Slick Metaphors

They see visions, of Heaven on Earth, or Armageddon, or whatever.
We study the way world works and identify the problems that need fixing.
They cannot fix a broken toilet – they prey to it to fix itself.
We devise solutions, test them over time, tweak them and change them until the problem is fixed.
They try to wish the world to become as they like it.
We work to change the world.
They are preachers.
We are engineers.
They are poetic speakers.
We are rocket scientists and brain surgeons.
They don’t want to get their hands greasy (though oil money is OK).
We make sure that the machinery of the society runs smoothly by keeping it well oiled and lubricated.
They make sure they are well oiled and lubricated.
Yesterday, even many of those (30% of white evangelicals, for instance) who think the way they do showed they understand that machines need engineers, rockets need rocket scientists and brains need brain surgeons and that eloquent preachers need to go back to church, out of government.
They slipped on their own grease.
We’ll start cleaning up in January.

Even a dead Democrat…

…is better than a living Republican incumbent. In South Dakota.

Sweet!

Environment and Public Works Committee:
Outgoing Chair: James Inhofe (OK).
Incoming Chair: Barbara Boxer (CA).
Voot!

Four Tangled Stones

Tangled Bank #66 is up on Easternblot.
The second edition of The Fourstone Hearth is up on Afarensis.

SBC – NC’07

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My SciBling Janet Stemwedel of Adventures in Ethics and Science is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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EduBlogging of the week

92nd edition of the Carnival of Education is up on NYC Educator
Carnival of Homeschooling – Library Edition is up on SpunkyHomeSchool.

Election highlights

Big stories of the day:
1 – Democrats sweep the House of Representatives. Many newbies are relatively conservative – we need to start retraining them. Watch out for Lieberman and what he does.
2 – Montana and Missouri races are not over yet, but look good for Dems. Virginia still has to count some regular ballots, the absentee ballots and provisional ballots tomorrow, plus an almost inevitable recount.
3 – South Dakota anti-abortion measure failed. Sigh of relief!
4 – Socialist Saunders wins. Who said moving to the right was neccessary to win?
5 – Repubs had nothing to run on, so they repeated the old slogans and platitudes, irrelevant “cultural” issues, and invested heavily in various types of campaign and voting shenannigans. The biggest suprise of the day is that millions STILL, at this day and age, voted for Republicans. How does one organize and implement re-education and group psychotherapy at such a massive scale to get those people back to Earth?
6 – Do Repubs really want the recount in Virginia? That would, after all, put a spotlight on all the electoral improprietes they performed there – something that otherwise would not be a story of this election. Do they really want people and the press to focus again on the voting machines? Voting supression? Robocalls?
7 – Here in NC, Heath Schuler won and Larry Kissell will probably have a recount and lose.
8 – Personally the most satisfying result – the defeat of Russell Capps in NC House Disctrict 041. Capps spent his legislative career pushing bills focused almost entirely on inserting religion into public schools, from Creationism to the Pledge of Allegiance. Good riddance!
9 – Bush was apparently “surprised and dismayed” with the result! What did he expect? Was nobody delivering the news to his Bubble over the past few months?
10 – The best and most important news of the day – Dems taking LOTS of governorships, thus ensuring fair elections in many more states (including Ohio) in 2008.

Bloggers on CNN

Pam is one of the CNN bloggers tonight. I already saw her on TV a couple of times. Let’s see how much time they give them on TV and how much space online.

