Alan Alda at the N.C. Zoo

He was here last Tuesday for filming of a scientific documentary for PBS:

He was doing important work on an upcoming PBS special “The Human Spark”, a three-part documentary about what makes us human, due to air next year.
Alda, who also met with researchers at Duke University on Monday, started filming last week and said he will tape additional segments in France, England and South Africa, as well as in the Pacific Northwest. Duke primatologist Brian Hare suggested the NC Zoo as a shooting location, zoo spokesman Rod Hackney said.

Turning the Tables on Me: Interview on the Confessions of a Science Librarian

It was bound to happen sooner or later. People seem to really like my series of interviews with the participants of the Science Blogging Conference. So, as he promised, John Dupuis turned the tables and interviewed me, even using some of the same questions that I tend to ask. Read the interview here.

Scienceblogs interview with Felice Frankel

My Scifoo friend and prize-winning science photographer Felice Frankel just gave a great interview to Ginny on Page 3.14.

News from JoVE

A new deal: Wiley-Blackwell and JoVE Unveil Groundbreaking Online Video Publications
Moshe on TV:

Today’s carnivals

The new Carnival of Space is up on Observations from Missy’s Window
The 82nd Skeptics’ Circle is up on Happy Jihad’s House of Pancakes

Think of a Dust-Free Keypad: Interview with Rose Reis

Rose Reis interviewed me in person on the Sunday morning right after the second Science Blogging Conference in January. Then, I got scooped for the interview. But I will not be deterred – so here is, finally, the exclusive interview with Rose for A Blog Around The Clock:
Welcome to A Blog Around The Clock. Would you, please, tell my readers a little bit more about yourself? Who are you? What is your scientific background? What is your Real World job?
Hi, Bora! I am your biggest fan! Apart from that, I am a program specialist at the INFO Project, at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. My Real World job actually includes blogging–how lucky am I? I work on various other projects, including helping to build and manage an online social networking site for international family planning program managers and researchers, the Elements of Successful Family Planning Programs .
Prior to coming to live in Baltimore last summer, I worked in magazine journalism in New York. But I got my blogging start a few years back under the moniker “Golap Golightly” when volunteering in Rajasthan, India for the Veerni Project — and that’s when I became interested in public health. The project brings reproductive health services to women and girls living in remote desert regions, as well as information about HIV/AIDS prevention and family planning. Blogging was a great way to get friends and family engaged in the work the NGO does, and it whetted my appetite to know more about public health. So I came to work here at Hopkins, and attend class in the department of Population, Family and Reproductive Health .
Rose%20Reis%20interview%20pic.JPGWhat do you want to do/be when (and if ever) you grow up?
Peter Pan. Actually I’m pretty pumped that I get paid to blog about health topics that I care about. I used to write about pricey leather duffles, and that was ok, but now I get to interview folks like gorgeous Purnima Mane, UNFPA’s deputy executive director, Margaret Neuse, the massively influential former director of USAID’s Population and Reproductive Health, and Robert Blum, who is the charismatic head of the Hopkins department that focuses on family planning. These videotaped interviews will go on the Elements of Successful Family Planning Programs Web site. Then I’ll get to blog about how great it was to meet them, and how cool Purnima’s bangle collection is.
What is the INFO Project?
So… The INFO Project, based at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health’s Center for Communication Programs, envisions a world of interconnected communities where shared reproductive health information improves and saves lives. Our mission is to support health care decision-making in developing countries by providing global leadership in reproductive health knowledge management. Through collaborative approaches and the innovative use of sustainable technology, we:
* Inform those who influence and improve health care and public health,
* Enhance the capacity of communities and organizations to obtain, adapt, and generate knowledge and best practices, and
* Connect communities, organizations, and individuals locally and globally to facilitate knowledge sharing and dialogue.
To accomplish these goals, INFO publishes reports (Population Reports, Global Health Technical Briefs) tailored to audiences who work on reproductive health programs in developing countries – program managers, researchers, policymakers and health care providers. We also support databases that house the latest evidence-based information on these topics, which we make available at no cost and in various ways (Listservs, CD-ROMS, handbooks) to our audiences in resource-poor settings.
We are supported by USAID.
What are the challenges in providing information to and from people in the developing world?
Whew… Well, during a recent online forum on the Implementing Best Practices Knowledge Gateway, we had a great participant from Ghana, Samuel Deh, apologize profusely to participants for being silent during three days–they had had a power failure.
Recently, I interviewed Jonathan Ndzi, a UNFPA emergency reproductive health coordinator living in Senegal, about his work overseeing service delivery in conflict settings. He said he’s completely off line when he’s in the field, maybe in refugee camps, which is how much of his time is spent in the 12-15 countries he oversees.
Internet can be a gamble, but even phones don’t work reliably–mobiles are usually better. We are looking more at mobile phone outreach and I learned recently that in 2006, Africa added more than 50 million mobile phone subscribers for a total of nearly 200 million users.
There are other challenges–we are looking to do text messaging outreach to health workers in Ethiopia, where my colleague Katie Richey is being transferred (she flies out today) to manage the project I mentioned above, Elements of Successful Family Planning Programs. But Amharic, the primary language, has 300 characters, as compared with 26 Roman characters. So Nokia recently introduced an Amharic keypad that is seamless to protect it from rural environmental dust.
For lower-level health providers, barriers to exchanging information may include language barriers or illiteracy.
What is the difference between writing a personal science/health blog and running a multi-author blog that serves as a communication outlet for an organization?
I could post every hour on the hour, but no one wants to read that. The challenge is getting others to be as excited as I am about the so-called social Web. Many people are–they read blogs, they’re on Facebook–but they still think it requires a strategic outline and several drafts to write a blog post.
So personal blogs and institutional blogs (wow, that sounds boring) are pretty different. You could say multi-author blogs make for an inconsistent tone, and a variety of posting subjects, but I think those are advantages. It also becomes a conversation between colleagues who might not be working on the same project–an open conversation, to which there are sometimes unexpected contributions. We now have more than ten people contributing to the blog. They range from our deputy director Peggy D’Adamo to our materials cataloging expert Judy Mahachek. It’s great because everyone has different expertise, and varied field experiences to share–my officemate Seth who worked with refugees in Thailand shared the Burmese phrase for family planning.
Is there anything that happened at this Conference – a session, something someone said or did or wrote – that will change the way you think about science communication, or something that you will take with you to your job, blog-reading and blog-writing?
My head was threatening to spin off with ideas by the end of the weekend. To prevent that from happening, I blogged about it here.
Our chat at Raleigh’s New World Coffee House about “institution” blogging was pretty awesome. I have the paper I scribbled notes on here. The lessons I picked up are helping me build blogging capacity here at INFO.
It was so nice to see you at the Conference and thank you for the interview.
Thank YOU!
============================
Check out all the interviews in this series.

Happy birthday Time Zones

On this day in 1884 the International Prime Meridian Conference established a system of standard time zones:

In 1884 an International Prime Meridian Conference was held in Washington D.C. to standardize time and select the Prime Meridian. The conference selected the longitude of Greenwich, England as zero degrees longitude and established the 24 time zones based on the Prime Meridian. Although the time zones had been established, not all countries switched immediately. Though most U.S. states began to adhere to the Pacific, Mountain, Central, and Eastern time zones by 1895, Congress didn’t make the use of these time zones mandatory until the Standard Time Act of 1918.

SCONC/BlogTogether joint meetup

Yesterday we had our first blogger meetup since the Conference, the Triangle bloggers jointly with the NC science communicators. Who was there? Anton Zuiker, Russ Campbell, Brian Russell, Ernie Hood, Chris Brodie, Abel Pharmboy and Lenore Ramm who took the pictures. We talked about plans for foodblogging, wineblogging and blogging101 events, about local jobs in academia, about the next Conference, about Sigma Xi, about Eve Carson (the helicopters were in the sky above, helping catch the second suspect), and about Carrboro Coworking. Fun was had by all (the weather was gorgeous as well – 65 degrees). Next meetup is in two weeks, organized by the good folks of Orange Politics.

