPo says that 800 words is the outer-length limit for a blog post; anything longer will turn people off.

No. No. No.
This feeds nicely in what Ezra Klein wrote about it:

The specialized posts mix with the generalized posts — in my case, health wonkery rubs elbows with garden variety political punditry — and the two cross-subsidize each other. The rigor of the more technical work gives you credibility in the reader’s mind and adds weight to the generalist posts. The generalist posts broaden the blog’s potential audience and create access points that new readers wouldn’t have if you let the blog become a repository of technical commentary.
————snip———–
One sidenote here is that I find the question of “specialization” is interesting. Health care is not the thing I write the most about: Somewhere between 5 percent and 10 percent of my posts are health care related. During periods of political drama, that number drops further. Far more of my posts are on the Obama administration, and politics more generally. But people define blogs by what they produce that’s different from their competitors, not by what they offer that’s the same.

This is excellent advice – blog about everything that strikes your fancy, but also sometimes blog about your area of expertise. Mix it up, topic-wise, but also mix-it up format-wise: videos, pictures, one-liners, linkfest, short posts and, YES, long essays, especially in your area of expertise.
If you write a long essay in your area of expertise, people WILL read. Why? Because your blog post is likely to contain information they can not find anywhere else on the Web, let alone in the media.
So, even if you mostly post a bunch of quick-and-dirty posts on various topics, when you have something special to say, don’t be afraid to write 2000 or 3000 or 4000 or 5000 words. People will read that. And bookmark it. And put it on social networks. And e-mail it to friends. And discuss it in the comments. And respond to them on their own blogs. Those posts are the real gems of the blogosphere.
And how do you become an expert on a topic? You could go the usual way, through school or practice. But you can also become an expert if you constantly blog about something over the years. You dig through the literature, you read other bloggers who write about it, you get corrected by commenters, and soon become a knowledgeable and respected authority. You may still know less (but not always) than a person who got a PhD in the topic, but you will certainly know more than a journalist who writes on that topic because the editor said so – because you write, and thus learn, with passion.

