ClockQuotes

We must use time as a tool, not as a crutch.
– John Fitzgerald Kennedy

Today’s Carnivals

Skeptics’ Circle #68 is up on Aardvarchaeology
Carnival of Space #18 is up on Out of the Cradle
Carnival of the Liberals #46 is up on Truth in Politics

PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases – sneak preview

The next journal to be launched by the Public Library of Science is PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases.
To whet your appetite, two papers were published in advance, both on the cause of River Blindness and the evolution of resistance to the anti-parasitic ivermectin: a research paper Genetic Selection of Low Fertile Onchocerca volvulus by Ivermectin Treatment and a commentary Ivermectin Resistance in Onchocerca volvulus – Toward a Genetic Basis.
Shabnam Sigman gives more details about the launch on the PLoS Blog. You can get more information about the new journal here.

New science carnival!

Geologists and other Earth/planetary science bloggers have gotten together and started The Accretionary Wedge. First edition will be this Sunday night so send your entries. Spread the word on your blogs. Also, think about the logo and make one if you have artistic talents.

Katrina Anniversary

I went to my old blog to see if and what I blogged about during and after Katrina hit the Gulf Coast two years ago. I was astonished at just how much I posted! My blogging style is, like, so different today.
Of course, I made a big linkfest of the best that was written on blogs at the time, a useful reminder of some of the details if you are looking for inspiration for your own posts:
Best Katrina Blogging (so far)
But, check this torrent of posting! I can’t believe I did it! Some are one-liners with links, some are long quotes from others, some are provocative and sharp-tongued thoughts of my own, and a couple are pictorial:
How did animals fare in the path of the hurricane?
Castro and the Hurricanes….
How the Free Market Killed New Orleans
Bush Declares War On Weather!
Ghost Town
Animals in the wake of Katrina
The Recent History of FEMA
Rescuing Horses from New Orleans
A progressive response to the New Orleans Disaster
Damning
Katrina timelines
Looting Mob. What Mob?
Lakoff on Katrina and beyond
Brownie No More
Stop Beating on Bush!
Walking Out Of New Orleans
First head to fall….
Sin of Pride
We The People?
Another Survivor Story
The New Orleans catastrophe is inexplicable, or is it?
A Pictorial Guide to the last Two Weeks
Form Before Function – FEMA prevented doctors from helping Katrina victims
Katrina: good local perspective
Sometimes You Just Don’t Know
Kerry on Katrina
Edwards on Katrina
Message in a Bottle
But for today’s anniversary, I’d like you to go and read Sheril Kirshenbaum’s story: …but We ALL Knew Katrina Was Coming!, and Chris Mooney’s four-part post – the best reading on the topic this week:
Hurricane Katrina Lessons, Part I: Learning to Live With Scientific Uncertainty
Hurricane Katrina Lessons, Part II: It’s Bigger Than New Orleans
Hurricane Katrina Lessons, Part III: Why Aren’t We Studying Changing Risks?
Hurricane Katrina Lessons, Part IV: It’s the President, Stupid

My picks from ScienceDaily

Mystery Of A Third Olfactory System Unlocked:

Researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine have found a “nose within the nose,” a unique olfactory system within the noses of mice that is able to “smell” hormones involved in regulating water and salt balance in the body. This research may lead to new insights into the complex system of “chemical communication” between individuals.

First Orchid Fossil Puts Showy Blooms At Some 80 Million Years Old:

Biologists at Harvard University have identified the ancient fossilized remains of a pollen-bearing bee as the first hint of orchids in the fossil record, a find they say suggests orchids are old enough to have co-existed with dinosaurs.

Amber Specimen Captures Ancient Chemical Battle:

It appears that chemical warfare has been around a lot longer than poison arrows, mustard gas or nerve weapons — about 100 million years, give or take a little.

Household Mold Linked To Depression:

A groundbreaking public health study has found a connection between damp, moldy homes and depression. The study, led by Brown University epidemiologist Edmond Shenassa, is the largest investigation of an association between mold and mood and is the first such investigation conducted outside the United Kingdom.

Social Parasites Of The Smaller Kind:

Cooperation is widespread in the natural world but so too are cheats — mutants that do not contribute to the collective good but simply reap the benefits of others’ cooperative efforts. In evolutionary terms, cheats should indeed prosper, so how cooperation persists despite the threat of cheat takeover is a fundamental question. Recently, biologists at the Universities of Edinburgh and Oxford have found that in bacteria, cheats actually orchestrate their own downfall.

Cats Do Suffer From Arthritis, Study Shows:

New research at the University of Glasgow has found that arthritis in cats is far more common than previously thought.

Today’s Carnivals

Tangled Bank #87 is up on Balancing Life
Four Stone Hearth #22 is up on Hominin Dental Anthropology
The 134th Carnival of Education is up on Matthewktabor.com.
The latest Carnival of Homeschooling is up on The Common Room.

ClockQuotes

If by the time we are 60 we haven’t learned what a knot of paradox and contradiction life is, and how exquisitely the good and bad are mingled in every action we take, and what a compromising hostess Our Lady of Truth is, we haven’t grown old to much purpose.
– John Cowper Powys

The Joys of Blogging Biology

One cool thing about being a blogging biologist is that one can write every day about sex with a straight face and then blame readers for “having a dirty mind”. But sex is so interesting – life would cease to exist without it and it is a central question in biology, so we have a license, nay, duty, to write about it all the time. We get all blase about it, I guess, compared to “normal people”. 😉
One cool story that revolves around sex is making the rounds of the science blogosphere today. Jake Young explains in seemingly dry scientific language:

This issue has spawned a variety of weird behaviors and adaptations. For example, the males have spines on their intromittent organs (read: insect penises) that puncture the females insides. This is to discourage them from mating with other males. In response the females kick the males during mating to limit the damage done by the spines.
——————-snip—————-
The nuptial gift in part makes up for the reproductive cost of mating to the females, which is high in this case, but Edvardsson argues that this is probably not how it evolved. Instead, the large ejaculate probably evolved first so that the male would have more sperm to compete with other males. Then, the female evolved a way to utilize the water and nutrients in that already present sperm. “Well, hey…it’s here.”