Another hit-job on blogs

David Neiwert:

But I also noticed this line:
“Unlike traditional, mainstream media, blogs often adopt a specific point of view. Critics complain they can contain unchecked facts, are poorly edited and use unreliable sources.”
And this distinguishes them from the mainstream press exactly … how?

Athenae:

What critics? We do not know. The reporter doesn’t tell us. Apparently it’s one of those things, like “the sky is blue” and “Democrats are weak on national security” that is so obvious we don’t need to cite a source of any kind to just blurt it out there and attribute it to “critics.” And all blogs, apparently, are subject to all these complaints. Equally. At once.

The Spitzer files…

Lindsay Beyerstein: Spitzer linked to prostitution ring
Spitzer’s Nixonian hubris
Sex and taxes: How Spitzer allegedly got caught
Spitzer and Suspicious Activity Reports and sex stings
Enough is enough: Feds probe Spitzer’s records back to 1999
Amanda Marcotte: Cut out the stand by your man routine
Ask for facts, get the facts
Elizabeth Pisani: Spitzer’s true folly
Spitzer: cementing a cross-party tradition of hypocrisy
Spitzer: some better ideas for the lapsed abolitionist
Calling “These women”: tell us about your disorders…
Scott Swenson: RealTime: Prostitution Pledge for Politicians
Ed Cone: Aarfy never paid for it in his life

ClockQuotes

Time is an illusion, lunchtime doubly so.
– Douglas Noel Adams

My picks from ScienceDaily

Insect’s Sensory Data Tells A New Story About Neural Networks:

A group of researchers has developed a novel way to view the world through the eyes of a common fly and partially decode the insect’s reactions to changes in the world around it. The research fundamentally alters earlier beliefs about how neural networks function and could provide the basis for intelligent computers that mimic biological processes.

One In Four Teenage Girls In U.S. Has Sexually Transmitted Disease, CDC Study Shows:

A new CDC study estimates that one in four (26 percent) young women between the ages of 14 and 19 in the United States – or 3.2 million teenage girls – is infected with at least one of the most common sexually transmitted diseases (human papillomavirus (HPV), chlamydia, herpes simplex virus, and trichomoniasis). The study, presented today at the 2008 National STD Prevention Conference, is the first to examine the combined national prevalence of common STDs among adolescent women in the United States, and provides the clearest picture to date of the overall STD burden in adolescent women.

Climate Change Predicted To Have Major Impact On Transportation Infrastructure And Operations:

While every mode of transportation in the U.S. will be affected as the climate changes, potentially the greatest impact on transportation systems will be flooding of roads, railways, transit systems, and airport runways in coastal areas because of rising sea levels and surges brought on by more intense storms, says a new report from the National Research Council. Though the impacts of climate change will vary by region, it is certain they will be widespread and costly in human and economic terms, and will require significant changes in the planning, design, construction, operation, and maintenance of transportation systems.

Startling Discovery About Photosynthesis: Many Marine Microorganism Skip Carbon Dioxide And Oxygen Step:

A startling discovery by scientists at the Carnegie Institution puts a new twist on photosynthesis, arguably the most important biological process on Earth. Photosynthesis by plants, algae, and some bacteria supports nearly all living things by producing food from sunlight, and in the process these organisms release oxygen and absorb carbon dioxide. But two studies by Arthur Grossman and colleagues*+ reported in Biochimica et Biophysica Acta and Limnology and Oceanography suggest that certain marine microorganisms have evolved a way to break the rules–they get a significant proportion of their energy without a net release of oxygen or uptake of carbon dioxide. This discovery impacts not only scientists’ basic understanding of photosynthesis, but importantly, it may also impact how microorganisms in the oceans affect rising levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide.

Evidence Of Ice Age Hunters: 28 Palaeolithic Handaxes Found In North Sea:

An amazing haul of 28 flint hand-axes, dated by archaeologists to be around 100,000 years-old, have been unearthed in gravel from a licensed marine aggregate dredging area 13km off Great Yarmouth.

Sperm-Check Home Test Receives FDA Approval:

Technology developed at the University of Virginia could soon have a dramatic impact on male contraception practices throughout the U.S. Earlier this year, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved SpermCheck Vasectomy, a home test that confirms men’s post-vasectomy sterility and is based on discoveries made at U.Va.

Which Came First, Social Dominance Or Big Brains? Wasps May Tell:

There’s new evidence supporting the idea that bigger brains are better. A study of a tropical wasp suggests that the brainpower required to be dominant drives brain capacity.

Today’s carnivals

Four Stone Hearth: Volume 36 is up on Afarensis
Carnival of the Liberals is up on Tangled Up in Blue Guy
The 162nd edition of the Carnival of Education is up on Learn Me Good

Start Them Early: Interview with Karen Ventii

Karen Ventii is one of my SciBlings – her blog is Science To Life. At the second Science Blogging Conference in January she co-moderated a panel on Gender and Race in Science: online and offline, relevant to the discussion of racial diversity that is ongoing here on Scienceblogs right now.
Welcome to A Blog Around The Clock. Would you, please, tell my readers a little bit more about yourself? Who are you?
My name is Karen Ventii & I come from Ghana.
What is your scientific background?
I have a B.S and an M.S in Biology and I’m currently getting my Ph.D. in Biochemistry from Emory University. My graduate research is in the area of cancer biology. I am characterizing a tumor suppressor called BRCA1-associated Protein 1 (BAP1).
KV-Interview%20pic.jpg
What is your Real World job?
Although grad school is my full time job right now, I consider myself a science writer. I am the communications coordinator for Georgia Bio’s Emerging Leader’s Network (ELN) and recently helped found the Science Writers Association of Emory (SWAE). I have also started doing more freelance science writing and I am looking forward to becoming a full time medical journalist when I graduate (which will be soon, I hope) 🙂
When and how did you discover science blogs?
I stumbled upon it while browsing the internet about 2 years ago.
What are some of your favorites?
Aetiology & Cognitive Daily.
You are one of the minority(?) of the female science bloggers who blogs under the full name. How does that restrict what you write about or not? Was that ever a source of any problems for you either online or offline?
It hasn’t really restricted what I write about and hasn’t been a problem yet. I hope it remains this way.
At the panel on Gender and Race in science online and offline, there was, unfortunately, very little talk about race.
Discussing race can be a touchy subject so it’s not surprising that there was little talk on the subject at the conference.
What can be done to get more African American kids excited about science as a career?
That is a very broad question and I honestly don’t have the answer. I can only respond based on my personal experiences. I think that developing an excitement about science starts at a young age. I was encouraged to study science by my parents and later developed a love for it. When I was old enough to make my own life choices I CHOSE to pursue a science career.
Is blogging with your picture up one of the ways to encourage people of all races to enjoy science?
I doubt that simply “seeing” the picture of a minority blogger will encourage other minorities to “enjoy science”. However, it may help and if it encourages them to, say, take a stab at science blogging then that’s even better.
Is there anything that happened at this Conference – a session, something someone said or did or wrote – that will change the way you think about science communication, or something that you will take with you to your job, blog-reading and blog-writing?
I gained a lot of valuable information from Dave Munger’s session on “How to build interactivity into your blog”
It was so nice to meet you and thank you for the interview.
============================
Check out all the interviews in this series.