Ken Miller talk

Last night I went back to my old campus to attend the Dr. Robert Rabb Lecture by Ken Miller. The Stewart Theater was packed. I saw a lof of old friends, but, as it was crowded, only got to spend some time talking to a couple of them.
Oh, there were bloggers there, too, of course. I first met up with Reed and Professor Steve Steve. Steve Steve is omnipresent (today in Raleigh, NC, yesterday in Vancouver, before that in Australia), omniscient and omnipotent (knew how and then fixed the computer and projector for the speaker) and benevolent (endless patience getting his picture taken with everyone – will post once available). Mr R was also there with his wife, but had to leave during the break between the lecture and the panel discussion, so we met for only a few seconds.
Rev.BigDumbChimp is Dr.Rabb’s grandson. He drove up from South Carolina for the occasion. Reed and I were worried how we were going to find him in the crowd. I suggested we get up to the microphone and ask for Big Dumb Chimp and hope he’d raise his hand and yell “It’s me”. I do not recall now why we decided not to pursue this strategy. Anyway, he walked in with the rest of the Rabb family and we immediatelly recognized each other (having a picture on one’s blog is sometimes a good idea) and got to chat a little bit. Hopefully, he’ll come to the Science Blogging Conference in January so we can have more time to talk.
Ken Miller is a very polished and energetic speaker. I had to remind myself that I was an unusually well-informed person in the audience of academics there – I actually knew the details of the Dover trial and have read big chunks of Judge Jones’ decision, I have recognized the authors of all quotes before he revealed them (including the quote from the Pope), and I new all the examples of evolutionary findings he used (whale evolution, Tiktaalik, immune system evolution, bacterial flagellum evolution). But I read science blogs all the time, including the Panda’s Thumb. Scientists do not – they read scientific papers all the time and are not as well informed about the creationist shenannigans, so much was probably new to them last night. In any case, it was fun, and getting a little bit of internal information from the courtroom proceedings was great.
But then, in the last part of the talk, he started on his apologetics for theistic evolution, slamming Dawkins for being “pessimistic” and totally misunderstanding the Darwin quote (the last paragraph in the Origin):
“There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.”
This does not mean there is a God making the world wondrous, it means that there is no need for the God hypothesis to see the grandeour. Actually, the God hypothesis impoverishes one’s sense and prevents one from being able to see the full scope of the grandeur of the Universe.
The panel afterwards was worse, with six “liberal” clergy-members on it: Miller is Catholic, there was a Baptist, a Presbyterian, a guy leading the Campus Crusade for Christ, a Moslem and a Reform Rabbi (the only one I knew from before – Rabbi Lucy Dinner of Temple Beth Or, the only woman on the panel). There was no representative of atheism on the panel, so these six people were free to preach “love”, and the power of prayer, and the Non-overlapping Magisteria without being challenged. I was sitting there watching them and thinking – hey, of all the hundreds of smart people in the auditorium, they picked the six with emotional problems to tell us all how to think?! OK, they were not the worse – there was also a local Creationist (YEC) group there, too scared to ask questions in public so they tried their hand afterwards, with Ken Miller enjoying himself visibly while rebuffing all their claims.
A few years ago, I was of the mind that something like theistic evolution is a good idea to spread the message that evolution is not evil. I thought that people like Ken Miller are great messengers to soften up the people (step 1) and prepare them for eventual compIete abandonment of the Creator (step 2). And even those who never get to Step 2 are less dangerous than straight-out creationists.
I certainly have no problems with anyone personally believing whatever they want. But I am more and more moving to the opinion that this is not a good strategy. It is just providing the apologia for the believers who have a problem with being perceived as medieval, and allowing them to, then, provide apologia for their more extreme brethren. They – the moderates and the fundies – flock together when the going gets tough and it really counts – the political battles between 15th and 21st centuries.
The moderates are no friends of reason when it counts the most, outside of comfortable chats on panels on campuses. Evolution battle is not a battle of science, it is a battle of mindsets and worldviews: medieval vs. modern. Giving a helping hand to those who give their helping hand to the medieval bigots and authoritarians is not a good strategy. They need to be made uncomfortable – Dawkins-style – and forced to choose and come clear with which side they are on. Otherwise, they’ll play nice with us when it does not matter, and stick their fingers in their ears and sing “la-la-la” when real action is required.
Note: the links to bloggers are now links to their own commentaries on the talk.

One Party

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Fair And Balanced, of course. Can’t insult anyone by naming names, can you?
They, after all, just report and you decide which party it is….

Never Again!