Mo the Neurophilosopher adds the scary pictures while retaining the dry scientific tone:

A cost/benefit analysis is therefore essential to the mating behaviour of the female. The number of mating events must be strictly limited because of the resulting harm. But at the same time, the female’s needs for both sperm and water must be met.

The beauty of Pondering Pikaia is her ability to cut through all the complexity and say it like it is:

basically, females will trade sex for drinks
—–snip—–
possibly the most brutal looking sex organ I have ever seen.

So, go ahead and chuckle, you readers with dirty minds, but this is a really cool evolutionary story and if titillation brings in lay readers and gets them interested in the theory behind the scientific finding all the better. This is a good example of framing, isn’t it? Got your attention and got you interested in the underlying science, didn’t it?
Update: I see that Kate also joined the fray:

And no, he doesn’t believe that these findings generalize to other species. Including humans. So, if you’re planning to proposition a female beetle anytime soon, remember to bring along a bottle of water. You should be just fine.

Tanja and Doug

I mentioned that I met Tanja and Doug on Sunday. They just sent me some pictures from the meeting (under the fold) and you can also see their wildlife pictures here.

Continue reading

Bloggers For Peer Review Icon Contest

The BPR3 icon contest just got even richer. It’s worth your time and energy!

New and Exciting in PLoS ONE

There are 32 new articles on PLoS ONE this week. Here are some titles that caught my eye – go read, rate, annotate and comment:
Why Men Matter: Mating Patterns Drive Evolution of Human Lifespan:

Evolutionary theory predicts that senescence, a decline in survival rates with age, is the consequence of stronger selection on alleles that affect fertility or mortality earlier rather than later in life. Hamilton quantified this argument by showing that a rare mutation reducing survival is opposed by a selective force that declines with age over reproductive life. He used a female-only demographic model, predicting that female menopause at age ca. 50 yrs should be followed by a sharp increase in mortality, a “wall of death.” Human lives obviously do not display such a wall. Explanations of the evolution of lifespan beyond the age of female menopause have proven difficult to describe as explicit genetic models. Here we argue that the inclusion of males and mating patterns extends Hamilton’s theory and predicts the pattern of human senescence. We analyze a general two-sex model to show that selection favors survival for as long as men reproduce. Male fertility can only result from matings with fertile females, and we present a range of data showing that males much older than 50 yrs have substantial realized fertility through matings with younger females, a pattern that was likely typical among early humans. Thus old-age male fertility provides a selective force against autosomal deleterious mutations at ages far past female menopause with no sharp upper age limit, eliminating the wall of death. Our findings illustrate the evolutionary importance of males and mating preferences, and show that one-sex demographic models are insufficient to describe the forces that shape human senescence.

Phylogenomics Reshuffles the Eukaryotic Supergroups:

Resolving the phylogenetic relationships between eukaryotes is an ongoing challenge of evolutionary biology. In recent years, the accumulation of molecular data led to a new evolutionary understanding, in which all eukaryotic diversity has been classified into five or six supergroups. Yet, the composition of these large assemblages and their relationships remain controversial.
Here, we report the sequencing of expressed sequence tags (ESTs) for two species belonging to the supergroup Rhizaria and present the analysis of a unique dataset combining 29908 amino acid positions and an extensive taxa sampling made of 49 mainly unicellular species representative of all supergroups. Our results show a very robust relationship between Rhizaria and two main clades of the supergroup chromalveolates: stramenopiles and alveolates. We confirm the existence of consistent affinities between assemblages that were thought to belong to different supergroups of eukaryotes, thus not sharing a close evolutionary history.
This well supported phylogeny has important consequences for our understanding of the evolutionary history of eukaryotes. In particular, it questions a single red algal origin of the chlorophyll-c containing plastids among the chromalveolates. We propose the abbreviated name ‘SAR’ (Stramenopiles+Alveolates+Rhizaria) to accommodate this new super assemblage of eukaryotes, which comprises the largest diversity of unicellular eukaryotes.

Quadrupling Muscle Mass in Mice by Targeting TGF-ß Signaling Pathways:

Myostatin is a transforming growth factor-ß family member that normally acts to limit skeletal muscle growth. Mice genetically engineered to lack myostatin activity have about twice the amount of muscle mass throughout the body, and similar effects are seen in cattle, sheep, dogs, and a human with naturally occurring loss-of-function mutations in the myostatin gene. Hence, there is considerable interest in developing agents capable of inhibiting myostatin activity for both agricultural and human therapeutic applications. We previously showed that the myostatin binding protein, follistatin, can induce dramatic increases in muscle mass when overexpressed as a transgene in mice. In order to determine whether this effect of follistatin results solely from inhibition of myostatin activity, I analyzed the effect of this transgene in myostatin-null mice. Mstn−/− mice carrying a follistatin transgene had about four times the muscle mass of wild type mice, demonstrating the existence of other regulators of muscle mass with similar activity to myostatin. The greatest effect on muscle mass was observed in offspring of mothers homozygous for the Mstn mutation, raising the possibility that either myostatin itself or a downstream regulator may normally be transferred from the maternal to fetal circulations. These findings demonstrate that the capacity for increasing muscle growth by manipulating TGF-ß signaling pathways is much more extensive than previously appreciated and suggest that muscle mass may be controlled at least in part by a systemic mode of action of myostatin.