A Year In Review – A Blog Around The Clock 2008

New Year’s Day, a time to reminisce about the past year, perhaps to analyze its ups and downs, and in the blogosphere: to link to one’s “Best of” posts for all of those who missed them.
I posted 2960 posts so far this year – with six days to go I may reach 3000. It is not easy sifting through all of those, so I picked the highlights for you here. Some are milestones, some are examples from multi-post series, some are posts that provoked a lot of comments, some are posts that took a lot of time and effort to write, and some are, well, just very long. There were other posts that elicited a lot of comments, or traffic or incoming links, or people found them useful or fun, but these choices, I think, best describe the year as a whole. Do these links tell a story?
January (205 posts) is always busy for me, finalizing the latest edition of the anthology (Open Lab 2007 – Up For Sale!) and organizing the conference – check out the videos and essential blog posts.
Thus, most of my blogging at the time is either related to these two events, or quick linkfests, videos and quotes. It was also the time of the early primaries, and although several candidates were still in the race at the time, we already started thinking about who the new President should appoint as the new Science Advisor. We had a vigorous debate here on scienceblogs about the grammatical correctness of Unshaven vs. Reshaven?. This was also the beginning of the Aetosaurs scooping saga.
I got hungry and posted my Mom’s recipe on How to Fix an Authentic Serbian Sarma (Stuffed Cabbage). We also did another round of “Ask the ScienceBlogger” and I responded with The Dangers of Blogging, or, the Quest for Male Contraception. This was also the last time I tried to quit posting Quotes, picks from ScienceDaily, links to carnivals, etc. as my commenters told me not to ever stop.
January was also the time when my Mom guest-blogged her second 5-part series here: Memories of War, Part I, Memories of War, Part II, Memories of War, Part III, Memories of War, Part IV and Memories of War, Part V.
At the end of the month, I started a series of interviews that spanned several months, covering 40 fascinating people, starting with Karen James. Oh, there was also science – The Hopeless Monster? Not so fast!
In February (225 posts), all the Quotes were from Charles Darwin. The problem of science popularization hits a snag in I inform people against their will!, but science education is doing fine – check out the local Island Project. But off the island, In Space, Holes are a problem.
Food and Guilt – questions about some extraordinary claims answered nicely in the comments. The interviews continue, including this one with Anne-Marie Hodge. The BlueSci interview went online.
We tried to remember our own Obsolete Lab Skills and I tried the Nth iteration of the answer to the life’s persistent question: What is a Science Blog? Finally, some fun science – Open Access Beer!
In March (241 posts) a bunch of bloggers answered the tough librarian’s question: How Do You Shelve Your Books? But then there was time for a little bit of science: Mel-Mel-Mel: it’s easy to remember in snowshoe hares. We got our first Super Readers and this blog received its 8000th comment.
I wrote a lot about telecommuting and related stuff, including about the 40-hour workweek. The series of scienceblogging interviews ended with a reverse interview – with me.
Then I penned a long rant about The so-called Facebook Scandal and an even longer follow-up – Individual vs. Group Learning Redux, both of which elicited a lot of heated commentary, and finally the third of the trifecta: ‘Generation’ is the mindset, not age.
Another off-the-cuff rant – Not all blogs are tech blogs. March was the month of Invertebrate Wars, the 5000th post and the millionth visitor to this blog, and the defense of profanity.
I was abroad for most of April (224 posts), so I picked a bunch of old good posts and had them scheduled for automatic re-posting during the month. The April Fool’s joke was about Brain Doping, which was taken too seriously by too many (and still is!). Before the trip, I wrote a comprehensive recap of all of my goings and doings of the previous month or so, with pictures. But before I left, there was enough time for another response to a clueless blog-basher: Moms, don’t let your daughters marry bloggers!
And then the EuroTrip started, with many, many posts (too many to link them all here today), each with many, many pictures! First stop – London, then Cambridge, then a great weekend in Cromer and back to Cambridge.
Next stop – Trieste, where I was on the Open Access panel (recordings are here), on the radio (recording is here) and the Science blogging panel.
Then, after thirteen years of absence, I arrived home in Belgrade, where I gave two talks about Open Access on the first day I arrived and did three radio interviews. I saw some of my childhood friends, and of course, the horses (with a follow up).
And while I was traveling, I posted the first guest-post by Anne-Marie Hodge: How do bats in a cave know if it is dark outside yet? So, yes, there was real science blogging on this science blog in April!
At the beginning of May (181 posts) I flew from Belgrade to Berlin and then finally came back home, just in time to vote in the NC primary.
There were some good answers in the comments of this post: Ettiquette for blogging a scientific meeting – a question. Why did I ask? Because I was about to go to reconnect with my tribe – the Society for Research on Biological Rhythms, from where came this long summary.
And I wrote a real science post as well – Clock Classics: It all started with the plants.
I started June (156 posts) with some thoughts on Historical Open Access. Then this video with a short commentary provoked so many comments that this post is still the starting point for an entire series of subsequent posts about the future of work, office, telecommuting and coworking.
Not everybody liked my review of Kung Fu Panda, though the NC symphony review apparently went over better. Then I briefly revisited academic blogging.
The new carnival – The Giant’s Shoulders got started. My paper on the future of the scientific paper got published. I made my first SPORE creature. Birds were the focus of the month in PLoS ONE.
And while I was galivanting around NYCity with my family at the end of the month, you could read the science post of the month: Why do earthworms come up to the surface after the rain?
In July (282 posts), blogosphere rose against Declan Butler and in defense of PLoS. Yes, some of the ScienceDebate2008 questions were, with permission, based on some of my questions.
Apart from politics, I went back (so rare these days) to debunking crackpottery. Then, When religion goes berserk! here, in the Balkans, and universally.
The documentary ‘Sizzle’ came out and a bunch of us here at scienceblogs.com got advance copies to screen. I wrote my review in two long posts, with lots of comments: Sizzle and Scientists are Excellent Communicators (‘Sizzle’ follow-up). Question: Are Science Movies Useful?
Back to an old topic of mine – Blog Carnivals – what is in it for you? I hosted the first edition of The Giant’s Shoulders and the seventh edition of Berry Go Round, then joined in the chorus debating the term Darwinist.
Some more on the media dinosaurs: Lee Siegel – who let him into a media room again?. Then The Web: how we use it. Finally, some science: Running the green light…. is all about cool chemistry.
August (306 posts) was a busy blogging month and a poetry month: There once was an Editor of FASEB…. and Well versed in science. Practical advice: What I try to do when I travel abroad across several time zones. Job-related: Post-publication Peer-review in PLoS-ONE, pars premiere. And a cool new site: iNaturalist rocks!
Back to teaching: BIO101 again and There is no need for a ‘Creepy Treehouse’ in using the Web in the classroom and Why teaching evolution is dangerous and What are teachers for?.
With the election approaching, I blogged about politics more than usual, doing my part in informing the voters, e.g., Vote McCain, The Wrecking Crew: How Conservatives Rule? By eliminating Free Market, of course, Just informing the voters…., Candidates on Science, and Palin?
Another epic: Importance of History of Science (for scientists and others). And another epic: Science vs. Britney Spears. And in the series of posts about workplace – Paperless Office? Bwahahahaha! and The 21st Century Workplace is wherever you and your laptop happen to be.
I hosted the first edition of Praxis. Celebrated the 6000th post here, 3 million pageviews and the 4th blogiversary. On wifi in hotels and watching the Olympics online: Rage 2.0 and a similar rant – Drinking Age?
SciBling MeetUp in New York City was a blast! Next thing, they outlaw cooking at home: it’s chemistry, after all…..
Want science? Domestication – it’s a matter of time (always is for me, that’s my ‘hammer’ for all nails) and Green Sahara Cemeteries and Rainforest Glow-worms glow at night because their clock says so and To Equine Things There is a Season (guest post by Barn Owl).
In September (325 posts) I received the 10,000th comment. PLoS ONE theme of the month were bats, and also a new push towards my own field. And I did a little analysis of my own traffic: What kinds of posts bring traffic?
We opened the submissions for the Open Lab 2008 and opened registration for ScienceOnline’09 which filled up in three weeks (we have about 30 people over limit, plus about 60 on waitlist!). And, the SciBlings and readers met at the Zoo for the Millionth Comment Party.
With the election in full swing, of course I covered politics a lot, several times a day, for example: Obama: Families are off limits, Obama answers science questions, If you are watching the RNC Convention and…., Compare and Contrast, Part 6, Palin – the fundraiser, Are they cheap, broke, or understaffed?, Just laugh at them, ‘Community Organizer’ – a dogwhistle for ‘Black rabble-rouser’, Obama Blasts McCain on Lipstickgate: Enough of the lies and distractions!. This kind of stuff tends to bring out the trolls.
Now, away from politics. How Inside Duke Medicine got revamped. Then, this was really cool: A non-biological biological clock. A book: The Divine Right of Capital. Not much time for science, but: ‘Normal’ body temperature? Not really. and Aerosteon riocoloradensis – the new dinosaur with hollow bones.
October (298 posts) brought an article in the local newspaper: From Telecommuting to Coworking. And that local newspaper was? Carrboro Citizen – a model for the newspaper of the future.
From there, I went into foodblogging – Offal is Good. And finally a serious post: Wikipedia, just like an Organism: clock genes wiki pages.
The program and organization of ScienceOnline09 got into full swing and the registration was completely filled up. We had a blogging contest for Open Access Day, and we got two winners: Greg Laden and Dorothea Salo.
This one was somewhat provocative: The Nobel Prize conundrum. And this one was provocative for a different reason: Obama-McCain race – a Serbian parallel lesson? When science and politics crash into each other: Palin, autism and fruitflies – it does not add up. And a book recommendation.
I wrote a recap of ConvergeSouth08. And I went to this symposium. And got interviewed again. Then I wrote something more serious: Information vs. Knowledge vs. Expertise.
November (233 posts) was marked by the saga of Roosevelts on Toilets in which I contributed this serious science post: Spring Forward, Fall Back – should you watch out tomorrow morning?
I did The Science Blog Meme. Into Balkan history: Semlin Judenlager. Watched Twilight.
Science: The map is in the bag, but the sequence may yet reveal if kangaroos have jumping genes and, related, Science by press release – you are doing it wrong.
I voted and was obviously happy with the outcome. Unlike four years ago, there was no need for long analytic “what the heck happened?” posts, but that did not deter me from opining about the political future: Transition and the new Cabinet, Post-election thoughts, Republicans? Who’s that?, Obama’s Transition and Will there be new communication channels in the Obama administration?
This golden piece of advice was discovered by one of my students, then, after I posted it, it spread like wildfire around the blogosphere. More science: Mining the Web for the patterns in the Real World. This was serious: Why does Impact Factor persist most strongly in smaller countries. And this is funny: What is wrong with the picture?
And finally, December (270 posts so far, but there will be more). I started by complaining about Google Blogsearch. Then we closed the submissions for the Open Laboratory 2008 and I posted all the entries.
I did the Five-Fiftysix meme and posted puzzle solutions the next day. We spent an hour on air on Radio In Vivo talking about science communication.
I found Inter-connectedness of science blogs interesting, noted the passing of H.M. and thought that Molecules with funny names are funny. So was Scarlett Johansson – Bioterrorist?
But Elites? That’s somehow bad? was a provocative post. And The Shock Value of Science Blogs was even more provocative.
Another two posts in the series on the topic I cover a lot lately – What’s an office for? and Co-Researching spaces for Freelance Scientists?.
Are you Managing your online persona like a Superhero? And another frequent topic here – Bloggers vs. Journalists morphs into Twitterers vs. Journalists and I compared Twitter and FriendFeed as used by companies, and ‘Newsworthy-ness’.
The preparations for ScienceOnline09 are in the final stretch. PLoS ONE turned Two, so we had a synchroblogging competition. The winner was Einstein was smart, but Could He Play the Violin?
Science: Clocks and Immunity and Elephants in zoos and Both Male-Male Competition and Mate Choice are parts of Sexual Selection and Evolutionary Psychology – why it is fundamentally wrong.
Who’s the Blogger Of The Year? What about the hypothesis that Blogs are a means to finding people to do rhythmic things with?
Well, that was fun. Have a great New Year and we’ll continue with the regular programing as usual. I hope you stay around next year and bring your friends….
Related: Year in Review 2007