Broken Pipeline

Check the website and download the PDFs:

An unprecedented five consecutive years of stagnant funding for the National Institutes of Health is putting America at risk–slowing the pace of medical advances, risking the future health of Americans, discouraging our best and brightest researchers, and threatening America’s global leadership in biomedical research. Unfortunately, President Bush’s budget proposal recommends a sixth year of flat funding for the NIH in 2009.
On March 11, 2008, a group of seven concerned academic research institutions, released a new report–A Broken Pipeline? Flat Funding of the NIH Puts a Generation of Science at Risk (http://brokenpipeline.org/brokenpipeline.pdf) –warning that America stands to lose a generation of young researchers and the cures they could discover if current NIH funding trends continue. The report features the voices of 12 junior researchers from institutions across the country who, despite their exceptional qualifications and noteworthy research, attest to the funding difficulties they and their peers are experiencing. Such difficulties, they say, are negatively impacting their work as well as science in general, and causing many young scientists to abandon academic research.

Post-doc with a leading Sleep research group

POSTDOCTORAL FELLOWSHIP OPPORTUNITY in SLEEP MEDICINE
Charles A. Czeisler, Steven W. Lockley, Christopher P. Landrigan, Laura K. Barger
Harvard Work Hours, Health and Safety Group
Division of Sleep Medicine, Brigham & Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School
The Harvard Work Hours Health and Safety Group focuses on understanding the consequences of extended work hours and disordered sleep schedules on health and safety across a range of professions and populations. We also develop and test countermeasures to prevent the increased risk of accidents and injury for both worker health and public safety with the long-term aim of providing data to inform evidence-based policy and legislative decisions. Recently, we have addressed the impact of reducing extended duration (>24 h) work shifts on physician health and patient safety and developed and tested a comprehensive sleep disorders screening and fatigue management program in several police forces.
We seek a post-doctoral fellow to join our team who will participate in ongoing projects and develop new research initiatives. These projects will primarily be ‘field-based’ programs involving data collection under real-world conditions but conducted using robust clinical trial designs. The Division of Sleep Medicine is interdisciplinary, with members from backgrounds in physiology, psychology, medicine, and mathematics and the successful candidate will be encouraged to collaborate within and outside the Division as they pursue their research interests. The rich environment of the Division of Sleep Medicine (http://sleep.med.harvard.edu) offers many opportunities for career development and education.
The candidate will have knowledge of clinical study design and experimental statistics. Candidates with experience in field- and/or laboratory based clinical trials are encouraged to apply. A background in Sleep Medicine is desirable but not required. An educational program in Sleep Medicine will be provided which the candidate will be expected to attend. The initial appointment will be for 2 years, renewable annually thereafter.
Interested candidates should send a letter of interest, curriculum vitae, and contact information for three references in hard copy and electronic format to:
Steven W. Lockley PhD
Division of Sleep Medicine
Brigham and Women’s Hospital
221 Longwood Ave
Boston MA 02115
Email: slockley@hms.harvard.edu

ClockQuotes

It is quite hard at times to distinguish a genius from a lunatic.
– Dorothy Thompson

New and Exciting in PLoS ONE

There are 48 new articles published in PLoS ONE this week. Rate, comment, send trackbacks….
The Phylogeny of the Four Pan-American MtDNA Haplogroups: Implications for Evolutionary and Disease Studies:

Only a limited number of complete mitochondrial genome sequences belonging to Native American haplogroups were available until recently, which left America as the continent with the least amount of information about sequence variation of entire mitochondrial DNAs. In this study, a comprehensive overview of all available complete mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) genomes of the four pan-American haplogroups A2, B2, C1, and D1 is provided by revising the information scattered throughout GenBank and the literature, and adding 14 novel mtDNA sequences. The phylogenies of haplogroups A2, B2, C1, and D1 reveal a large number of sub-haplogroups but suggest that the ancestral Beringian population(s) contributed only six (successful) founder haplotypes to these haplogroups. The derived clades are overall starlike with coalescence times ranging from 18,000 to 21,000 years (with one exception) using the conventional calibration. The average of about 19,000 years somewhat contrasts with the corresponding lower age of about 13,500 years that was recently proposed by employing a different calibration and estimation approach. Our estimate indicates a human entry and spread of the pan-American haplogroups into the Americas right after the peak of the Last Glacial Maximum and comfortably agrees with the undisputed ages of the earliest Paleoindians in South America. In addition, the phylogenetic approach also indicates that the pathogenic status proposed for various mtDNA mutations, which actually define branches of Native American haplogroups, was based on insufficient grounds.

Laterality and Flight: Concurrent Tests of Side-Bias and Optimality in Flying Tree Swallows:

Behavioural side-bias occurs in many vertebrates, including birds as a result of hemispheric specialization and can be advantageous by improving response times to sudden stimuli and efficiency in multi-tasking. However, behavioural side-bias can lead to morphological asymmetries resulting in reduced performance for specific activities. For flying animals, wing asymmetry is particularly costly and it is unclear if behavioural side-biases will be expressed in flight; the benefits of quick response time afforded by side-biases must be balanced against the costs of less efficient flight due to the morphological asymmetry side-biases may incur. Thus, competing constraints could lead to context-dependent expression or suppression of side-bias in flight. In repeated flight trials through an outdoor tunnel with obstacles, tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) preferred larger openings, but we did not detect either individual or population-level side-biases. Thus, while observed behavioural side-biases during substrate-foraging and copulation are common in birds, we did not see such side-bias expressed in obstacle avoidance behaviour in flight. This finding highlights the importance of behavioural context for investigations of side-bias and hemispheric laterality and suggests both proximate and ultimate trade-offs between species-specific cognitive ecology and flight biomechanics.

Molecular Mapping of Movement-Associated Areas in the Avian Brain: A Motor Theory for Vocal Learning Origin:

Vocal learning is a critical behavioral substrate for spoken human language. It is a rare trait found in three distantly related groups of birds-songbirds, hummingbirds, and parrots. These avian groups have remarkably similar systems of cerebral vocal nuclei for the control of learned vocalizations that are not found in their more closely related vocal non-learning relatives. These findings led to the hypothesis that brain pathways for vocal learning in different groups evolved independently from a common ancestor but under pre-existing constraints. Here, we suggest one constraint, a pre-existing system for movement control. Using behavioral molecular mapping, we discovered that in songbirds, parrots, and hummingbirds, all cerebral vocal learning nuclei are adjacent to discrete brain areas active during limb and body movements. Similar to the relationships between vocal nuclei activation and singing, activation in the adjacent areas correlated with the amount of movement performed and was independent of auditory and visual input. These same movement-associated brain areas were also present in female songbirds that do not learn vocalizations and have atrophied cerebral vocal nuclei, and in ring doves that are vocal non-learners and do not have cerebral vocal nuclei. A compilation of previous neural tracing experiments in songbirds suggests that the movement-associated areas are connected in a network that is in parallel with the adjacent vocal learning system. This study is the first global mapping that we are aware for movement-associated areas of the avian cerebrum and it indicates that brain systems that control vocal learning in distantly related birds are directly adjacent to brain systems involved in movement control. Based upon these findings, we propose a motor theory for the origin of vocal learning, this being that the brain areas specialized for vocal learning in vocal learners evolved as a specialization of a pre-existing motor pathway that controls movement.

Ovulation Order Mediates a Trade-Off between Pre-Hatching and Post-Hatching Viability in an Altricial Bird:

Simultaneously dependent siblings often compete for parentally provided resources. This competition may lead to mortality, the probability of which may be a function, in part, of the individual offspring’s production order. In birds, serial ovulation followed by hatching asynchrony of simultaneous dependents leads to differences in post-hatching survival that largely depend on ovulation (laying) order. This has led to the widespread assumption that early-laid eggs are of greater value and therefore should possess different maternally manipulated characteristics than later-laid eggs. However, this perspective ignores the potential effect of laying order on pre-hatching viability, an effect which some studies suggest should offset the effect of laying order on post-hatching viability. I examined the relationship between laying order and hatching and fledging probability in wild, free-living Lincoln’s sparrows (Melospiza lincolnii). In broods with complete hatching success, first-laid and therefore first-hatched offspring had the highest probability of fledging, and fledging probability declined with increasing laying order. However, first-laid eggs were less likely than later-laid eggs to hatch. This effect of laying order on pre-hatching viability seemed to offset that on post-hatching viability, and, consistently, maternal investment in egg size varied little if at all with respect to laying order. These results suggest that ovulation order mediates a trade-off between pre-hatching and post-hatching viability and should encourage a re-evaluation of the solitary role post-embryonic survival often plays when researchers make assumptions about the value of propagules based on the order in which they are produced.