Insights from Amphioxus into the Evolution of Vertebrate Cartilage:

Central to the story of vertebrate evolution is the origin of the vertebrate head, a problem difficult to approach using paleontology and comparative morphology due to a lack of unambiguous intermediate forms. Embryologically, much of the vertebrate head is derived from two ectodermal tissues, the neural crest and cranial placodes. Recent work in protochordates suggests the first chordates possessed migratory neural tube cells with some features of neural crest cells. However, it is unclear how and when these cells acquired the ability to form cellular cartilage, a cell type unique to vertebrates. It has been variously proposed that the neural crest acquired chondrogenic ability by recruiting proto-chondrogenic gene programs deployed in the neural tube, pharynx, and notochord. To test these hypotheses we examined the expression of 11 amphioxus orthologs of genes involved in neural crest chondrogenesis. Consistent with cellular cartilage as a vertebrate novelty, we find that no single amphioxus tissue co-expresses all or most of these genes. However, most are variously co-expressed in mesodermal derivatives. Our results suggest that neural crest-derived cartilage evolved by serial cooption of genes which functioned primitively in mesoderm.

The Antibacterial Protein Lysozyme Identified as the Termite Egg Recognition Pheromone:

Social insects rely heavily on pheromone communication to maintain their sociality. Egg protection is one of the most fundamental social behaviours in social insects. The recent discovery of the termite-egg mimicking fungus ‘termite-ball’ and subsequent studies on termite egg protection behaviour have shown that termites can be manipulated by using the termite egg recognition pheromone (TERP), which strongly evokes the egg-carrying and -grooming behaviours of workers. Despite the great scientific and economic importance, TERP has not been identified because of practical difficulties. Herein we identified the antibacterial protein lysozyme as the TERP.

Corpus Callosum Morphology in Capuchin Monkeys Is Influenced by Sex and Handedness:

Sex differences have been reported in both overall corpus callosum area and its regional subdivisions in humans. Some have suggested this reflects a unique adaptation in humans, as similar sex differences in corpus callosum morphology have not been reported in any other species of primate examined to date. Furthermore, an association between various measurements of corpus callosum morphology and handedness has been found in humans and chimpanzees. In the current study, we report measurements of corpus callosum cross-sectional area from midsagittal MR images collected in vivo from 14 adult capuchin monkeys, 9 of which were also characterized for hand preference on a coordinated bimanual task. Adult females were found to have a significantly larger corpus callosum: brain volume ratio, rostral body, posterior midbody, isthmus, and splenium than adult males. Left-handed individuals had a larger relative overall corpus callosum area than did right-handed individuals. Additionally, a significant sex and handedness interaction was found for anterior midbody, with right-handed males having a significantly smaller area than right-handed females. These results suggest that sex and handedness influences on corpus callosum morphology are not restricted to Homo sapiens.

Simple Sequence Repeats Provide a Substrate for Phenotypic Variation in the Neurospora crassa Circadian Clock:

WHITE COLLAR-1 (WC-1) mediates interactions between the circadian clock and the environment by acting as both a core clock component and as a blue light photoreceptor in Neurospora crassa. Loss of the amino-terminal polyglutamine (NpolyQ) domain in WC-1 results in an arrhythmic circadian clock; this data is consistent with this simple sequence repeat (SSR) being essential for clock function.
Since SSRs are often polymorphic in length across natural populations, we reasoned that investigating natural variation of the WC-1 NpolyQ may provide insight into its role in the circadian clock. We observed significant phenotypic variation in the period, phase and temperature compensation of circadian regulated asexual conidiation across 143 N. crassa accessions. In addition to the NpolyQ, we identified two other simple sequence repeats in WC-1. The sizes of all three WC-1 SSRs correlated with polymorphisms in other clock genes, latitude and circadian period length. Furthermore, in a cross between two N. crassa accessions, the WC-1 NpolyQ co-segregated with period length.
Natural variation of the WC-1 NpolyQ suggests a mechanism by which period length can be varied and selected for by the local environment that does not deleteriously affect WC-1 activity. Understanding natural variation in the N. crassa circadian clock will facilitate an understanding of how fungi exploit their environments.

When you are spoofed in a comic strip, it’s time to give up

See the entire comic strip here, as this is just the panel most relevant to yesterday’s news:
13-prism.jpg

My picks from ScienceDaily

Super Spiders Make Bolder Birds:

Recent research has revealed that by feeding spiders to their chicks, birds can manipulate the personality and learning ability of their young. In a report recently published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, University of Glasgow researchers reveal that birds preferentially feed their young spiders containing taurine.
Taurine is an amino acid which is also found in breast milk and energy drinks. The beneficial qualities of taurine include aiding the development of premature babies and reducing blood pressure in human adults, but it has not previously been known how taurine influences the development of birds.
By comparing the behaviour of wild blue tits that were fed a taurine supplement, mimicking a diet rich in spiders, with blue tits that were not, researchers were able to observe the long term impacts of this vital nutrient.

Sleep Apnea Treatment Option: Innovative Surgery:

Sleep disorder and ear, nose and throat specialists at Thomas Jefferson University are examining an innovative procedure to treat obstructive sleep apnea syndrome.

New Light-sensing Ability Discovered In Disease-causing Bacteria:

The bacteria that cause brucellosis can sense light and use the information to regulate their virulence, according to a study in the August 24 issue of the journal Science. The discovery comes after 120 years of research into the disease, which causes abortions in livestock and fevers in humans. Researchers found that two other bacteria, including a species that attacks plants, sense light using the same type of protein structure, and at least 94 more species possess the code for it in their DNA.

‘Mighty Mice’ Made Mightier:

The Johns Hopkins scientist who first showed that the absence of the protein myostatin leads to oversized muscles in mice and men has now found a second protein, follistatin, whose overproduction in mice lacking myostatin doubles the muscle-building effect.

New Golden Frog Discovered In Remote Region Of Colombia:

A new poisonous frog was recently discovered in a remote mountainous region in Colombia by a team of young scientists supported by the Conservation Leadership Programme (CLP). The new frog, which is almost two centimetres in length, was given the name the “golden frog of Supatá.”