Are you interviewing your family members today?

If so, record it, or write it down, upload a podcast or post on your blog. And:

After the overwhelming response to the National Day of Listening, we are hoping to pass on a new holiday idea: For everyone who did an interview surrounding the National Day of Listening (or are thinking about recording a loved one), making a copy of it and pairing it with a paperback copy of our book, “Listening is an Act of Love,” provides a meaningful touch to the holiday season, and gives that special someone even more incredible stories to read! The book as well as more DIY recording tips can be linked to at www.storycorps.net.

Blogs – a means to finding people to do rhythmic things with?

I found this quite intriguing:

Those thinking that online social networking is a substitute for face-to-face interactions might want to think again. Recent research in psychology suggests there are some benefits to real-life socializing that the Internet just can’t provide; researchers at Stanford University have published a report in Psychological Science called “Synchrony and Cooperation” that indicates engaging in synchronous activities (e.g., marching, singing, dancing) strengthens social attachments and enables cooperation. As most of our online social networking to date is based on asynchronous communication and interaction, this could spell trouble for those that prefer to engage in relationships online rather than off.

Hmmm, isn’t this quite a leap? There is a difference between being in the same physical space and doing something rhythmic in it. There is also a difference between doing something together online vs. offline. I do not see how those things are comparable.

Scientists have theorized that synchronous activities lead to group cohesion ever since the 1970s, but Stanford’s Scott Wiltermuth and Chip Heath wanted to put some backing behind this notion. In one study, the researchers led 30 participants around campus in two different conditions: one walking in step (marching), the other walking normally. Afterwards, the participants were instructed to play an experimental economics game called the “Weak Link” in which productivity is a function of the lowest level of input. Wiltermuth and Heath found that participants that walked in step were initially more likely to cooperate as a team.
In a second study, participants were instructed to read or sing the Canadian National Anthem while performing a simple activity in tandem or separately. As you’d expect from the hypotheses, individuals that sang together or acted together showed a greater level of cooperation. A third study cemented these results.

OK, that’s fine. This is why people chant, sing, dance, march, etc. There are good reasons why simultaneous rhythmic activity fosters cooperation and closeness. Have you ever been to a political rally and chanted something in unison with thousands of others? That’s building a communal spirit:

Have you ever been to a soccer game in Europe:

The game started a couple hours later as it was getting dark. It gets dark here at 4:30pm. And that was around the time the crowd began to cheer for their team. It was amazing to listen to. Imagine an entire stadium cheering together… but not the kind of cheering that we know in the States. This was not the sound of random cheers… or the periodic screams that come with doing the wave… and at no time did I ever heard the word “fence”. No, the Serbian fans were singing. They were all singing together to support their team. And their voices in unison echoed through the chilly night and into our apartment. It was astonishing. I truly believe that everyone should have the great privilege of listen to European soccer fans. Then again… I have no idea what they were singing… honestly, it could have been about a fence… but I’m not going to focus on that.