Jobs: work with Project Exploration!

POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT:

Title: Manager of Web and Publications
Reports to: Director of Operations
Project Exploration Background: Cofounded in 1999 by paleontologist Paul Sereno and educator Gabrielle Lyon, Project Exploration is a nonprofit science education organization that works to make science accessible to the public– especially minority youth and girls–through personalized experiences with science and scientists. Project Exploration meets its mission through youth development programs, services for schools and teachers, and public programs such as exhibits and online initiatives.
Position Summary & Responsibilities:
The Manager of Web and Publications will serve as lead artistic designer and project manager for all organizational print and web publications. He/she will collaborate with cross-departmental staff to provide quality graphic design services to support the organization’s educational, promotional, development, and earned revenue objectives. He/she must demonstrate superior independent judgment in regards to organizational branding and image. He/she will be responsible for the development, design, content, and maintenance of organization’s web site.
Job Duties and Responsibilities:
Design:
* Lead the layout and graphic design for printed and web-based publications.
* Produce creative visual elements utilizing manual and computer-assisted design techniques.
* Work proactively to develop project guidelines and deadlines to ensure timely and cost-effective delivery. Coordinate with staff members to effectively incorporate photographic, editorial and design elements and to meet project deadlines.
* Serve as project manager to oversee workflow of print and production vendor services.
* Coordinate with all department directors to integrate print and electronic media and aligning print and web publications to meet organization’s style guidelines.
* Provide oversight and long-term planning of graphic design and publication projects.
* Develop signage for earned revenue traveling exhibits and organization events.
Web and Internet Technologies:
* Develop and execute new content for the existing web strategies, as well as develop new web pages as needed by the organization.
* Utilize project management software and shared calendar to facilitate cross-departmental projects.
* Assist staff with development of e-commerce and other online fundraising campaigns
* Lead content development, design and execution of web site.
* Support staff in developing any web-related exhibit development.
* Provide web site traffic reports as scheduled.
Qualification Requirements:
* Bachelor’s degree or university diploma in marketing, fine arts, or communications with a minimum of five years experience in web and print development.
* Expertise in problem-solving with the ability to sort through complex issues and conduct comparative analysis of multiple solutions.
* Effective time management skills and ability to utilize work plans to prioritize competing and interdependent tasks and meet deadlines.
* Advanced programming experience and web authoring with HTML, XML, XHTML, CSS2, PHP/MYSQL, ActionScript, and JavaScript
* Extensive knowledge of print design and prepress procedures.
* Expertise with graphic design software, particularly with Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, Dreamweaver, and Flash.
* Team-leadership and management skills.
* Excellent verbal and written communication skills.
Salary: Competitive; excellent benefits and professional growth opportunities
Position begins: Immediately
Send cover letter, resume, references, and salary history to:
Director of Operations
Project Exploration
950 East 61st Street
Chicago, IL 60637
773-834-7625 fax
jobs@projectexploration.org
No phone calls, please.
For more information about Project Exploration, visit www.projectexploration.org

My picks from ScienceDaily

Micronesian Islands Colonized By Small-bodied Humans:

Since the reporting of the so-called “hobbit” fossil from the island of Flores in Indonesia, debate has raged as to whether these remains are of modern humans (Homo sapiens), reduced, for some reason, in stature, or whether they represent a new species, Homo floresiensis. Lee Berger and colleagues from the University of the Witwatersrand, Rutgers University and Duke University, describe the fossils of small-bodied humans from the Micronesian island of Palau. These people inhabited the island between 1400 and 3000 years ago and share some — although not all — features with the H. floresiensis specimens.

See more here, here, here and here.
Fossilized Giant Rhino Bone Questions Isolation Of Anatolia, 25 Million Years Ago:

Contrary to generally accepted belief, Anatolia1 was not geographically isolated 25 million years ago (during the Oligocene epoch): this has just been demonstrated by researchers from the Laboratoire des Mécanismes et Transferts en Géologie (LMTG) (CNRS/ University of Toulouse 3/IRD) and the Paléobiodiversité et paléoenvironnements laboratory (CNRS/Muséum national d’histoire naturelle/University of Paris 6).

How Frequency Of Meals May Affect Health:

The health consequences of eating one large meal a day compared with eating three meals a day has not been established. Now two recently published journal articles are among the first to report the effects of meal skipping on key health outcomes, based on a study involving a group of normal-weight, middle-aged adults.

Invasive Species Can Produce ‘Hotspots Of Evolutionary Novelty,’ Study Shows:

When exotic species invade new territory, they often present a major threat to the other plants and animals living there–that much is clear. But researchers writing in the March 11th issue of Current Biology now show that, in addition to their destructive tendencies, invasive species can also have a surprisingly “creative” side.

Non-human Primates Convey Meaning Through Call Combinations:

Researchers have made what they say is the first experimental demonstration that a primate other than humans conveys meaning by combining distinct alarm calls in particular ways.

Mystery Behind The Strongest Creature In The World:

The strongest creature in the world, the Hercules Beetle, has a colour-changing trick that scientists have long sought to understand. New research details an investigation into the structure of the specie’s peculiar protective shell which could aid design of ‘intelligent materials’.

Wandering Albatrosses Follow Their Nose:

The first study of how individual wandering albatrosses find food shows that the birds rely heavily on their sense of smell. The birds can pick up a scent from several miles away, U.S. and French researchers have found.

Today’s carnivals

Grand Rounds Vol. 4 No. 25 is up on Canadian Medicine
Carnival of the Green #118 is up on The Expatriate’s Kitchen
The 115th Carnival of Homeschooling is up on At Home With Kris

ClockQuotes

Is freedom anything else than the power of living as we choose? Nothing else. Tell me then, you men, do you wish to live in error? We do not. No one who lives in error is free. Do you wish to live in fear? Do you wish to live in sorrow? Do you wish to live in tension? By no means. No one who is in a state of fear or sorrow or tension is free, but whoever is delivered from sorrows or fears or anxieties, he is at the same time also delivered from servitude.
– Epictetus

New and Exciting in PLoS

Lots of interesting stuff in PLoS Medicine and PLoS Biology this week, as well as a special, one-day-in-advance paper in PLoS ONE:
Small-Bodied Humans from Palau, Micronesia:

Newly discovered fossil assemblages of small bodied Homo sapiens from Palau, Micronesia possess characters thought to be taxonomically primitive for the genus Homo. Recent surface collection and test excavation in limestone caves in the rock islands of Palau, Micronesia, has produced a sizeable sample of human skeletal remains dating roughly between 940-2890 cal ybp. Preliminary analysis indicates that this material is important for two reasons. First, individuals from the older time horizons are small in body size even relative to “pygmoid” populations from Southeast Asia and Indonesia, and thus may represent a marked case of human insular dwarfism. Second, while possessing a number of derived features that align them with Homo sapiens, the human remains from Palau also exhibit several skeletal traits that are considered to be primitive for the genus Homo. These features may be previously unrecognized developmental correlates of small body size and, if so, they may have important implications for interpreting the taxonomic affinities of fossil specimens of Homo.

Predators Make (Temporary) Escape from Coevolutionary Arms Race:

Arguably cute and spanning at most 20 cm from head to tail, the rough-skinned newt packs pretty near the most poisonous punch known to the animal kingdom. Taricha granulosa, like all species in its genus, exudes an exceptionally potent neurotoxin, tetrodotoxin (TTX) from its skin glands. Some Taricha newts could wipe out thousands of mice or a clutch of humans with their toxic issue. But why produce enough poison to kill a potential predator several times over? To discourage the one predator–the common garter snake (Thamnophis sirtalis)–that’s resistant enough to the poison to count on newts as a food source.