Saving The Remarkable Kakapo Bird From Extinction:

One of the strangest and most endangered birds in the world, the kakapo, is being brought back from the brink of extinction with the help of scientists from the University of Glasgow.

ClockQuotes

Take time to gather up the past so that you will be able to draw from your experience and invest them in the future.
– Jim Rohn

New and Exciting in PLoS Biology and PLoS Medicine

The Molecular Anatomy of Spontaneous Germline Mutations in Human Testes:

The frequency of Apert syndrome mutations is 100-1,000 times higher than expected from average mutation rates, and it is due to positive selection in the testis increasing the frequency of germ cells carrying the defect.

Enlightening Energy Parasitism by Analysis of an ATP/ADP Transporter from Chlamydiae:

This paper explores the functional basis of how the intracellular P. amoebophila manages to effectively exploit the energy pool of its host cell by using the nucleotide transporter PamNTT1.

Emergence of Large-Scale Cell Morphology and Movement from Local Actin Filament Growth Dynamics:

Mathematical modeling predicts global modifications of the shape and behavior of migrating cells from knowledge of detailed multiscale protein interactions.

Qualitative Research: Understanding Patients’ Needs and Experiences:

Why do up to half of all patients with tuberculosis (TB) fail to adhere to drug treatment [1]? The answer to this question is a matter of life and death, since nonadherence contributes to disease relapse and mortality.

Setting Priorities in Child Health Research Investments for South Africa:

This paper aims to define health research priorities in South Africa, where it is estimated that nearly 100,000 children under 5 years of age still die each year.

Evolution of Adoption

If we are not there at the moment of birth, how come we can bond with the baby and be good fathers or good adoptive parents? Kate explains. Obligatory Reading of the Day.
Update: Related is this new article by former Scibling David Dobbs: The Hormone That Helps You Read Minds
Update 2: Matt responds to Kate’s post.
Update 3: Kate wrote a follow-up: Why help out? The life of an alloparent

Grist on environmental proclivities of Presidential candidates

Grist takes a look at all candidates from both parties and evaluates their stands on environmental issues, global warming and energy:
How Green Is Your Candidate?

Michael Pollan – food news

Michael Pollan’s book The Omnivore’s Dilemma got out in paperback today, so if you have not read it yet, now is the time.
Also, in his mailing-list letter, Pollan announces that he has “…just completed a new book, a short manifesto about diet and health called “In Defense of Food.” It’s scheduled to be published January 1.”
On the Farm Bill, currently going through the Congress, he writes:

The House Bill was a disappointment in many ways, leaving the current subsidy system undisturbed, though there are a handful of creative provisions tucked into it regarding school lunch and local food systems. There’s reason to hope the Senate Bill will offer more genuine reforms. It’s important to keep public attention focused on the process, lest the usual suspects have their way. A good site for keeping up to date on the substance and politics of the debate is www.farmpolicy.com.

ClockQuotes

There’s no point in being grown up if you can’t be childish sometimes.
– Dr Who

My picks from ScienceDaily

Echidna’s Sex Life Under Study:

A University of Adelaide-led project will study the genetic makeup of one of Australia’s most iconic animals, the echidna, to give an unprecedented insight into their sex life and behaviour. World echidna expert Dr Peggy Rismiller and geneticist Dr Frank Grützner will collaborate with the Monarto and Adelaide Zoos and South Australian Museum to learn more about these unique egg-laying mammals known as monotremes.

Sharks’ ‘Bite Force’ Under The Spotlight:

While sharks instill fear in beachgoers worldwide, they instill a deep sense of curiosity in UT assistant professor and shark expert Dan Huber. There are still many mysteries surrounding what makes sharks such perfect predators, so Huber’s research on sharks’ “bite force” – their hunting performance – may offer new insights on sharks’ habits, capabilities and evolution. The research may also lead to advances in protective swimwear, shark-proofing equipment and a better understanding of flexible cartilage – which forms the sharks’ whole skeletons, much like human ears and noses.

Pollution Harms Top Marine Predators:

A new study provides some of the first evidence that albatrosses in the North Pacific may be affected by environmental contamination. Alterations in the immune function of the black-footed albatross were associated with elevated blood levels of nonpoint source contaminants. Nonpoint source pollution comes from a wide variety of sources such as farms, cars, roads and highways, and lawns. This kind of pollution is ubiquitous and can pose a significant threat to wildlife.

Monkeys Use ‘Baby Talk’ To Interact With Infants:

Female rhesus monkeys use special vocalizations while interacting with infants, the way human adults use motherese, or “baby talk,” to engage babies’ attention, new research at the University of Chicago shows. “Motherese is a high pitched and musical form of speech, which may be biological in origin,” said Dario Maestripieri, Associate Professor in Comparative Human Development at the University. “The acoustic structure of particular monkey vocalizations called girneys may be adaptively designed to attract young infants and engage their attention, similar to how the acoustic structure of human motherese, or baby talk, allows adults to visually or socially engage with infants.”

Wind Turbine Has Switch To Move Clear Of Migrating Birds:

The wind turbine off in the distance is flopped over on its side – the 11-foot blades suspended just above the ground at one end and a 2,000-pound, bulbous, galvanized steel counterbalance pitched into the air at the other. The unique turbine isn’t broken; it was lowered from a height of 80 feet to test the ability to bring it down at the drop of a hat should foul weather set in or should the migratory songbirds and nesting seabirds that frequent this 95-acre island run afoul of the whirling blades.

Today’s Carnivals

Encephalon #30 is up on Neurofuture
Gene Genie #14 is up on MicrobiologyBytes
Carnival of the Green #92 is up on Greener Magazine

Lunar Eclipse tonight

Here is the time-table if you want to watch the eclipse in the Eastern time zone:
eclipseedt.jpg
As you can see, it is very late at night, and much of the good stuff is happening after dawn. Perhaps in other time zones, the eclipse will look better, so check out the timelines here.

MS Excel is the tool of the Devil!