Never Again!I know, I know, Tuesdays are supposed to be for touchy-feely personal posts or navel-gazing posts about blogging, but today is an election, so I decided to go with provocative, hard-hitting stuff instead (originally posted on June 27, 2005, click on the clock-spiderweb to see the original):

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I Have Voted, Have You?

I voted at 9:40am and was voter #299 at our place which is huge! In some years there is less than that whole day.
Even more, earlier today, when I was dropping off my daughter at school around 7:50am, there was a line there with people even standing outside in the cold rain! I have NEVER seen a line there in the last 3.5 years here.
Oh, and if you are so new here that you do not know how I may have voted, I feel like this and this.
There is a judge race (officially non-partisan) in which I did not vote because the self-professed Democrat is bat-shit crazy (and not even endorsed by the Democratic Party) and the Republican…well, they all need to get the message that belonging to a maniacal party does not pay any more. There is another judge (who I think is an old-style Zell-Miller-like Southern Democrat) who is running unopposed for whom I did not vote because I saw his despicable demeanor in the courtroom – but that is personal.

My picks from ScienceDaily

Fossil Is Missing Link In Elephant Lineage:

A pig-sized, tusked creature that roamed the earth some 27 million years ago represents a missing link between the oldest known relatives of elephants and the more recent group from which modern elephants descended, an international team that includes University of Michigan paleontologist William J. Sanders has found.

Saving Threatened Turtles In The Caribbean:

Ecology and conservation experts from the University of Exeter are urging international governments to work together to protect threatened Caribbean sea turtle populations. The Cayman Islands, a UK Overseas Territory, once supported one of the world’s largest sea turtle rookeries, which comprised some 6.5 million adult green and loggerhead turtles. These populations were driven into decline from the mid-1600s onwards, when massive harvesting of nesting turtles began. Only a few dozen individuals survive today.

More Human-Neandertal Mixing Evidence Uncovered:

A reexamination of ancient human bones from Romania reveals more evidence that humans and Neandertals interbred. Erik Trinkaus, Ph.D., Washington University Mary Tileston Hemenway Professor in Arts & Sciences, and colleagues radiocarbon-dated and analyzed the shapes of human bones from Romania’s Petera Muierii (Cave of the Old Woman). The fossils, discovered in 1952, add to the small number of early modern human remains from Europe known to be more than 28,000 years old.

Insect Wings Used To Pattern Nanoscale Structures:

A team of researchers led by Jin Zhang and Zhongfan Liu (Peking University) have used the wings of cicadas as stamps to pattern polymer films with nanometer-sized structures

Animal Testing Alternative Has Ticks Trembling At The Knees:

Scientists in Switzerland have developed a synthetic cowhide as a replacement for live animals when observing the effects of new anti-tick treatments. Traditional testing methods for these agents involve coating animals in harsh chemicals, and measuring how quickly ticks die. The new animal friendly method is also far more sensitive, and effects can be measured sooner by observing “leg trembling” — an early symptom of the pesticide blocking the tick’s central nervous system.

Novel Experiment Documents Evolution Of Genome In Near-real Time:

UCSD bioengineers report in the November issue of Nature Genetics rapid evolutionary changes in a bacterial genome, observed in near-real time over a few days. Scientists have previously published static “snapshots” of the genome sequences of more than 100 bacterial species, but this new report shows how these genomes are moving targets.

Study Questions Squeaky-clean Reputation Of Service Industries In Climate Change:

Service industries like banking, health care, and telecommunications may have a squeaky-clean reputation when it comes to industrial pollution, but they are responsible for amounts of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions that actually are comparable to those of traditional manufacturing industries, a new study has found.

Disappearing Nest Egg: Researcher Studying Declining Numbers Of Macaws:

One of the most colorful birds in the world may have a less-than-colorful future. Macaws, the largest members of the parrot family, have seen their numbers decline in recent decades, and that trend is continuing today.

Tiny Worm Provides Model For The Genetics Of Nicotine Dependence:

The unassuming C. elegans nematode worm, a 1-millimeter workhorse of the genetics lab, is quite similar to human beings in its genetic susceptibility to nicotine dependence, according to University of Michigan researchers.