It does not matter if you are playing for Milan, Borussia, Real-Madrid or Manchester United – you have to be a professional, an amazingly self-controlled person with nerves of steel in order not to be affected by the continuous chant of 100,000 Red Star fans when playing at their stadium. The players play in sync with the audience chants, and the audience alters the chant to match the rhythm of the play. It is absolutely amazing to watch. So yes, rhythmic synchronized behavior is a great way to ensure group cohesion which is needed for attaining the group goals, e.g., of scoring goals. Or winning elections.
But now we get to the argument that does not seem to have anything to do with rhythmic behavior:

The Internet is a great enabler of asynchronicity. Instead of phone conversations or face-to-face chats, for instance, occuring in real time, instant messaging allows all parties involved to think and react at their own paces. E-mail is handled at the recipient’s leisure. The pace of social networking is dictated by the participants. Is the nature of online communication- that is, a lack of synchronicity- potentially damaging for relationships? If it takes a certain sort of tandem activity to strengthen social connections, maybe the Web is missing out big-time.
As an aside, this might also suggest why individuals that are deep into the gaming scene (e.g., MMORPGs, first person shooters, etc.) often tend to find companionship online more easily than most: perhaps playing a game online is a cooperatively kinesthetic experience that satisfies this human need for synchronicity.

Hmmm, none of this is rhythmmic activity. It is social, communal and synchronous, but it is not rhythmic. Thus, the study noted above can’t really say anything about it. A lot of the stuff online happens synchronously, in real time – Skype, chat, fast-moving discussions on blogs and forums, etc. are just as synchronous as a real-life conversation. Here, the distinction is not between rhythmic and arrhythmic, but between online and offline.
Now, a lot of online activity is centered around finding like-minded people. When you find them, and, let’s say you read their blogs regularly, after a while you start wishing to meet them in person. What do you do? You connect with them on Facebook or Dopplr.com in order to track each other’s travel so you can meet up whenever you are in the same town. You organize a Blogger MeetUp to meet like-minded people in your area, or a BloggerCon if you want to broaden the scope geographically. That is how Science Blogging Conference originated – my wish to meet other science bloggers in person.
But when we meet in person, do we engage in rhythmic behaviors (no, I don’t want to know about that kind!)? Perhaps we may raise a glass of beer or wine in a completely synchronous and rhythmic manner, but that is rare. It is not about rhythmicity, it is about physical proximity. Even most of the Flash Mob activities (see this list for examples) are rarely rhythmic – I found only one example that is synchronously rhythmic.
This is also related to my obsession with the Death Of The Office, i.e., with the world of telecommuting and coworking. Instead of having the people picked for you by others – going to the office – you pick your own friends and, whenever possible, meet them in person. You actively choose to live in the place where you can combine all your needs for a particular climate and culture, with the proximity to a substantial number of people you like to see often, although you have first discovered each other online. Then you can go with them to a soccer match and chant in sync if you want, but that’s not the point.

Blogger Of The Year

Eleven years ago, two or three guys with awesome programming skilllz sat down and almost simultaneously, and not knowing of each other at the time, wrote the first blogging software. Dave Winer was one of those guys and, like the rest of them, strongly dislikes the “who was the first blogger” frenzy that sometimes sweeps through the blogosphere. He was one of them, but nobody was “the first”.
If you read or write blogs, it is thanks to guys like Dave. If you are reading this post in an RSS feed reader, it’s because Dave invented and wrote the RSS. If you have ever been to an “unconference”, it’s probably because Dave pushed and popularized the format over the years. He can be maddeningly curmugeounly at times, but more often than not, he has profound insights and his blog is always worth reading – gives us all hope when we see that even after 11 years Dave’s blogging has not lost any of its steam.
Last year, Dave gave out his first Blogger Of The Year Award to Naked Jen. When Dave picks a winner, it is worth paying attention.
This year, Dave has announced his second Blogger Of The Year Award to Jay Rosen. And it’s a well deserved award. If you want to know how journalism works, how it is changing, where it is going and what role the blogs play in it, read the entire archives of Jay’s blog – I did.
Jay reserves his blog for longer, thoughtful pieces, so his blogging frequency is low. But he has recently started microblogging on Twitter and FriendFeed and took it by the storm (do yourself a service and start following him on those places).
Readers of my blog are probably familiar with Jay, as I tend to link to him often. On Twitter and FriendFeed he is the one I tend to pay attention the most of all:
FFstats.JPG
But now, thinking of all this in terms of science blogging community – who is the Science Blogger Of The Year? Do you need more than one category – perhaps separate Best Medical, Best Skeptical, Best Science-and-Politics, Best Lab Life, etc.?
My first nomination, in the category of The Best New Science Blogger (started writing in 2008) is SciCurious.
Nominate your favourites in the comments here.

5 Stages Of Twitter Acceptance

For people like this:
imb_5stagesoftwitter_2.jpg
From here

Education 2.0

At the Western RCAC Symposium last week:
Rodd Lucier: Fertilizing the Grass Roots:

My personal suspicions are that most attendees will fail to make effective use of any of the many tools introduced today. Even with everyone recognizing that we have a long way to go: A significant knowing-doing gap will remain!

David Warlick: So Now What Do We Do?:

Then Rodd listed some comments that he overheard during the conference, that support his concern. I’m listing them here and will try to make some suggestions that may be useful. My suggestions are indented just a bit to better distinguish them from the overheard statements.

Doug Pete: How I Saw It:

David Warlick went first with his presentation “Our Students – Our Worlds”. Eyes were opened for many as David took us inside the minds and lives of today’s youth. His famous tentacles diagram affirmed that students aren’t “human” by a traditional view! It does drive home the message that they are indeed connected at levels that we suspect but don’t totally know. (at least until the texting bill comes in…) Rather than ask folks to turn off electronic devices, David let me know before the event that he would welcome a back channel through his presentation. Gulp! What to do?

Amber MacArthur: Talking about social media – A year on the road:

But what I’ve realized over time is that it’s critical for me to update my slides based on the audience that will sit in front of me. Sounds like a pretty obvious concept, one that becomes more apparent over time (also, in the web world, trends change too quickly to rely on one deck). Since I’ve spoken to such varied groups, from teams of probiotic scientists, oil engineers, and all-grades educators, I strive to find specific social media examples that will be relevant to each crowd. This usually means I spend a lot of time researching new Web 2.0 trends, videos, articles, and tips online.