Phenotypic Mismatches Reveal Escape from Arms-Race Coevolution:

Arms races between natural enemies can lead to the rapid evolution of extreme traits, high degrees of specialization, and the formation of new species. They also serve as the ecological model for the evolution of drug resistance by diseases and for host-pathogen interactions in general. Revealing who wins these arms races and how they do so is critical to our understanding of these processes. Capitalizing on the geographic mosaic of species interactions, we examined the dynamics of the arms race between snakes and their toxic newt prey. Garter snakes in some populations have evolved dramatic resistance to the tetrodotoxin defense of the their local prey. By evaluating the pattern of mismatches between toxicity and resistance, we discovered that predators sometimes escape the arms race through the evolution of extreme resistance, but that prey never come out ahead. The reason for this one-sided outcome appears to depend on the molecular genetic basis of resistance in snakes, wherein changes to a single amino acid residue can confer huge differences in resistance.

A Role for Parasites in Stabilising the Fig-Pollinator Mutualism:

Much biodiversity ultimately relies on cooperation between different species, interactions called mutualisms. Benefits to one partner are gained by obtaining resources from the other, presenting a problem: what prevents one partner from exploiting the other at an unsustainable level? Fig trees are pollinated by tiny wasps that only develop successfully themselves by each destroying a single female fig flower that would otherwise become a seed. Wasps tend to occur in long flowers near the fruit’s centre, with seeds developing near the outer wall. Female wasps therefore favour long flowers for their offspring, and leave short flowers to develop into seeds. To understand why wasps exploit fig trees sustainably, we need to explain why this preference has evolved. The fig-pollinator mutualism is exploited by small parasitic wasps that attack pollinators from outside the fruit. In three Australasian fig species, we found that pollinator offspring in the outer layer of flowers were more likely to be parasitized than those in the inner layer. Our data thus indicate that long flowers provide enemy-free space for pollinator offspring at the fruit’s centre. We suggest that the provision of variable length flowers by fig trees may contribute to mutualism stability by indirectly involving a third party: parasitic wasps, previously regarded as detrimental to both mutualists.

Observational Research, Randomised Trials, and Two Views of Medical Science:

Two views exist of medical science: one emphasises discovery and explanation, the other emphasises evaluation of interventions. This essay analyses in what respects these views differ, and how they lead to opposite research hierarchies, with randomisation on top for evaluation and at bottom for discovery and explanation. The two views also differ strongly in their thinking about the role of prior specification of a research hypothesis. Hence, the essay explores the controversies surrounding subgroup analyses and multiplicity of analyses in observational research. This exploration leads to a rethinking of the universally accepted hierarchy of strength of study designs, which has the randomised trial on top: this hierarchy may be confounded by the prior odds of the research hypothesis. Finally, the strong opinions that are sometimes displayed in pitting the two types of medical science against each other may be explained by a difference in “loss function”: the difference in penalty for being wrong.

Further Evidence that Exclusive Breast-Feeding Reduces Mother-to-Child HIV Transmission Compared With Mixed Feeding:

The critical role of breast-feeding in improving infant and under-five-year survival in resource-limited settings has been well documented since the mid-1970s. A pooled analysis by the World Health Organization (WHO) of a number of studies on the impact of breast-feeding on child survival showed that the protective effect is strongest in the first six months of life, with a 4-6-fold survival benefit for breast-fed infants [1]. The benefit extends throughout the first year of life, with a 1.4-1.8-fold protective effect against mortality during months six through twelve.

Determining Origins and Causes of Childhood Obesity via Mendelian Randomization Analysis:

Childhood obesity has become a serious public health problem worldwide. The United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that one in three children and adolescents are currently overweight/obese [1]. The adverse complications of childhood obesity on physical health and psychosocial development are tremendous [2]. Moreover, pediatric obesity may substantially increase future burden of cardiovascular disease and other morbidities in adulthood.

Having basic courage and decency is not manly enough, eh?

Why are Republicans (and their voters) so insecure about their masculinity? What are they covering up with their aggression and machismo? Why everything they say and do in an election boils down to some mythical and barbaric notion of manliness:
War cheerleaders ask: ‘Is Obama man enough to be president?’
Thus, everyone who opposes them is always tagged as a ‘sissy’, although it is them who are fearful cowards. If you criticize cowards you are shrill and effeminate and hysterical like a woman, is that how it works?
The religion of balance and centrism
How much you want to bet that these people all vote Republican?