Lighting The Way Toward Understanding Nitric Oxide’s Role Inside Living Cells:

Eavesdropping on the behavior of nitric oxide (NO) in parts of the body ranging from the penis to the brain is important to solving the mysteries of how this small molecule plays such a big role in conditions ranging from male sexual function to communication among nerves.

Biodiversity Controls Ecological ‘Services,’ Report Scientists In Comprehenisive Analysis:

Accelerating rates of species extinction pose problems for humanity, according to a comprehensive study headed by a biologist at the University of California, Santa Barbara and published in the journal Nature this week. The groundbreaking statistical analysis demonstrates that the preservation of biodiversity — both the number and type of species — is needed to maintain ecological balance and “services.”

Webb vs. Allen

Lindsay went down to Virginia this morning and is live-blogging (and photoblogging) the last hours of the campaign and the election there.

Voting problems and irregularities

If you go to this page and click on the map, you will see where there are election problems and complaints and what they are (click on the state, then use the pull-down menu to choose the county in order to see a list of the actual complaints).
As expected, there are already many problems in Ohio, especially in Cuyahoga County.
(Via)

MedBlogging of the Week

Grand Rounds 3.07 are now up on MSSPNexus Blog

SBC – NC’07

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Robert Knop is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Rotating Shift-Work can kill you

Chronic Jet-Lag Conditions Hasten Death in Aged Mice

Researchers at the University of Virginia have found that aged mice undergoing weekly light-cycle shifts – similar to those that humans experience with jet lag or rotating shift work – experienced significantly higher death rates than did old mice kept on a normal daylight schedule over the same eight-week period. The findings may not come as a great surprise to exhausted globetrotting business travellers, but the research nonetheless provides, in rather stark terms, new insight into how the disruption of circadian rhythms can impact well-being and physiology, and how those impacts might change with age.

Who to vote for in North Carolina

If you are in Chapel Hill (Orange County) NC and want to know how to vote on some races you did not pay much attention to, consult Concerned Citizen and Orange Politics. The debates in the comments at OP are quite informative as the candidates themselves tend to show up often.
For the broader Triangle area, check out the Independent and Exile on Jones Street.
For races across North Carolina, go for info to BlueNC

Tomorrow, go vote and be prepared!

Bring your cell-phone with you (if you have one). Bring your camera (if you have one). Bring family or friends along to serve as each others’ witnesses in case something happens.
And if you notice anything wrong with the way elections are going or your vote is counted? What do you do?
You need to respond immediately. Take a picture or a movie of the offense (discreetly if deemed neccessary). Then, you need to respond loudly enough that everyone in the building hears about it. Immediately complain to the election officials and do not back down until the problem is resolved. Inform everyone in the room. Immediately call the NATIONAL CALL-IN NUMBERS:
888-SAV-VOTE for voting machine and legal issues
866-OUR-VOTE for general election questions
866-VEY-VOTA for Spanish
These three numbers will collect reports from voters and include them in a national database of information called the Election Incident Reporting System (EIRS) that will be live and operating in real-time on election day so that these problems and trends can be evaluated as they occur.
Also, find your local contact numbers here:
www.votetrustusa.org
Click on “States” at the top of the page to find an election-integrity group in your state to report to locally.
Inform the local Democratic Party.
Go home and write a summary of the problem you encountered. Post it on your blog and mail it to everyone you know. Send the permalink to (or post it in the comments of, or re-post as a Diary at) prominent blogs and websites like DailyKos, MyDD, Black Box Voting and BradBlog. Edit the post for tone and style (cutting out the F-words) and send it to all the local radio stations, TV news stations and newspapers.
Do not let them steal yet another election! They have hijacked democracy as if it was an airplane. We need to fight the hijackers, even if that means we all together fall to our deaths in the field somewhere.