Community, Collaboration & Conversation with Amber MacArthur – listen to the podcast.

2008 EduBlog Awards winners have been announced

It is rare that I pick the winners in any contest, but this time I picked three! Congratulations to all the winners of the 2008 EduBlog Awards, but especially to my friend David Warlick who led the session on ‘blogs in science education’ at the last year’s Science Blogging Conference, and to Miss Baker’s students who will lead a ScienceOnline09 session on Science online – middle/high school perspective (or: ‘how the Facebook generation does it’?).

Einstein was smart, but Could He Play the Violin? – the winner of the synchroblogging contest

Happy Anniversary, PLoS ONE!
Today is PLoS ONE’s second anniversary and we’re celebrating by announcing that the winner of the second PLoS synchroblogging competition is SciCurious of the Neurotopia 2.0 blog.
“This fluent post captures the essence of the research and accurately communicates it in a style that resonates with both the scientific and lay community” – Liz Allen, PLoS.
Here is the winning entry, cross posted in its entirety:
====================
Einstein was smart, but Could He Play the Violin?
I already wrote one entry for PLoS ONE’s second birthday, but I’m feeling sparky today, and I think I like this paper better.
I don’t know about you guys, but when I was a sprog, my parents dragged me to music lessons. LOTS of music lessons. As of right now, I have been producing music of some type for the past 21 years straight. And I LOVE it.
Of course, I didn’t always love it. I remember my mother dragging me and my brother to lessons, making us sit down every day and practice (I was, and still am, no good with the practicing), and the fear and shakiness of recitals (heck, I still get that, and it’s been 21 years). In her time, Sci has actually “mastered” (it’s a debatable point), three different instruments (‘instruments’ is a loose term), and still uses one of them professionally on occasion. And if you can guess what they are, Sci will…do something cool. Like send you one of her favorite books. Or perhaps a tshirt with a molecule on it. Or perhaps some of her delicious cookies. Obviously, you can only guess if you don’t KNOW already (that means you, Dad). So there you go, contest open.
Anyway, years and years of music lessons. But the question is: did they do me any good? Does playing ‘Baby Mozart’ really do anything, and is anything achieved by starting your child on Suzuki when they are 2, other than the pain and misery of your child, and possibly an eventual love of music? Can it, perhaps, make me SMARTER?
ResearchBlogging.org Forgeard et al. “Practicing a musical instrument in childhood is associated with enhanced verbal ability and nonverbal reasoning” PLoS ONE, 2008.
And for the record, Einstein did play the violin. Apparently he was quite good.
There actually are several studies out there that show that techniques that you learn can “transfer” to other techniques, giving you a bit of an edge. This works best when you’re performing skills that are very similar to each other (like learning how to estimate the area of a square, and then learning how to estimate the area of a triangle). We know this happens for musicians in the development of fine motor skills. Once you’ve been playing the violin for a while, other things that require fine motor skills will come to you a bit easier (perhaps we should train all would-be surgeons on musical instruments, if you can master playing Rachmaninoff, brain surgery should be a piece of cake).
Of course, most of the studies that have been done are correlational in nature. Kids who play musical instruments have better motor skills. This could be due to the music, or the kids could play music because they have good motor skills. Good motor skills could be a development of things like the higher socio-economic class that often goes along with being taught music as a child, and thus parents are maybe able to put more effort to their development. The possibilities go on. Correlation is NOT causation.
The same thing goes for the correlation between musical learning and IQ. There was a modest correlation, but it could be just the effect of the extra lessons the kids were receiving, resulting in more time spent on focused attention and mastering a skill. Significant correlations have also been shown for music and verbal and language skills. Music lessons have been found to be correlated with increases in reading ability and phonetic comprehension. This actually leads me to a question: if language, reading, and phonetic comprehension are related to the pitch and tone of words, do children who are tone deaf have a harder time mastering reading and verbal skills? I think this might warrant a future PubMed search.
Unfortunately, all the previous tests tended to focus on the “transfer” of skills to not very related fields, like IQ. So in this study, the authors wanted to look at the effects of music learning on “near” transfers, skill closely related to music training: spatial reasoning, verbal abilities, nonverbal, and mathematical. They also looked for VERY closely related skills: fine motor control and auditory skill.
They grabbed a whole bunch of kids around 8-11 years old. Some played musical instruments, some didn’t (one of the problems with this study to me is that the control group is a good bit small than the instrumental group, 41 musicians vs 18 non). Kids were controlled for the socio-economic class of the parents. Average length of music training was close to five years. They also divided the kids up by whether or not they got Suzuki training, but ended up grouping them together, as Suzuki effects were no different from other instrumentalists.
Dang, they didn’t graph their data. Well, I shall fix. Because I can. People should be so grateful I do all their graphing…
graph1.png
There you go. So, as you can see from the graph (the pretty, pretty graph), musical kids scored a lot better on fine motor skills for left and right hand (the first two sets of bars). This is pretty expected, if you’re using fine motor skills a lot, presumably you’ll get better at them. The musical kids also did better when distinguishing tones and following melody lines, though interestingly, they didn’t show any improvements in rhythm. I wonder if this has anything to do with the kids of music the kids were studying. There wasn’t a single drummer in the bunch, it was all either piano or stringed instruments.
And finally, the kids with musical training scored a lot better (I know it doesn’t look like it, but the MANCOVA analysis uncovered a difference) on vocabulary testing. They outperformed their non-musical counterparts in both verbal ability (vocabulary) and non-verbal reasoning skills. They didn’t find any differences in math or spatial reasoning.
The authors hypothesize that music training may transfer skills to some other related domains. The other hypothesis is that music training doesn’t enhance a specific skill set, but rather your general intellectual ability. This would mean they would score higher on every test given. In fact, they DID score higher, but most of the time the scores didn’t reach significance.
Still, remember this is correlation, not causation. Families were of similar socio-ecoomic class and education, but that doesn’t mean they are all similar parents. Kids who take music lessons may have parents that are more involved in their intellectual development. Kids that persist in taking music lessons for a good chunk of time may have superior motivation. Correlation =/= causation.
But it’s still a cool paper, and no matter what, it’s quite clear that music lessons didn’t HURT. Time to tape your poor child to the piano bench!
Marie Forgeard, Ellen Winner, Andrea Norton, Gottfried Schlaug (2008). Practicing a Musical Instrument in Childhood is Associated with Enhanced Verbal Ability and Nonverbal Reasoning PLoS ONE, 3 (10) DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0003566

Pam Spaulding on Waynesutton.tv

Pam Spaulding and Wayne Sutton discuss blogs, election, Rick Warren and more:

Location: Carrboro Creative Coworking space. Who needs Silicon Valley when there are people and facilities like this right here in North Carolina?