There is a good reason why scientists in general despise MS Excel. It is cumbersome, non-common-sensical, and the stats cannot be trusted. The graphs are ugly. I am sure it took a lot of hard work to design Excel (and Word), but if I were Charles Simonyi, I would hide the authorship of those two programs as much as possible. Charles went to the Space Station, after all, paying for the ticket out of his own pocket, so there is something much more exciting (and safe) to brag about (not to mention dating Martha Stewart).
There are so many good pieces of software out there, many capable of doing some very complex statistics. For quick simple tests, nothing beats the free online GraphPad QuickCalcs. A few seconds of pasting in the data, click on “Calculate” and the numbers are all there, ready to copy and paste into the manuscript.
I still use CricketGraph (the ancient version 3.0, not anything newer) for drawing graphs as nothing beats its simplicity and the crisp clarity of the graphs. For the stuff in my field, the open source program Circadia, small enough to fit on the old big soft floppies, not updated since 1982, is still a golden standard that no newer software package can begin to match in its ease of use, clarity and ability to do everything a chronobiologist wants to do with data in a matter of few minutes. I wish I did not have to keep an old Mac around just for those two programs (new MacOS cannot read them).
But, darned Excel is the corporate standard. So, I spent the last few days cussing and cursing, being mean to the dog, and generally having a bad time, because I had to use Excel. And I started out all wrong – it was a common-sensical way to do it, but, hey, common sense does not operate here. I consulted people better versed with it to see if I was doing it right. When they said No, I had to start from scratch. And I am still doing it (a day overdue now). And it appears I’ll be doing it all day or longer…. Yuck!

Meeting a reader/commenter in RealLife is always fun!

Yesterday I had lunch (and coffee and another coffee – this lasted a while because it was so much fun) with Tanja and her husband Doug. Regulars here probably recognize the commenter who goes by the handle “tanjasova” – that’s her.
They just bought a nice house in Winston-Salem and will completely move to North Carolina next month, so we’ll get to meet each other and indulge ourselves in Serbian cuisine often in the future. They have three teenage boys (from their respective first marriages) and they live on his salary as she is still looking for a job. Now that she will be here, she can easily go and interview in person which should be helpful. If you are looking for a person with experience in several biological disciplines from biochemistry and immunology to ecology, take a look at her CV.
She gave me an update on the state of Serbian science (and the academic politics) and the recent rise of Creationists (mostly Adventists). One fortunate side-effect of the place being small, i.e., there being only one really large university (University of Belgrade) is that the “debates” and panels about evolution and creationism will inevitably bring people who know each other REALLY well. Tanja recalled one such debate she attended (in 1995 I believe). After the Creationist panelist finished his rant, the other guy, a professor of evolutionary biology (who was temporarily ousted from the University during the Milosevic regime due to his outspoken opposition), turned to him and said “And to think, my eesteemed colleague, that you got an A on my exam!”. Pwned.
Tanja and Doug also brought with them an album full of pictures just as amazing as this one – Doug is a passionate nature photographer. I hope all those pics end up somewhere online where everyone can see them.
I forgot my camera, but once they get back to their computer and send me the pictures they took yesterday, I’ll be sure to post them here. Thank you for a great afternoon!

Wi-fi for the people

Brian Russell, the tireless fighter for public wireless in the Chapel Hill/Carrboro area, recently wrote two blog posts on the widely read local blog Orange Politics: Chapel Hill WiFi Pilot needs different Hotspots and Where is the WiFi?
This received quite a lot of attention both before and during the Chapel Hill Town Council meeting where public wi-fi was discussed. Some pilot locations may get altered due to Brian’s advice. Today, Brian has a front-page article in Chapel Hill News on the topic. He has been building a Google Map of local wireless (on which I made sure to include a good word for my ‘office’). Brian writes:

On Sept. 1, or when the new pilot goes live, I will plot their locations on a Google map at http://www.chapelhillwireless.org. Then I will publicly announce on Orange Politics a series of Wireless Tailgate Parties. Each day we’ll be at different Chapel Hill Wireless hot spot. Bring your folding chair, a fully charged laptop, food, drinks, a video camera, wi-fi phone, or whatever. If you don’t have a laptop don’t worry. We’ll share.

My picks from ScienceDaily

Mouse Vision Has A Rhythm All Its Own:

In the eyes of mammals, visual information is processed on a daily schedule set within the eyes themselves–not one dictated by the brain, according to a new report in the journal Cell. The researchers found in mice that the eyes’ normal rhythmic response to light requires only that a molecular “clock” inside the retina go on ticking. The retina is a layer of nerve tissue covering the back of the eyeball, which is often likened to the film in a camera; without it, images can’t be captured.

How Snakes Survive Starvation:

Starving snakes employ novel survival strategies not seen before in vertebrates, according to research conducted by a University of Arkansas biologist. These findings could be used in conservation strategies to determine the health of snake populations.

Giant Panda Can Survive:

The giant panda is not at an “evolutionary dead end” and could have a long term viable future, according to new research involving scientists from Cardiff University.