Elections

From today’s Quotes of the Day:

Tomorrow is election day in the US. At the table where I read, there is a stack of brochures proclaiming that each and every candidate is intelligent, honest, caring, devoted, hard working, well groomed, and straining at the bit to serve me and my community. Plus a few that say that the other guy is lying. My problem is that, with the two-party system, you only get to vote against one candidate in each race.
Our elections are free, it’s in the results where eventually we pay.
– Bill Stern
In politics it is necessary either to betray one’s country or the electorate. I prefer to betray the electorate.
– Charles de Gaulle, 1899 – 1970
The men the American people admire most extravagantly are the most daring liars; the men they detest most violently are those who try to tell them the truth. A Galileo could no more be elected president of the United States than he could be elected Pope of Rome. Both high posts are reserved for men favored by God with an extraordinary genius for swathing the bitter facts of life in bandages of self-illusion.
– Henry Louis Mencken, 1880 – 1956
Californians seem to understand that government’s major function is to entertain. No matter who is elected, the politicos end up swindling us, wasting our tax money on pork-barrel projects. The only way to reclaim at least some of that lost money is to elect politicians who put on a good show.
– Orange County Register
People never lie so much as after a hunt, during a war, or before an election.
– Otto von Bismarck, 1815 – 1898
Ninety-eight percent of the adults in this country are decent, hard-working, honest Americans. It’s the other lousy two percent that get all the publicity. But then, we elected them.
– Lily Tomlin

Another nasty Republican campaign trick

Betsy recorded two sleazy robocalls up in New Hampshire. This should be on every TV and radio station tonight and in the morning!

Serotonin, Melatonin, Immunity and Cancer

Blogging on Peer-Reviewed Research

Serotonin, Melatonin, Immunity and CancerMaking connections (from January 22, 2006)…

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My picks from ScienceDaily

Fossils Of Ancient Sea Monster Found In Montana:

A complete skull of a long-necked plesiosaur has been discovered in Montana. The 70-million-year-old skull is one of the best specimens of its kind found in North America.

Snow Data Helps Maintain Nation’s Largest, Oldest Bison Herd:

NASA satellite data and computer modeling and US Department of Agriculture information are helping track the remnants of the once mighty bison herd in Yellowstone National Park as they migrate with the melting snowpack.

Reduced Body Temperature Extends Lifespan, Study Finds:

Scientists at the Scripps Research Institute have found that reducing the core body temperature of mice extends their median lifespan by up to 20 percent. This is the first time that changes in body temperature have been shown to affect lifespan in warm-blooded animals.

New Phylum Sheds Light On Ancestor Of Animals, Humans:

Genetic analysis of an obscure, worm-like creature retrieved from the depths of the North Atlantic has led to the discovery of a new phylum, a rare event in an era when most organisms have already been grouped into major evolutionary categories.

Global Map Shows New Patterns Of Extinction Risk:

The most detailed world map of mammals, birds and amphibians ever produced shows that endangered species from these groups do not inhabit the same geographical areas, says new research.