PLoS ONE Second Birthday Synchroblogging Competition – final list of entries

The deadline for the PLoS ONE Second Birthday Synchroblogging Competition is now officially over. Here are all the posts written for the competition – 18 posts, written by 17 people, covering 22 PLoS ONE articles. Liz, Dave, Jason and I will be reading them today and will announce the winner as soon as we can:
Barn Owl of Guadalupe Storm-Petrel: DNA Repair During Spermatogenesis: Gimme a Break! about the article: Deletion of Genes Implicated in Protecting the Integrity of Male Germ Cells Has Differential Effects on the Incidence of DNA Breaks and Germ Cell Loss
Ed Yong of Not Exactly Rocket Science: Predatory slime mould freezes prey in large groups about the article: Exploitation of Other Social Amoebae by Dictyostelium caveatum
Scicurious of Neurotopia (version 2.0): Why Did the Dolphin Carry a Sponge? about the article: Why Do Dolphins Carry Sponges?
Scicurious of Neurotopia (version 2.0): Einstein was smart, but Could He Play the Violin? about the article: Practicing a Musical Instrument in Childhood is Associated with Enhanced Verbal Ability and Nonverbal Reasoning
Allyson of Systems Biology & Bioinformatics (Semantically Speaking) on One way for RDF to help a bioinformatician build a database: S3DB (also cross-posted on The mind wobbles: One way for RDF to help a bioinformatician build a database: S3DB) about the article: A Semantic Web Management Model for Integrative Biomedical Informatics
Simon Cockell of Fuzzier Logic: Contextual Specificity in Peptide-Mediated Protein Interactions about the article: Contextual Specificity in Peptide-Mediated Protein Interactions
Mike Haubrich of Tangled Up in Blue Guy : Small-Bodied Humans on Palau – A Disagreement about the articles: Small-Bodied Humans from Palau, Micronesia and Small Scattered Fragments Do Not a Dwarf Make: Biological and Archaeological Data Indicate that Prehistoric Inhabitants of Palau Were Normal Sized
Martin of The Lay Scientist : Catching Snowflakes: The Media and Public Perceptions of Disease about the article: Medicine in the Popular Press: The Influence of the Media on Perceptions of Disease
Nir London of Macromolecular Modeling Blog: Model for the Peptide-Free Conformation of Class II MHC Proteins about the article: Model for the Peptide-Free Conformation of Class II MHC Proteins
Greg Laden of Greg Laden’s blog: How to make an elephant turn invisible about the articles: Risk and Ethical Concerns of Hunting Male Elephant: Behavioural and Physiological Assays of the Remaining Elephants, Roadless Wilderness Area Determines Forest Elephant Movements in the Congo Basin, Elephant (Loxodonta africana) Home Ranges in Sabi Sand Reserve and Kruger National Park: A Five-Year Satellite Tracking Study and Population and Individual Elephant Response to a Catastrophic Fire in Pilanesberg National Park.
The Neurocritic of The Neurocritic blog: Can You Reread My Mind? about the article: Using fMRI Brain Activation to Identify Cognitive States Associated with Perception of Tools and Dwellings
Moneduloides of Moneduloides blog: A trypanosome and a tsetse walk into a bar… about the article: Factors Affecting Trypanosome Maturation in Tsetse Flies
El-Ho of Pas d’il y’on que nous: The Etiology of Fear about the article: Coupled Contagion Dynamics of Fear and Disease: Mathematical and Computational Explorations
Ian of Further thoughts: Evolution and conservation in Mexican dry forests about the article: Sources and Sinks of Diversification and Conservation Priorities for the Mexican Tropical Dry Forest
Alun Salt of Archaeoastronomy: If you put a snail shell to your ear can you hear the sound of your thoughts? about the article: Climate Change, Genetics or Human Choice: Why Were the Shells of Mankind’s Earliest Ornament Larger in the Pleistocene Than in the Holocene?
Michael Tobis of Only In It For The Gold: The Singularity about the article: Ecosystem Overfishing in the Ocean
PodBlack Cat of PodBlack blog: Pet Ownership – Maybe Not For Better Health, Perhaps Sense Of Humour? about the article: To Have or Not To Have a Pet for Better Health?
Juan Nunez-Iglesias of I Love Symposia!: Randomise your samples! about the article: Randomization in Laboratory Procedure Is Key to Obtaining Reproducible Microarray Results
Not in competition, because Dave Munger of Cognitive Daily is one of the judges: Make sure you get some sleep — or at least some caffeine — before that test about the article: Sleep Loss Produces False Memories