ClockQuotes

To a surprising extent the war-lords in shining armour, the apostles of the martial virtues, tend not to die fighting when the time comes. History is full of ignominious getaways by the great and famous.
– George Orwell

This PRISM does not turn white light into the beautiful colors of the rainbow

When technological or social changes start altering the business landscape in a particular industry, people involved in that business tend to respond in three general ways.
The visionaries immediately see where their world is going, jump to the front edge of it and make sure that the change is as swift and painless as possible, resulting in as good new business environment as possible. They immediately sell their horses and invest in the development of the internal combustion engine, gear-boxes, brakes and start building car factories.
The followers are much more timid, but they are astute enough to know that they can choose to either adapt of die. So they watch for a while and, once they are ready, they sell their livery horses, turn their stables into garages and start driving schools, taxi-cab services, limo rentals, rent-a-car chains, road-paving companies, etc.
The fools feel threatened and, in a knee-jerk response, start buying more livery horses, expanding their stables and, to show off their foolishness, they get on their high horses and start yelling how cars are the tools of the Devil and, like, totally un-American.
The Web is changing the business world of the science publishing industry. You can guess where this post is going now, can’t you….
There are now 2811 journals in the Directory of Open Access Journals, the seven PLoS journals just being the most well-known of them, with many smaller journals being published by BioMedCentral and Hindawi. Those are the visionaries, the organizations that are making sure that the new business world of Open Access, now quite inevitable, is reached in a way that is the best for everyone: researchers, readers/taxpayers, universities, publishers, libraries, students, medical practitioners, the governments of the world, etc. The old business model is quickly giving way to the new model and the early adopters are experimenting with it and showing that it can be done without too much pain and with universal benefit.
There are others, watching and getting ready to jump as soon as they feel comfortable doing so. I can bet money that Nature will go Open Access as soon as the forward-looking editors manage to persuade their backward-looking corporate overlords that the data and statistics show that this is the sound business way to go. Science is making some small noises as well, but they have to deal with the Victorian mindset of their AAAS bosses. They’ll get there, but it may take them a few years. And once Nature and Science go Open Access, everyone else will have to follow suit.
Except the screamers. Those who are buying livery horses right now. One such livery horse is Eric Dezenhall, the PR guy from the Frank Luntz school of obfuscation, recently hired by outfits like Reed Elsevier and American Chemical Society to get on a high horse and scream how Open Access is the tool of the Devil and, like, so un-American. Oh, btw, he suggested to the Association of American Publishers to join forces with American Enterprise Institute and National Consumers League, those paragons of honesty, freedom, democracy and openness, to launch a campaign of lies and defamations against the Open Access movement. Just sayin’….
These folks have now come up with another Luntz-grade moniker: PRISM, which stands for, believe it or not, “Partnership for Research Integrity in Science & Medicine”!
Their main points, from the front page of the website (and if you dig around the site, there is some even more incredible stuff there):

What’s at risk
Policies are being proposed that threaten to introduce undue government intervention in science and scholarly publishing, putting at risk the integrity of scientific research by:
* undermining the peer review process by compromising the viability of non-profit and commercial journals that manage and fund it;
* opening the door to scientific censorship in the form of selective additions to or omissions from the scientific record;
* subjecting the scientific record to the uncertainty that comes with changing federal budget priorities and bureaucratic meddling with definitive versions; and
* introducing duplication and inefficiencies that will divert resources that would otherwise be dedicated to research.

Oh, up is down. Black is White. War is peace, Freedom is slavery, Ignorance is strength. Stalin is the coryphaeus of science. Socialized medicine is inefficient. Bush would be pleasant to have beer with. We are winning in Iraq (but first we have to find the WMDs which are like so there). Clean Air Act actually cleans air. Evolution is ‘just a theory’. Global warming is a hoax. When you stop laughing (the kind of laugh one usually tries to suppress at a funeral), read some of the first responses on blogs:

Continue reading

My picks from ScienceDaily (the Brain Edition)

Viagra Increases Release Of Key Reproductive Hormone, Study Finds:

Researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison report this month that sildenafil increases the amount of oxytocin released by stimulation of the posterior pituitary gland, a small structure directly underneath the brain that regulates hormone levels in response to neural signals.

Mice Provide Important Clues To Obsessive-compulsive Disorder:

Mice born without a key brain protein compulsively groom their faces until they bleed and are afraid to venture out of the corner of their cages. When given a replacement dose of the protein in a specific region of the brain, or the drugs used to treat humans suffering from obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), many of these mice seem to get better.

Brain Research Shows Why Long-term Drug Users Just Can’t Say No:

New research from the University of Melbourne has shed new light on why long term drug users find it hard to say no, despite dire consequences to their health. A study into the frontal cortex, the key region of the brain involved in decision making, has shown that drug users have to place much greater demand on the brain to control impulses.

Longer Life? ‘Longevity’ Genes Protect Very Old People From The Bad Genes’ Harmful Effects:

People who live to 100 or more are known to have just as many–and sometimes even more–harmful gene variants compared with younger people. Now, scientists at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University have discovered the secret behind this paradox: favorable “longevity” genes that protect very old people from the bad genes’ harmful effects. The novel method used by the researchers could lead to new drugs to protect against age-related diseases.

Tone Deafness Explained:

Do people cringe when you sing? You’ve got company. But researchers have found that only 1 in 20 people truly has amusia, the technical term for tone deafness. Tests have shown that some people with bad singing voices hear music just fine. Amusics are a smaller group with a perceptual problem: They can’t pick out differences in pitch or follow the simplest tunes, reports the September 2007 issue of the Harvard Health Letter.

ClockQuotes

The modern American tourist now fills his experience with pseudo-events. He has come to expect both more strangeness and more familiarity than the world naturally offers. He has come to believe that he can have a lifetime of adventure in two weeks and all the thrills of risking his life without any real risk at all.
– Daniel Joseph Boorstin

Morning in Carrboro

This morning bright and early, I went to Weaver Street Market (the one in Carrboro, not the one a block away from me), where I met Paul Jones for coffee and a session of people-watching – a Saturday morning tradition.
Carrboro is like a miniature version of San Francisco in a sense. While Chapel Hill is populated by Birckenstock liberals (hey, I am one, so I feel comfortable), in Carrboro you can wear, figuratevily, anything you want: Birckenstocks, sure, but also sneakers, clogs, slippers, high-heels, army boots, cowboy boots, loafers, sandals, Tevas, or go barefoot and, no matter what, nobody cares. Just like in San Francisco, it is a live and let live place, where one can be whatever one is (or whatever one wants to pretend to be) freely, without anyone batting an eye-lash. What a wonderful feeling!
Apart from meeting a bunch of other people (everyone knows Paul around here) and planning the Science Blogging Conference, we also talked about the Web a lot. After all, Paul teaches a course on Online Communities. Geez, my job description is “Online Community Manager“! I got there by the seat of my pants, doing what I like doing and observing how others behave online. It is now time to start reading and learning about what researchers have found out about this as well. Hopefully this will be helpful for my work as well.