Guarding the Coral Reefs like a Moray Eel: Interview with Rick MacPherson

I had great fun meeting Rick MacPherson last summer in San Francisco, so I was very happy that he could come to the second Science Blogging Conference in January where he co-moderated a panel on Real-time blogging in the marine sciences. Do not miss out on reading his blog Malaria, Bedbugs, Sea Lice, and Sunsets.
Welcome to A Blog Around The Clock. Would you, please, tell my readers a little bit more about yourself? Who are you? What is your scientific background? What is your Real World job?
Aloha, Bora, and thanks for the opportunity to chat. I’m on the Big Island of Hawaii as I write this. I’m checking-in on one of our coral reef conservation projects here. When I’m not blogging, my day job is directing all of the site-based conservation programs with the Coral Reef Alliance (CORAL). I’m a marine ecologist by training and did my undergrad years at Roger Williams College (now a university) in Bristol, Rhode Island. I loved it. Class sizes were small, professors were committed to teaching, questions were encouraged, and there was plenty of hands-on, field-based learning. I think it was that early exposure to field work that got me hooked as a field biologist. Though I suspect if you asked my family, they would say that my roots in field work started a lot earlier. As a child, I was notorious for heading out into the woods and streams near our home in Northeast Pennsylvania early in the morning and not returning until late in the day. I’d have pockets filled with rocks and fossils, jars of beetles, caterpillars, or frogs, and lots of scrapes and muddy clothes. Not a lot has changed.
I bounced around quite a bit after grad school trying a lot of different field-based marine science gigs, from co-managing a field station for a season in Jamaica to leading ecotourism trips as a naturalist. I even had a 3-year stint as a columnist for a New England newsweekly on queer culture. About 10 years ago, I packed-up and moved from the east coast to San Francisco, California and it’s been the best decision of my life. California was the stomping ground of my marine bio idol Ed Ricketts, and moving here was a life-long dream come true. I eventually found myself as a lecturer and Ocean Science Specialist for UC Berkeley and curriculum developer for the Lawrence Hall of Science. But I missed the field and the hands-on experiences that got me excited about science in the first place. Lucky for me, I was contacted about an opening with the Coral Reef Alliance to lead their conservation programs. It was serendipity and I’ve never been happier.
Tell us more about the Coral Reef Alliance, what does it do, and what do you do there.
CORAL is a member-supported, non-profit organization, dedicated to protecting the health of coral reefs by integrating ecosystem management, sustainable tourism, and community partnerships. The best defense we have against coral reef destruction are marine protected areas (MPAs). But when you look at the 1100 or so coral reef MPAs out there, most are failing to meet their conservation objectives. We wanted to know why, so we did a very comprehensive gap analysis, asking MPA managers a series of questions. Their answers clustered around several common themes: Lack of capacity to reach out to local communities and tourism sectors, lack of sustainable financing, lack of trust from stakeholders, inadequate training to do their work. We then looked at what a small, nimble NGO like CORAL could provide to fill those gaps and our conservation methodology began to form. We began working with communities to identify and solve local conservation challenges. We change attitudes and behavior through education and training. Our programs provide technical and financial resources to strengthen marine protected areas. And unlike many conservation NGOs that avoid working with the private sector, we see marine tourism providers (diving, snorkeling, or boating businesses) as a force to leverage increased reef stewardship. So we create meaningful incentives for sustainable tourism. We’ve found that achieving these goals translates into measurable gains in reef resilience and MPA effectiveness.
As Director of Conservation Programs, I’m responsible for pulling together the best teams I can find for our projects along the Mesoamerican Barrier Reef, and our Pacific projects in Hawaii, Fiji, Papua New Guinea, and Indonesia. While I wish more of my time could be spent in the field, most of my energies go into grant writing to continue to grow our programs and increase the scale of our impact. I’m also a big believer in monitoring and evaluation of program effectiveness which is something that is always a challenge to demonstrate. There are a lot of workshops, trainings, meetings, publications, and all sorts of busy-looking activities that a conservation NGO does. But at the end of the day, how is the natural resource (lake, stream, coral reef, fishery, etc.) better off because of this activity? That’s one of the most challenging yet exciting aspects of my work… quantifying conservation impact.
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What is the idea behind dumping iron into the ocean and why it turned out to be a bad idea in the end?
The whole iron dumping scheme is yet another example of what happens when bad or inadequate science meets “get rich quick” mentality. Essentially, the idea behind one such iron dumping company, Planktos, is that the ocean can be a much greater carbon sink for excess atmospheric CO2 if we could somehow increase primary productivity in the ocean (that is, get more phytoplankton to metabolize CO2 through photosynthesis). But to boost phytoplankton blooms, you need to add something to the ocean that is limiting the growth of plankton in the first place, in this case iron. So dump some iron into the ocean, plankton blooms, CO2 is depleted in that area of the ocean, and more atmospheric CO2 can “sink.” But wait, there’s more. It also had the added notion of offering consumers an easy out of their carbon guilt by offering shares in the iron dumping as “carbon credits.” I’m just dubious in general of attempts to make people feel better about their global impacts without actually asking anyone to change the behaviors that are unsustainable in the first place. Anyway, I was more of an armchair skeptic and detractor during the whole iron dumping fiasco a few months back. Craig over at Deep Sea News and Miriam at The Oyster Garter systematically dismantled the whole Planktos agenda. They ultimately folded, which I suppose means somewhere out there is a big pile of rusting iron in someone’s back yard.
What do you want to do/be when you grow up?
My answer today hasn’t changed from the answer I gave when I was 10… I want to be a marine biologist. And here I am. I’m just one of those very fortunate (or obsessive) individuals who succeeded in following his dream. But I can honestly say that I became a scientist despite my education. In retrospect, science was taught very badly, if at all, in my elementary years. Despite the abysmal science instruction, I was still so completely in love with science, nature, and science writing that it didn’t matter. I knew every shark species, watched every Jacques Cousteau special, read The Sea Around Us by Rachel Carson… you name it. I had at least half a dozen “experiments” going on around the house at any given time. In high school as a young and somewhat shell-shocked queer in the late 70’s, I was too busy trying to survive and stay relatively invisible and just get through the ordeal to focus much on my academics. Still, I loved science and remained committed to following-through with a career in marine biology despite anything my guidance counselors suggested.
Once I made it to college, I knew I could finally get to take the classes I’d been waiting for all my life: marine zoology, invertebrate zoology, botany, developmental bio. It was great. And while the early 80’s was still somewhat of the Dark Ages for being a young, shy queer man, I got a chance to at least meet other equally tentative gay and lesbian students and find some safety in numbers.
I’ve been really encouraged by all the gay and lesbian student science groups that have formed on campuses nationwide. It’s tough enough dealing with the course load in a science program. Having a support and sounding board to deal with the social complexities of queer life is a great thing. If I ever get tired of my blog, I may need to start one called “Queered Science” to explore those intersections of science and GLBT perspectives.
What’s with the fascination with Moray Eels?
Yeah, the morays. My weekly feature, That’s a Moray Monday, got started as sort of a whim. I was trying to think of a regular, recurring feature that could give a different take on my work with coral reefs and maybe allow people to see reefs through a different lens. I wanted to focus on something big and charismatic that might appeal to those readers who aren’t particularly moved by coral polyps, sea fans, or mantis shrimps. I suppose there are more cuddly reef megafauna I could have chosen (dolphins, manta, turtles), but there’s something just right about the moray that I can sort of empathize with. They aren’t an “out-there, in-your-face” reef species. It takes some time to find them. They have a certain calm dignity. And they’re obliged to mind their own business if you simply return the favor. But piss them off and they come at you all fists and elbows… except without the fists and elbows but numerous sharp, bacteria-laden teeth.
When and how did you discover science blogs? What are some of your favourites? Have you discovered any new cool science blogs while at the Conference?
I can’t recall when I first discovered science blogs. My own exploration into blogging began about a year and a half ago. I launched my blog, Malaria, Bedbugs, Sea Lice, and Sunsets, as an online journal of my travels. It seemed a lot more convenient than the many paper journals that I carried around, and at least I wouldn’t lose yet another journal because of a swamped boat or due to a spilled Mai Tai.
I’m a big fan of many of the Sciblings, but I must admit that of late I’ve been really impressed by some of the science and nature blogs coming out of SouthEast Asia. I’m hampered by what I can read in english of course, but there are some great photo and journalistic nature blogs from Singapore that provides a different take on the blog experience. I’m very curious about more science blogs that may be coming out of China, but due to either translation issues or internet censorship we aren’t seeing yet.
Is there anything that happened at this Conference – a session, something someone said or did or wrote – that will change the way you think about science communication, or something that you will take with you to your job, blog-reading and blog-writing?
I want to thank you and Anton for arranging the snow and freezing rain. It’s been 10 years since I had seen snow, so it was a welcome addition and added to the un-conference feel.
I got to meet some of my ocean blogging colleagues which was just fantastic. Peter from Deep Sea News, Jennifer from Shifting Baselines, Kevin from The Other 95%, Jason from Cephalopodcast, and Karen from The Beagle Project Blog. In addition, I thought the sessions on increasing interactivity on your blog and open access efforts in Serbia were thought provoking and boundary pushing. I was unfortunately dealing with some work-related problem solving during the conference so got pulled away from the evening events, much to my frustration since one of the big motivations to come to North Carolina was to have a few beers with my peers.
I’ve gone on the record as being critical of the Changing Minds Through Science Communication: A Panel on Framing Science session. It seemed to be the least un-conference moment of the whole un-conference event and more of a platform for Science Debate 2008. Which is all fine, I suppose, but I traveled a long way to get short-shrifted with what I perceived as a rather average panel discussion/keynote. Chris Mooney was very nice eye candy, though, so it wasn’t a total loss.
It was so nice to see you again and thank you for the interview.
Always a pleasure, Bora, and thanks for the opportunity.
============================
Check out all the interviews in this series.

Will there be a Third Science Blogging Conference?

You bet there will be! But it will have a different name. Anton and I met yesterday afternoon (and the whole committee will meet in a couple of weeks), looked at all the feedback we got from the last meeting and started planning for the next one.
So, the third conference will be called ScienceOnline’09 (the new website will be up in a couple of weeks at scienceonline09.com, as well as a new, more reliable wiki). You will still be able to get to it from the scienceblogging.com page in the future.
The new name reflects the broader perspective of the meeting. Neither the first nor the second meeting was, and we surely do not want the third one to be, focused entirely on science blogging, but on everything people can do to use the Internet to do, teach, publish and communicate science.
The ScienceOnline’09 will meet from mid-day Friday, January 16th through mid-day Sunday January 18th, 2009. at Sigma Xi and in a couple of weeks we will start asking you to help us shape the program. Stay tuned….

ClockQuotes

What can be done at any time is never done at all.
– English Proverb

Triangle Bloggers AND Science Communicators joint Meetup

SCONC Second Wednesday AND the BlogTogether bloggers meetup will occur jointly this month, at Tyler’s Taproom, Durham!