PLoS ONE Second Birthday Synchroblogging Competition – entries so far

The entries for the PLoS ONE Second Birthday Synchroblogging Competition have been coming in all day. Here are the posts I found so far. If you have posted and your post is not on this list, let me know by e-mail. I will keep updating this post and moving it to the top until the competition closes at dawn tomorrow:
Ed Yong of Not Exactly Rocket Science: Predatory slime mould freezes prey in large groups about the article: Exploitation of Other Social Amoebae by Dictyostelium caveatum
Scicurious of Neurotopia (version 2.0): Why Did the Dolphin Carry a Sponge? about the article: Why Do Dolphins Carry Sponges?
Scicurious of Neurotopia (version 2.0): Einstein was smart, but Could He Play the Violin? about the article: Practicing a Musical Instrument in Childhood is Associated with Enhanced Verbal Ability and Nonverbal Reasoning
Allyson of Systems Biology & Bioinformatics (Semantically Speaking) on One way for RDF to help a bioinformatician build a database: S3DB (also cross-posted on The mind wobbles: One way for RDF to help a bioinformatician build a database: S3DB) about the article: A Semantic Web Management Model for Integrative Biomedical Informatics
Simon Cockell of Fuzzier Logic: Contextual Specificity in Peptide-Mediated Protein Interactions about the article: Contextual Specificity in Peptide-Mediated Protein Interactions
Mike Haubrich of Tangled Up in Blue Guy : Small-Bodied Humans on Palau – A Disagreement about the articles: Small-Bodied Humans from Palau, Micronesia and Small Scattered Fragments Do Not a Dwarf Make: Biological and Archaeological Data Indicate that Prehistoric Inhabitants of Palau Were Normal Sized
Martin of The Lay Scientist : Catching Snowflakes: The Media and Public Perceptions of Disease about the article: Medicine in the Popular Press: The Influence of the Media on Perceptions of Disease
Nir London of Macromolecular Modeling Blog: Model for the Peptide-Free Conformation of Class II MHC Proteins about the article: Model for the Peptide-Free Conformation of Class II MHC Proteins
Greg Laden of Greg Laden’s blog: How to make an elephant turn invisible about the articles: Risk and Ethical Concerns of Hunting Male Elephant: Behavioural and Physiological Assays of the Remaining Elephants, Roadless Wilderness Area Determines Forest Elephant Movements in the Congo Basin, Elephant (Loxodonta africana) Home Ranges in Sabi Sand Reserve and Kruger National Park: A Five-Year Satellite Tracking Study and Population and Individual Elephant Response to a Catastrophic Fire in Pilanesberg National Park.
The Neurocritic of The Neurocritic blog: Can You Reread My Mind? about the article: Using fMRI Brain Activation to Identify Cognitive States Associated with Perception of Tools and Dwellings
Moneduloides of Moneduloides blog: A trypanosome and a tsetse walk into a bar… about the article: Factors Affecting Trypanosome Maturation in Tsetse Flies
El-Ho of Pas d’il y’on que nous: The Etiology of Fear about the article: Coupled Contagion Dynamics of Fear and Disease: Mathematical and Computational Explorations
Ian of Further thoughts: Evolution and conservation in Mexican dry forests about the article: Sources and Sinks of Diversification and Conservation Priorities for the Mexican Tropical Dry Forest
Alun Salt of Archaeoastronomy: If you put a snail shell to your ear can you hear the sound of your thoughts? about the article: Climate Change, Genetics or Human Choice: Why Were the Shells of Mankind’s Earliest Ornament Larger in the Pleistocene Than in the Holocene?
Michael Tobis of Only In It For The Gold: The Singularity about the article: Ecosystem Overfishing in the Ocean
PodBlack Cat of PodBlack blog: Pet Ownership – Maybe Not For Better Health, Perhaps Sense Of Humour? about the article: To Have or Not To Have a Pet for Better Health?
Juan Nunez-Iglesias of I Love Symposia!: Randomise your samples! about the article: Randomization in Laboratory Procedure Is Key to Obtaining Reproducible Microarray Results

Synchroblogging contest….

…has started.

Croatian Facebook Group Results in Arrest

That’s interesting:

Croatia currently has over 400,000 users on Facebook and that is more than a 15 percent growth over last month according to our own internal statistics. Facebook tends to be one of the first locations that younger generations turn to for expressing their political frustrations. There is no doubt that Facebook will continue to be a center for political expression.
Svetlana Gladkova suggests that the primary reason he was arrested was not simply that he created the Facebook group but that, “he is actually the president of one of the local branches of the youth of SDP (social democratic party) which is in opposition to the government in Croatia.” Niksa Klecak was eventually released due to a lack of evidence after being initially arrested for keeping “Nazi symbols and propaganda at home.”

This is not me

This guy is an impostor! He is (or was) a soccer player, but if you google his name, most of the first 100 search hits are not about him at all…. (smile).

PLoS – on Twitter and FriendFeed

Despite online debates – which one is better: Twitter or FriendFeed, sometimes serious, sometimes tongue-in-cheek – the fact is that these are two different animals altogether. Asking one to make a choice between the two is like asking one to make a choice between e-mail and YouTube – those are two different services that do different things. Thus, they are to be used differently.
Twitter is a communications tool (or a ‘human application’). You can broadcast (one-to-many), you can eavesdrop (many-to-one) or you can converse (one-to-one, either in public or through Direct Messages). But most importantly – you have to mix a little bit of all three. If all you do is throw your RSS feed into Twitter, i.e., only broadcast, then you are doing it wrong. In Twitter, you have to engage with others on a regular basis – listening, talking, conversing. Reciprocating. Not building a fan-club, but a network of friends. As I mentioned yesterday:

You will be measured by the size of your network – who is your (mutual – it has to be mutual!) friend.