Blogrolling for Today

What You’re Doing Is Rather Desperate


Traction Lobe


It Has Come To My Attention


Jennomics


Inalienable Rights


Prehistoric Pulp

Gooey Stuff

Oobleck and Semen are on Jennifer’s mind these days. Obligatory Readings of the Day.

Medical Imaging of the Month

Radiology Grand Rounds XV are up on Sumer’s Radiology Site

My picks from ScienceDaily

Crested Auklet Birds Rub Tick-repelling Perfume On Their Mates During Courtship:

Hitting it off with members of the opposite sex takes chemistry. University of Alaska Fairbanks researcher Hector Douglas has found that, for crested auklets, chemistry has both amorous and practical applications. The birds rub a citrus-like scent, secreted in wick-like feathers on their backs, on each other during courtship, a behavior called alloanointing. It is well known among some mammals, such as peccaries, but until now was not documented among birds. His research also indicates that the behavior could help protect the birds from parasites, such as ticks.

Natural Insecticide Re-created In The Lab:

Twenty-two years of dedicated research has finally resulted in success: In the journal Angewandte Chemie, a British team headed by Steven V. Ley at the University of Cambridge reports the first synthesis of azadirachtin, a natural compound that stops predatory insects from feeding.

Martian Life? Small Percentage Of Martian Soil Samples Could Have Biological Origin:

A new interpretation of data from NASA’s Viking landers indicates that 0.1% of the Martian soil tested could have a biological origin.

Are Homosexual Civil Unions A 600-year-old Tradition?:

A compelling new study from the September issue of the Journal of Modern History reviews historical evidence, including documents and gravesites, suggesting that homosexual civil unions may have existed six centuries ago in France. The article is the latest from the ongoing “Contemporary Issues in Historical Perspective” series, which explores the intersection between historical knowledge and current affairs.

First Out-of-body Experience Induced In Laboratory Setting:

A neuroscientist working at UCL (University College London) has devised the first experimental method to induce an out-of-body experience in healthy participants. In a paper published in Science, Dr Henrik Ehrsson, UCL Institute of Neurology, outlines the unique method by which the illusion is created and the implications of its discovery.

ClockQuotes

Have regular hours for work and play; make each day both useful and pleasant, and prove that you understand the worth of time by employing it well. Then youth will be delightful, old age will bring few regrets, and life will become a beautiful success.
– Louisa May Alcott

New on…

New on Seed Scienceblogs:
The ScienceBlogs 500,000th Comment Contest
PZ Myers explains
Now, where are the comments on this blog? Just type! It’s easy!
New on PLoS – new articles have been published today on:
PLoS Genetics
PLoS Computational Biology
PLoS Pathogens
New on Hirschsprung’s Disease:
Short Bowel Syndrome – And the Potential Benefits of Omega-3’s
Save the babies!
You can help, perhaps.
New on the blog carnival front:
Should there be a new geology carnival?
Friday Ark #153 is up on The Modulator
New on the Skube debacle:
Nick Anthis: Jay Rosen: Blogs Do Quality Reporting Too
Jay Rosen: Blowback: The journalism that bloggers actually do…
Jeff Jarvis: A game of wack-a-curmudgeon
Ed Cone: Skube speaks
Paul Jones: News and Record’s Skube vs Bloggers Summary
Lanita Withers: Essay lights up blogosphere
Scott Rosenberg: Skube vs. Marshall and the LA Times’ editorial kabuki
New on the Science Blogging Conference and Anthology
The registration for the Conference opens in one week – September 1st.
Send in yor suggestions for the posts that should be included in Open Laboratory 2007
New on Open Science:
Cameron Neylon: Open (adjective)
Bill Hooker: What do we mean by open science?
Peter Murray-Rast: What do we mean by open science?
Jean-Claude Bradley: Cameron Neylon on Open Notebook Science
Bill Hooker: Another note on terminology
New on spoiled kids growing up into Kindergarden bullies:
Blake Stacey
SA Smith
Chris Mims
Jim Lippard
Andrea Bottaro
John Lynch
Lindsay Beyerstein
PZ Myers

Bloggers for Peer-Reviewed Research Reporting

Dave announced that the contest for the icon for denoting posts covering peer-reviewed research is now open. Use your creative skills and/or spread the word.

Top Five Dead Scientists

James Randerson asks this question, but actually leaving only four slots open as “…If anyone plans not to include Darwin I’m going to have to ask them to step outside.” a sentiment with which Peter McGrath agrees. So – your Top 5?

ClockQuotes

The last time I saw him he was walking down Lover’s Lane holding his own hand.
– Fred Allen

My picks from ScienceDaily

Tracking Feline Memories On The Move:

When a cat steps over an obstacle with its front legs, how do its hind legs know what to do? A new study in Current Biology reveals that it is the foreleg stepping movement itself that leaves a lasting impression. By comparison, feline memories of having just seen an obstacle proved rather fleeting. Indeed, the researchers found that cats could remember having stepped over a hurdle for at least ten minutes. The findings suggest that cats’ working memories can extend much longer than earlier studies had shown, according to the researchers.

Elephantnose Fish ‘See’ With Their Chin:

Originating in Central Africa, Peters’ elephantnose fish (Gnathonemus petersii), finds its bearings by means of weak electrical fields. Scientists from the University of Bonn have now been able to show how well this works. In complete darkness the animals can even distinguish the material of objects at a distance or dead organisms from living ones. The results have now been published in the Journal of Experimental Biology.

More….
Claims Of Sex-related Differences In Genetic Association Studies Often Not Properly Validated:

A review of previous research suggests that prominent claims of sex differences of gene-disease associations are often insufficiently documented and validated, according to an article in the August 22/29 issue of JAMA.