ENCEPHALON

Welcome to the 10th edition of the Encephalon, the blog carnival of brains, minds, neurons, behavior and cognition. This was a busy week (and weekend) for me, so I decided to give up on the spectacularly difficult idea I had for creative hosting and go with a traditional style. After all, it is the contributors’ posts that you came here to find, not my artistic aspirations. So, let’s get right into it!
Coffee Mug, one of the bloggers on the original Gene Expression won the contest (by solving the neurotransmitter puzzle) last time I hosted The Synapse and the prize is – being highlighted first today. So, here is his contribution, Place and Plasticity: Two Views on the Hippocampus, the post you have to read first of all.
Alvaro of SharpBrains submitted three entries this week: Neurogenesis and How Learning Saves Your Neurons, Cognitive Neuroscience and ADD/ADHD Today and Cognitive Simulations for Basketball Game-Intelligence: Interview with Prof. Daniel Gopher,.
Sandy G of The Mouse Trap sent a two-part post regarding how a new kind of stroop test may help us resolve questions regarding language specificity vs domain general modesl of language: Color memory, stroop test and models of working memory and Incongruence perception and linguistic specificity: a case for a non-verbal stroop test.
The neurophilosopher from the The Neurophilosopher’ weblog, the founder of this carnival, also sent two entries: 100 years of Alzheimer’s Disease and Navigation neurons put monkeys on the right track.
Mary of The Thinking Meat Project gives us these two: Neurons linked to social behavior and To see ourselves as others see us.
Michael of Peripersonal Space has two posts very closely related to the title of his blog: Hands, tools, neglect and the parietal lobe and The long arm experiment.
From RDoctor comes Multiple Sclerosis. Quiz:.
I saw these two posts on The Neurocritic that I could not resist including in here as Editor’s Choices: Invisible Nudes Redux and Glossolalia.
From AlphaPsy, a group blog, two posts by Olivier – The Blushing Brain and Peculiar Tastes – and one by Hugo: Who thinks the Earth is flat?
Now for a medley of picks from the Seed Magazine’s sciencebloggers’ blogs:
From Dave and Greta Munger of Cognitive Daily: Face recognition: Not just about processing speed and Don’t let your kids read this entry (Chocolate doesn’t make them hyper).
From Chris of Mixing Memory: Motivated Seeing? Motivation Affects Visual Perception and A Unified Psychology?
From Shelley Batts of Retrospectacle: Will Longer Life Leave Us All Demented? and Debunking the Myth of the Non-Echoing Duck Quack/
From Jake Young of Pure Pedantry: Janet Hyde and Marcia Linn on the Psychological Similarity between Men and Women
From Jonah Lehrer of The Frontal Cortex: The Moral Mind and Basketball Players and The Hot Hand.
From Joseph of Corpus Callosum: Effect of Night-Shift Nap on ER Residents and Nurses and General’s Advice: US Needs Sexual Literacy.
From me: Development of the human sleep patterns.
And let’s finish with some fun! From Sandra Porter of Discovering Biology in a Digital World: a three-part Halloween story: Tales From The Lab, part I, part II and finale.
Next week, it’s time for The Synapse again, and in two weeks, Encephalon comes back at The Mouse Trap.

SBC – NC’07

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Troy Livingston is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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The missing secrets of Nikola Tesla

It’s 45 minutes long, but it is worth your time:

(Via)

Encephalon – last call for submissions

This is the last reminder to send me permalinks to your recent posts related to neurons, brains, behavior and cognition for the next edition of Encephalon, the neuroscience carnival. I need them by midnight today. I’ll post the carnival tomorrow morning.
Send the links to:
encephalon.host AT gmail DOT com
or
Coturnix AT gmail DOT com

Happy birthday J.B.S. Haldane

From Quotes of the Day:

John Burdon Sanderson Haldane was born at Edinburgh, Scotland on this day in 1892. He was educated at Eton and Oxford, but possibly most important is the fact that he assisted his scientist father in the lab from age eight. His primary work was in genetics, being the first to provide a mathematical basis for Mendelian genetics and for Darwin’s evolution. He taught at Oxford, Cambridge, and the University of London. In 1957 he became disgusted with policies of the British government and moved to India where he spent the rest of his life.
——————————-
If one could conclude as to the nature of the Creator from a study of his creation it would appear that God has a special fondness for stars and beetles.
This is my prediction for the future – whatever hasn’t happened will happen and no one will be safe from it.
I have never yet met a healthy person who worried very much about his health, or a really good person who worried much about his own soul.
We do not know, in most cases, how far social failure and success are due to heredity, and how far to environment. But environment is the easier of the two to improve.
So many new ideas are at first strange and horrible, though ultimately valuable that a very heavy responsibility rests upon those who would prevent their dissemination.
If human beings could be propagated by cutting, like apple trees, aristocracy would be biologically sound.
– All from J. B. S. Haldane, 1892 – 1964

SBC – NC’07

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Christina Whittle is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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NC Blogging of the week

Tar Heel Tavern #89 is up on Poetic Acceptance

Blogrolling: A

Below the fold are blogs with titles that start with the letter ‘A’. Any glaring omissions? Anything worthy checking out? Is YOUR blog starting with this letter?