You know that, after a long time of resistance, I recently succumbed and started using Twitter – find me here. I find it useful and I am trying to balance the three modes (broadcast, eavesdrop, converse) as best I can. I can definitely see the allure, especially for people who use mobile devices (I don’t – I spend too much time online anyway and need to reconnect with the physicalness of the world when I am not at the computer, thus I disabled the online access on my cell phone and have never texted a message in my life).
People who follow me on Twitter, probably all of them, know where I work. One out of 20 tweets or so have something to do with PLoS. My profile links to my blog, on which it is immediately obvious where I work. I don’t need to pull in the RSS feed from PLoS to be effective as a “face of PLoS” on Twitter.
But, even better, I am not alone – Liz Allen is now on Twitter, too, as an “official” face of PLoS. And, if you check out the PLoS twitter profile and click on “Follow”, you will see that she totally groks it. Her tweets do not have that horrible “PR feel” about them that some of the business marketers erroneously use. So I hope you will subscribe.
FriendFeed, on the other hand, is an aggregator. It is as much or as little of a conversation as you want it to be. You do not have to balance the three modes and you can use it in one of the modes only and it can still work for you.
I have joined FriendFeed some time ago and I find it extremely useful. This is where I find half of my “bloggable” material these days – the eavesdropping mode. I do the broadcast mode by importing the feeds from my blog and my Twitter. I use the conversation mode by “liking” and/or commenting on other people’s stuff. As with Twitter, people who follow me mostly know where I work and are used to seeing an occasional PLoS-related entry from me without considering it to be PR spamming.
But what FriendFeed allows me to do in addition, is make a room. You can join the room or not, depending on your interest. But this way I do not have to spam anyone who subscribes to my main feed. You can join the PLoS ONE room if you want to see the PLoS ONE feed imported. Whenever there is a good blog post covering one of the PLoS ONE papers, I add the permalink to that post as a comment on that paper’s feed in the room (feel free to do it yourself if you blog about our papers). Occasionally I may place additional news or links there as well. That way, I can be myself yet still do the marketing for PLoS that I need to do. And nobody’s complained so far. You should give it a try.

Blogging contests of various kinds

Are you writing your posts yet? Hurry up, the PLoS ONE Second Birthday Synchroblogging Competition is in two days!
There are also just a couple of days left to vote in the 2008 Edublog Awards, so if you have not done it yet, do it now.
And be patient with us – there are many, many good entries to choose from for The Open Laboratory 2008. The judging process is going on smoothly and the winners will be announced pretty soon.

ABATC on Rocketboom.tv (video)

Today’s Rocketboom mentions the NCSU symposium on obese zoo animals and links to me:

Cool!

Top Three Twitter Accounts from around the world

This guy compiled a list of Top Three Twitter Accounts from a number of different countries. Of course, it is impossible to make such a list perfectly – many people never put their country when registering, others have moved, others have multiple accounts, etc., but nonetheless, it is a nice list of people you may want to check out and follow if you want to broaden your international horizons.
A number of countries are missing, though. There is no Serbia, for instance. But you can find a full deck of cards of Twitter users just from Belgrade, Serbia here.

Future of the Internet aka Future of Society

Jeff Cohen was one of the people interviewed for this article in Raleigh News & Observer today about the Future of the Internet:

In 2020, powerful mobile phones will rule, privacy will erode further and the line between work and home life will be faint, if not obliterated.
That’s what 578 technology gurus see in their crystal balls, according to a new report by the Pew Internet & American Life Project. The survey, “Future of the Internet III,” conducted by Pew and Elon University, envisions amazing advances in mobile devices, virtual reality, voice and touch technology — possibly even communication between mind and machine.
But will the innovation lead to better lives?
Maybe not.
“There is an undercurrent of worry in these experts about whether people will use the technology for good or for ill,” says Lee Rainie, director of the Pew project.
Although cheap, accessible technology will spread throughout the world, it won’t necessarily level the economic playing field or lead to better social understanding, the technologists believe.
In an always-on world, career choice will be key, says Janna Anderson, associate professor at Elon. “If you’re going to be living your work, you need to find something that suits you so well it won’t seem like work.”

Read the whole thing.

More on Pulitzers for online reporting

Remember this?
Now Simon Ovens interviewed several key players in this game – Pulitzers Open to Online-Only Entrants — But Who Qualifies? It’s longish, but worth your attention:

He did, however, confirm that a blog could hypothetically qualify. “If one or two people call their website a text-based newspaper, would it be eligible?” he said. “Blogs tend to fall into three categories. There are news reporting blogs, there are commentary blogs, and there’s a hybrid version of the two. If they’re text-based and meet our criteria, then they probably could compete. But it would be up to them to satisfy the criteria.”

The best description of a Troll

Is here. Bookmark for future reference.

Scienceblogs.com on NYTimes

If you go to the Science page of New York Times, starting today, you will see on the right side, just below the “Most popular” box a brand new widget – “Selected Posts From Sb Scienceblogs” that looks like this:
NYT%20Sb%20widget.JPG
Soon, we’ll reciprocate the link by linking to NYTimes science content as well. A nice way for old media and new media to integrate with each other, send readers to each other and educate the general audience about the difference in format, form, style, voice and quality between the old and new media. Everybody wins.

Interview with Michael Nielsen

Sam Dupuis (yes, the son of John) contacted Michael Nielsen and posted a nice, smart, long blog interview. Check it out.

Triangle Blogger Meetup

Last night was the first time we had a Triangle blogger meetup at the new Carrboro Creative Coworking place. Wayne Sutton, John Rees, Rob G, Jeff Cohen, Jim Buie, Brian Russell and I got together and talked about Twitter and FriendFeed, about engaging the commenters and moderating comments, and many other things. That was fun.

Ah, finally some useful stuff done with math modeling…. ;-)

YouTube Usage Decoded:

Why are certain videos on YouTube watched millions of times while 90 percent of the contributions find only the odd viewer? A new study reveals that increased attention in social systems like the YouTube community follows particular, recurrent patterns that can be represented using mathematical models.
The Internet platform YouTube is a stomping ground for scientists looking to investigate the fine mechanism of the attention spiral in social systems. How is it possible, for example, that one YouTube video of a previously unknown comedian from Ohio can be viewed over ten million times in the space of two weeks and 103 million times during its total two-year running time? The video was aired on the most popular television networks in America and the comedian Judson Laipply has meanwhile become a YouTube star. Social scientists, economists, mathematicians and even physicists are fascinated by this “herding”, as the herdlike behavior in social networks is often termed, on YouTube.

Read the rest, it’s very interesting (and applicable to other media, not just YouTube).