SciVee has really made it.

Yup, a mention in The Inquirer! (see Wikipedia definition if unclear).

Today’s Carnivals

Change of Shift, Volume II, Number 5 is up on Nurse Ratched’s Place
Carnival of Space #17 is up on The Planetary Society Weblog

What is an “Author”?

There are some die-hards in the comment thread of this post on Evolgen who assert that the only thing that makes one an author of something is the act of writing, i.e., using writing materials to commit language to paper. Preferably English language… Thus, in their minds, there is something fishy about multi-author scientific papers, i.e., only the individual who crafted the sentences of the paper should be considered an author of that paper.
But…
Leonardo painted Mona Lisa. Leonardo is the “Author” of Mona Lisa. People who named it, framed it, marketed it, hung it up in The Louvre and described it in the Catalogue – all of them are equivalent to editors and publishers. They are not authors. Leonardo is. Although, note that he never commited language to paper. For all practical purposes he could have been illiterate, he would still be the Author.
Mozart composed The Little Night Music. Mozart is the “Author” of The Little Night Music. He wrote it down in musical notation, but for all practical purposes he could have just played it and had some court musician (Salieri?) jot down the notes on paper. In any case, Mozart is the Author. Although, note that he never committed language (German, English or any other) to paper. For all practical purposes he could have been illiterate, he would still be the Author.
Many modern music bands are composed of musically illiterate people. They get together and start playing their instruments. After a while and many fits and starts, they come up with something that actually sounds good. They then practice it and in the end they record it. The music is never written down, but it is distributed in the form of a digital file, perhaps as a CD. They are collectively Authors of the piece. Others – producers, recording engineers, marketers, etc. are not Authors. The band members are. No language was committed to paper in the entire process, not even musical notation. For all practical purposes they could all have been illiterate, they would still be the Authors.
When a bunch of scientists get together and talk, they may come up with an idea, which they then refine and develop. They contact other scientists who possess particular skills or expertise needed for the project. The work gets done, with each person doing his/her own part. They all participate in data production, data analysis and/or interpretation. Finally, almost as an afterthought, one unlucky member of the group is assigned the tedious job of writing the paper, i.e., the textual part of the paper. This one person commits language to paper, though the statistics and graphs are a much more important parts of the paper (and much more difficult to produce than text). All the people involved in the process are Authors of that piece of work. If the group hired someone else, e.g., a professional writer (and yes, some labs do that), to write the textual part of the paper, the ONLY person who is NOT an Author of that paper is the ONLY person who actually committed language to paper.
So, where does the confusion arise from? Authorship has NOTHING to do with language. It has everything to do with the creative process. People who produce something new, be it art, music, ideas (including stories) or knowledge are the authors of it. The writing is just one of the many possible ways that the authored thing is recorded for others to enjoy. A novelist is an author not because she typed, but because she creatively invented the story she subsequently typed.
Imagine if 20 or 50 years from now there is no scientific paper in the current form at all. All of science is reported in the video format on places like SciVee or JoVE. The authors of the work turn on the camera and talk about their initial idea and background, then show around the lab, demonstrate their techniques, put up a short clip of something relevant to the work (e.g., animal behavior), display the data and the analysis, then again turn to the camera and talk about their conclusions and the directions for the future research. The YouTube generation, now in their 50s and 60s and with long white beards, watches this and, if intrigued, clicks on another button that shows all the raw data sitting there ready to be mined. No writing is involved at all. No putting language on paper. Yet, all the people who participated in the creation of this piece of knowledge are Authors. For all practical purposes they could all be illiterate, they would still be the Authors.

Sarah is back from Chernobyl

So, this is a perfect time to take another look at her Notes From Ukraine and check out the last several posts from there. I hope the blog will continue as Notes From Durham including the coverage of her science at Duke and all the local blogger events…

Telecommuting – how it really looks like

Matt did it first! And then he told more of us. I like the one Laelaps did. But this is more truthfull:

Leave No Rock Unturned

On September 2nd this year go out somewhere: into your backyard, or the woods, or the bottom of the sea, and turn a rock or two or three. Take pictures of what you find underneath. Perhaps you’ll find earthworms, or pillbugs, or beetles. Or a starfish. Maybe even a snake. Perhaps even a snake guarding the entrance to Dick Cheney’s Undisclosed Location. If you turn a rock in Iraq and find WMDs please let us all know as that would be the biggest scoop in the history of the blogosphere (good luck with that one, though).
The idea was hatched by Dave Bonta, Fred Garber and Bev Wigney. Dave explains in detail.
Post your pictures on your blog and send Bev the URL, or post them on this Flickr tag, or send them to Bev at bev (at) magickcanoe (dot) com (with “Rock Flipping” in the subject line). Then sit back and watch the collection grow. See what others find under the rocks on that day. Post a link on your blog as well.

ClockQuotes

Everyone in daily life carries such a heavy, mixed burden on his own conscience that he is reluctant to penalize those who have been caught.
– Brooks Atkinson

Blogger Blowback

On Sunday, LATimes published a viciously uninformed piece about blogging by some Skube guy (who appears to be here in NC though I have never heard of him before). The blogosphere, as expected, responded with laughter and dismay.
Today, LATimes published a response by NYU J-school professor (who I have most definitely heard of, and even met in person once) Jay Rosen – The journalism that bloggers actually do:

Blowback! That’s what you’re in for when a great American newspaper runs a Sunday opinion piece as irretrievably lame as “Blogs: All the noise that fits” by Michael Skube…

The article lists a few examples (collected in the most blogospheric manner possible – in the comments thread on Jay Rosen’s blog, subsequently fact-checked and vetted before publication), including one distinctly science-related example – the George Deutch affair in which my Scibling Nick Anthis did some investigative reporting which resulted in a highly visible resignation of Deutch from NASA.