Does science make you thirsty?
Jargon got you down?
Want to kick back with other SCONCs?
We’re here for you. Come hang with other science communicators on Wednesday, March 12 and talk shop. Or not. Whatever. This is a social event, a chance to talk with people who share your passion for explaining science.
There’s no official start time, but say 5-ish. Early arrivers: grab a table. Wear your SCONC pin to find each other.
Tyler’s Taproom is on the American Tobacco Campus next to the Durham Bulls stadium.
Our meeting coincides with the regularly scheduled meetup of the blogtogether community in Durham.

8000

Congratulations to Rev. BigDumbChimp for posting the 8000th comment on this blog!

The power of humor


There are other versions of this on YouTube as well…some funnier than others….

The State of U.S. Journalism – Obligatory Readings of the Day

Glenn Greenwald: Tucker Carlson unintentionally reveals the role of the American press (the 424 comments are also worth at least skimming through).
Jay Rosen: An Attractively Against-the-Grain Enterprise…
Rachel Sklar: WaPo Writer Proves Own Thesis With Inane Op-Ed (follow ALL the links in the article as well).

Congratulations to Bill Foster

A Democrat and a physicist won a special election in the Dennis Hastert’s uber-Republican district (also birthplace of Ronald Reagan) yesterday. He is an overall Good Guy.

Science 2.0

On the Wired Science blog – The Internet Is Changing the Scientific Method:

If all other fields can go 2.0, incorporating collaboration and social networking, it’s about time that science does too. In the bellwether journal Science this week, a computer scientist argues that many modern problems are resistant to traditional scientific inquiry.

The title of the post is a big misnomer as the paper does not say anything about the change in the Scientific Method, but about the change scientists go about their work (perhaps “methodology”?). Read the rambunctious comment thread.
The paper is here but you cannot read it because it is in Science so you have to pay, which you are not crazy to do. But I got the paper and read it. I cannot copy and paste the entire text without breaking some maddening copyright law or something, but it is within Fair Use to give you a few key quotes so you can start the discussion (under the fold).

Continue reading

Today’s carnivals

The Boneyard XV is up on Laelaps
International Carnival of Pozitivities 2.9 is up on Creampuff Revolution

Walking With Zeke

Zeke%20book%20cover.jpg
I bought a book yesterday. You should buy yourself a copy, too. The best writer in the blogosphere, on the most famous dog in the blogosphere. You’ll be touched.

New in OA

Charles Leadbetter: People power transforms the web in next online revolution
Anna Kushnir: Science Participation and Going Incognito
Wobbler: Digital Scholarly Communication & Bottlenecks
Jonathan A. Eisen: Open Evolution
Peter Suber: Aiming for obscurity (the links within are important)
Stian Haklev: A “Fair Trade” logo for academic research?

Intro to the Semantic Web

ClockQuotes

Procrastination is the thief of time.
– Edward Young

The Grand LOL-PZ Birthday Bash Linkfest

Today is PZ Myers‘ 51st birthday.
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We’ve done it last year and the year before. As I did last time, I will collect a linkfest of all the posts – especially those that use the LOLCats generator (Greg has collected some pictures if you want to use them).
First out of the starting gate:
Greg Laden: Happy Birthday PZ Myers!
Maryannaville: There’s a Page looking for a Mr PZ Myers located in the lobby
Tangled Up in Blue Guy: Happy Birthday PZ
Of Two Minds: Happy B-Day PZ!
Evolving Thoughts: So, here I am in Arizona, still
Effect Measure: Freethinker Sunday Sermonette: a PZ Myers Revelation
Page 3.14: Happy Birthday Davy “PZ” Jones
Aardvarchaeology: Mean Emcee wid’ a Mastah Flow
Dr. Joan Bushwell’s Chimpanzee Refuge: LOL LABRAKEET
Adventures in Ethics and Science: Happy birthday PZ!
Stranger Fruit: Today in Science
Green Gabbro: Borg Business
Science After Sunclipse: Happy Birthday, PZ
decorabilia: happy birthday, PZ
Teacherninja: Happy Birthday PZ!
Blue Collar Scientist: Happy Birthday….
Discovering Biology in a Digital World: The day PZ visited Seattle and became a pirate
Rev. BigDumbChimp: Happy Birthday PZed
Afarensis: Happy Birthday PZ Mzfegryzzz*
bathtubnz: Happy Birthday
Jyunri Kankei: Happy Birthday, PZ!
The Beagle Project Blog: A very British happy birthday from the land of Darwin
Archy: Let the evil conspiracy continue
Sandwalk: Happy Birthday PZ Myers
Thinking for Free: Happy 51 to PZ
Thoughts in a Haystack: Cephalopod Kowtow
Archaeoporn: Happy Birthday PZ Myers
Terra Sigillata: Happy 51st, Professor Myers!
Mythusmage Opines: One Year Closer to Tunicatehood
Synapostasy: Paying My Elders Their Proper Respect
Dynamics of Cats: birthday boy
Mom of 2 Dancers: Sunday Ramblings …
Science Notes: Happy birthday, PZ Myers
The Inverse Square Blog: PZ’s Birthday — with Gravitas
The Greenbelt: Happy Birthday, PZ!

Wall Street Journal on Open Access

Information Liberation By DANIEL AKST:

If your child has a life-threatening disease and you’re desperate to read the latest research, you’ll be dismayed to learn that you can’t — at least not without hugely expensive subscriptions to a bevy of specialized journals or access to a major research library. Your dismay might turn to anger when you realize that you paid for this research.

Read the whole thing….

The so-called Facebook Scandal

[rant]So, if you organize a study-group online instead of in meat-space, the old fogies who still remember dinosaurs go all berserk. A student is threatened by expulsion for organizing a Facebook group for studying chemistry. Moreover, as each student got different questions, nobody did the work for others, they only exchanged tips and strategies. See the responses:
The Star:

Yet students argue Facebook groups are simply the new study hall for the wired generation.

Yes, they are.
Greg:

How much of this is a matter of administrative fear of the internet?

100%.
Larry:

Today, that sense of “honor” seems horribly old-fashioned. To most students it will not seem like cheating if they ask their friends for help with the assignments and share information. That’s what happened on the Facebook study group.

Old-fashioned is too nice a term. It is outdated and anachronistic.
Post-Diluvian Diaspora:

Honestly, do you not see the difference between studying together and exchanging answers on a graded assignment?

The problem is in a stupid professor who thinks in terms of “graded assignments” in the 21st century.
This all stems from the old German universities of a couple of centuries ago, where getting a degree was essentially a hazing process. Toughening the individual. For what? For replicating and preserving the hierarchy, both within the academia and in society as a whole. The educational systems around the world, at all levels, are still based on such outrageous ideas.
No individual can know everything needed knowing. No individual can make the necessary societal changes on one’s own. So why teach them as if it is all up to an individual? Both learning and social change are communal processes. What we need to be teaching is how to be a member of a community, how to network, how to contribute, how to share, how to pull together in order to increase the global knowledge and, by using this knowledge, to increase the global welfare.
Science is supposed to be a collaborative activity. Why is it organized (and taught) as if it was a competitive activity? How does that affect science? Negatively, by increasing secretiveness and sometimes outright fraud.
The Web is changing all this. The teenagers already grok that the old selfish notions of intellectual property are going by the way of the dodo. They naturally think in terms of networks, not individuals. And thinking in term of newtorks as opposed to a linear, hierarchical, individualistic focus, is necessary for speeding up the advancement of knowledge and societal good.
In other words, it is not important what each individual knows or does, it is important what the interactions between individuals can do, and how the group or community (or global community) learns and acts upon the knowledge.
Thus, education, especially science education, from Kindergarden through post-doc and beyond, should be organized around collaborations, teaching people and letting them practice the networking skills and collaborative learning and action. Individuals will make mistakes and get punished by the group (sometimes as harshly as excommunication). They will learn from that experience and become more collaborative next time. The biggest sin would be selfish non-sharing of information.
If I could, I would not give individual students grades on their individual performance at all. I would give a common grade for the entire class. Each individual will then get that same grade. If the last semester’s cohort got an A, do you think that this semester’s group would settle for anything less? And how do they get an A? By pooling their resources, sharing all the information, closely collaborating on all assigned projects, and coaxing/teaching/punishing individuals who are not pulling their weight. Neither the reward nor the punishment would be meted out by some outside self-appointed ‘authority’, but by peers – the people who matter the most.
Then, they would take this approach to the Real World, where such things really matter, where sucess is that of a community, not that of any individual.
So, if you do not get this, if you are not mentally ready for the 21st century, if you still harbor the outdated competition-based, individualistic mindset, you should not be in the teaching business. Quit today. Save yourself the embarassment of being laughed at by your students. Save your students from having to deal with an authoritarian. Save the society from promulgating the counter-productive, anti-social methods of knowledge-acquisition and knowledge-use.[/rant]

A 40-hour workweek?