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Blogging Class

Some of you may remember last year when I followed ColinMcEnroe’s blogging class up at Trinity College in Hartford CT. Well, I should have expected it, but I forgot and nobody told me that they are at it again. Check all the students’ blogs on the sidebar – some cool blogging going on there. I just noticed they have mentioned me, but teh context completely alludes me…
You can see some posts in which I have mentioned or discussed last year’s class here:
Blogging Blogs
Journalists As Bloggers – are they any good?
Lance Mannion to be dissected
Teaching Blogging
Meta-meta-meta-meta-blogging: tying the knots in the blogosphere
Another Blogging Course
Schools in Blogs, Blogs in schools

Does getting scared lead to (better) sex?

Dr.Petra looks at studies that suggest this, and links to her old Halloween post on the related subject…

Dinosauroids

dinosauroid%20r%26s.jpgI took a class with Dale Russell a few years ago. It was one of the most memorable classes ever, mainly because of Dale’s overwhelming enthusiasm for the subjects of dinosaurs and evolution (as well as the coolest field-trip to the vaults of Carnegie Museum, getting to touch and hold and discuss fossils never seen by general public).
But I was always uneasy with Dale’s overly-anthropomorphic depiction of ‘alternative’ evolution, i.e., what if dinosaurs did not go extinct. First of all, there is no reason to believe that anything as intelligent as us would ever have evolved. But even if it did, and even if it evolved out of dinosaurian ancestors, there is no reason why it would ever look similar to us in morphology. Now Darren Naish explains why and provides (in the comments) some examples of fish and birds (parrots, of course) with large brain:body ratios comparable to ours.

More on the elephant intelligence

It is not just mirrors that elephants can figure out – they can also flush toilets! [OK, jokes aside, click on the link to see what is really happening]

If it quacks like a duck…it is in an echo-chamber!

Just in case you have, as a child, heard the myth that ducks’ quack does not produce an echo, and have never outgrew the myth (possibly by never even thinking about it ever since), a potential IgNobel winner for next year has been published and, yes, ducks’ quacks produce echoes. Shelley has the details of the experiments and the link to the sound-file of the quack and the echo. Ah, the power of the scientific method! Though alternative methods have been proposed:

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SBC – NC’07

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Andrea Novicki is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Music Selections: Americanitis

americanitis.jpgPolitically active and charged music, the “protest music” is live and well. Check out Will Kimbrough and his latest CD called Americanitis. He sang a couple of tunes live in teh studio of local NPR station and I really liked them.

The Power of Human Voice

Earlier today I was listening to The Story with Dick Gordon on WUNC91.5FM and it was about the persuasive power of the human voice. This is something I was always interested in.
The guest was Anne Karpf, author of Human Voice. It was one of those extra-long driveway moments because the topic was so interesting, she is so insightful (and has a great sense of humor), and had several clips of people like FDR, Churchill, Reagan, Bush and Blair with added analysis of their voices, as well as some cultural comparisons, the development of language, etc.
I am about to put the book on my wish list and will try to get it as soon as possible.

Tripoli 6 on NPR

Starting right now on Talk of the Nation – Science Friday

My picks from ScienceDaily

Low Levels Of Neurotransmitter Serotonin May Perpetuate Child Abuse Across Generations :

Infant abuse may be perpetuated between generations by changes in the brain induced by early experience, research shows. A research team found that when baby rhesus monkeys endured high rates of maternal rejection and mild abuse in their first month of life, their brains often produced less serotonin, a chemical that transmits impulses in the brain. Low levels of serotonin are associated with anxiety and depression and impulsive aggression in both humans and monkeys.

Scientists Discover Molecular Basis For Dark Adaptation In Mice:

In poor light the eyes of mice react like some digital cameras: they reduce their resolution while at the same time increasing their sensitivity. Specialists in the retina focus the information of several light sensor cells for this purpose. Scientists from the University of Bonn and their colleagues from Oldenburg, Bochum and Kobe (Japan), have now discovered how all this works.

How To Mend A Broken Heart: Zebrafish Hold Key To Regeneration:

When a portion of a zebrafish’s heart is removed, the dynamic interplay between a mass of stem cells that forms in the wound and the protective cell layer that covers the wound spurs the regeneration of functional new heart tissue, Duke University Medical Center scientists have found.

Engineers Probe Spiders’ Polymer Art: Manufactured Silk Could Be Used For Artificial Tendons, Parachutes, More:

A team of MIT engineers has identified two key physical processes that lend spider silk its unrivaled strength and durability, bringing closer to reality the long-sought goal of spinning artificial spider silk.

Modeling Alien Invasions: Plasticity May Hold The Key To Prevention:

The ability of an organism to respond adaptively to environmental variation — phenotypic plasticity — can have profound and unexpected effects on species interactions and the probability that a species will invade.

New Research House To Guide Future Home Development:

The University of Nottingham is helping to battle climate change on the home front — with the construction of a new experimental house on campus that will cut “greenhouse gas” emissions by 60 per cent

Urban Sprawl Not Cause Of Human Sprawl: Study:

As health-spending on obesity-related illnesses continues to rise in the United States, many suggest that urban planning geared towards active and healthy living could be an important tool to curb obesity. But does urban sprawl really cause human sprawl? Not according to research conducted at the University of Toronto, the London School of Economics and Universitat Pompeu Fabra in Spain.

The Perils of Ideological Continua and Coordinate Systems

The Perils of Ideological Continua and Coordinate SystemsThis post (from January 14, 2005) is how I see the political/ideological landscape in the USA.

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Ask a ScienceBlogger

This week’s questions in the Ask a ScienceBlogger series:

What’s the most important local political race to you this year (as a citizen, as a scientist)?

There are two places here in which representatives of a reality-based community can replace mysoginist, homophobic cavedwellers:
NC – 8: Larry Kissel (D) vs. Robin Hayes (R)
NC -11: Heath Shuler (D) vs. Charles Taylor (R)
But it is really the sum of all local races that is important this year, and it appears that many voters understand that the Tuesday election is really a national election, much more than local. What is neccessary is to divide the Government again, so the “we make reality” crowd is forced to face reality again.

Blogrolling

My Bloglines feeds are functioning again, so it’s time for me to start updating my blogroll, as the one linked on the sidebar is woefully out of date. What I am going to do is post here the blogs I have, one letter at the time, more-or-less one letter a day or whatever time I manage to find to do this.
Today, here are the blogs I subscribe to that have titles that begin with numbers (or symbols):
0xDE
10000 birds
11D
2 cents worth
2 sides 2 ron
3 Bulls
3 quarks daily
5/17
511
90% True
What I want you to do (after checking the blogs I link to) is give me links to other blogs starting with the same letter (or, today only, numbers and symbols) that I have missed so I can take a look and consider for inclusion. And it’s fine if you are days, weeks or months late – I get comment notifications, so this can work indefinitely into the future.
Then, once I have assembled blogs starting with the first couple of letters of the alphabet, I’ll try to remember how to place the new blogroll up top, behind one of those cute little grey buttons right underneath the banner. Afterwards, it will be just a matter of updating it on a regular basis. In the meantime, you can keep checking my old blogroll linked on the sidebar.

SBC – NC’07

NCSciBlogging.jpg
Susan Manning of SciTech Publishing is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Aspergers under white hoods

Dave proposes
Sara disposes
You comment.

Underfunded? Or Unpopular?

This week’s question in the Ask a ScienceBlogger series is:

What’s the most underfunded scientific field that shouldn’t be underfunded?

The first and obvious answer is, of course, “my field“, whatever it is.
But then….

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No, I am not asking for a raise here….

…but I have to note that The Brummell loves Seed Magazine and reviews the whole last issue, article by article.

History Blogging of the fortnight

The History Carnival XLII is up on Holocaust Controversies.