In academia? See what they say:
Mad Hatter
EcoGeoFemme
ScienceGirl
Jennie
Mad Hatter again
DrugMonkey
Laurie Granieri
ScienceWoman
Telecommuting has its perks. But working only 40 hours is not one of them. Especially in my case in which the line between work, blogging, schmoozing and fun is blurry. Is posting this weekend post to be considered work (building and keeping my own community that, tomorrow, will click on a link to PLoS) or pleasure (doing what I always did – reading interesting stuff online and sharing with my readers)? Both? Who’s to tell? I have fun doing it. But I have fun doing my job, too.
And back when I was in grad school, my gregariousness/sociability was a drawback (wasting my time chatting with colleagues), so I did most of my work at night and on weekends (the Big Holidays were the best as there was absolutely nobody to talk to). And the nature of my research was such that I could not possibly work 9-5. I had to do big campaigns, i.e., experiments that lasted 24, 36 or even 72 hours straight, followed by a couple of days I am not expected to be seen on campus at all.

Coworking in Carrboro

Carrboro’s Creative Coworking in the works:

Freelance web designer Brian Russell’s vision to create a shared workplace for freelancers and other creative types is moving toward a concrete Carrboro reality.
The idea to open what he called a shared office space with a coffee shop atmosphere was first mentioned publicly nearly a year ago. Russell said James Harris, director of economic and community development in Carrboro, encouraged him to make it happen.
The concept lies somewhere between a wireless-equipped coffee shop and the generic, cubicle-clad office. Russell said the need for this type of space is generated by people who have been driven away from the typical office environment but who are unhappy working alone at home.

Get ready for Fear and Violence

The Repubs are stoking fear and violence as that is the only thing left for them on which to campaign. Thus, we need to keep the Dems in the news and campaigning (and thus media forgetting McCain) and the people excited about them and constantly hearing liberal frames for at least a couple of more months:

Of course, the goal of the Republican Party is to win the election and that is the purpose of launching their violent rhetoric: to frame the election in such a way that defeats the Democratic candidate. The stakes however, are much greater than just who wins or loses the White House. If violent logic takes over America’s political debate, voters will likely see a rapid shut down of the deliberative democracy on which our entire system of government depends.
When political debate is taken over by violent language and logic, the effect it has on the public sphere is poisonous and debilitating. Conversation itself shuts down, opening up the door for the return of a pre-modern form of politics rooted in violence rather than the free and open exchange of ideas through words.
It has been almost 50 years since this country experienced a sudden collapse in our political conversation and the sudden shift to violence that follows. The Republican effort to frame the Presidential debate with violent rhetoric has once again opened the door that leads in that direction. Americans everywhere and of all political perspectives should take note of it and reject it.

SuperReaders

DrugMonkey, Nick, Afarensis, Chad and John explain it better, but in short, each SciBling needs to pick two regular readers who will, over a longish period of time in the future, tag (in delicious, with a special tag) three site-wide scienceblogs.com posts of their interest. These posts will be included into a special reader-generated feed to which you can subscribe, and it will be visible on the front page. I am not sure, but I think the final list will be secret and I do not know for how long it will be valid, i.e., at what time intervals we need to pick new two people (every six months, year?).
So, help me out in the comments and nominate each other (or yourself) for this position. Who reads multiple scienceblogs regularly (daily?), has good taste in posts, knows how to use de.licio.us (or is willing to learn – it is super-easy), perhaps prefers topics that may not be overwhelmingly popular site-wide (so the feed does not turn just into anti-Creationist rants, for instance, but has diversity)? Let me know in the comments or by e-mail. I think we have some time to turn in our two names (and they have to make sure that nobody was picked by two or more SciBlings) so take your time thinking and commenting.

Happy International Women’s Day

Sretan Osmi Mart!

The jigsaw puzzle as a metaphor for the way science works

I did this again this morning.

ClockQuotes

Youth is the season of tragedy and despair. Youth is the time when one’s whole life is entangled in a web of identity, in a perpetual maze of seeking and of finding, of passion and of disillusion, of vague longings and of nameless griefs, of pity that is a blade in the heart, and of “all the little emptiness of love.”
– Ellen Glasgow

My picks from ScienceDaily

Antarctic Fish Species Adopts Winter Survival Strategy Similar To Hibernation:

Scientists have discovered an Antarctic fish species that adopts a winter survival strategy similar to hibernation. Scientists from British Antarctic Survey (BAS) and the University of Birmingham reveal, for the first time, that the Antarctic ‘cod’ Notothenia coriiceps effectively ‘puts itself on ice’ to survive the long Antarctic winter.

Mysterious Eel Fishery Decline Blamed On Changing Ocean Conditions:

American eels are fast disappearing from restaurant menus as stocks have declined sharply across the North Atlantic. While the reasons for the eel decline remain as mysterious as its long migrations, a recent study by a NOAA scientist and colleagues in Japan and the United Kingdom says shifts in ocean-atmosphere conditions may be a primary factor in declining reproduction and survival rates.

Low Maternal Education Linked To Intellectual Disabilities In Offspring:

By applying a public health approach, researchers at three universities have discovered a key indicator for increased risk of mental retardation in the general population. The study assessed population-level risk factors by linking birth records of 12-14-year-old children in Florida with their respective public school records, over the course of a school year.

Smoking Doesn’t Make You Happy:

If you are planning to ignore the messages of national No Smoking Day on 12th March by claiming that smoking is one of the few pleasures left to you, then recent research from the Peninsula Medical School in the South West of England may make you think again.

Mother-daughter Conflict, Low Serotonin Level May Be Deadly Combination:

A combination of negative mother-daughter relationships and low blood levels of serotonin, an important brain chemical for mood stability, may be lethal for adolescent girls, leaving them vulnerable to engage in self-harming behaviors such as cutting themselves.

Mercury Threatens Next Generation Of Loons:

A long-term study by the Wildlife Conservation Society, the BioDiversity Research Institute, and other organizations has found and confirmed that environmental mercury–much of which comes from human-generated emissions–is impacting both the health and reproductive success of common loons in the Northeast.

Mysteries Of Oceanic Bacteria Probed:

Microbes living in the oceans play a critical role in regulating Earth’s environment, but very little is known about their activities and how they work together to help control natural cycles of water, carbon and energy. A team of MIT researchers led by Professors Edward DeLong and Penny Chisholm is trying to change that.

Dissolved Organic Matter In Water Column May Influence Coral Health:

Bacterial communities endemic to healthy corals could change depending on the amount and type of natural and man-made dissolved organic matter in seawater, report researchers from The University of Texas at Austin Marine Science Institute and Mote Marine Laboratory in Sarasota, Florida.

Giant Panda Genome To Be Sequenced:

The International Giant Panda Genome Project has been launched. The goal of this project is to finish the sequencing and assembling of the draft sequence within six months, according to researchers with BGI-Shenzhen.

Blogrolling for Today

Modern Mechanix


Prelinger Library Blog


Almost Diamonds


When do you think you’ll be done?


The Happy Scientist


A Mad Tea-Party


Mother of All Scientists


A Lady Scientist


(Non) Scientific Observations from a female scientist