Happy Birthday H.G.Wells

Herbert George Wells was born at Bromley, England on this day in 1866. He was apprenticed as a draper, which inspired several of his novels, then taught school before securing a scholarship to the Normal School of Science at South Kensington. Although his writing covers a broad range, he is now best known for his science fiction work, mostly between 1895 and 1905, starting with The Time Machine and including The War of the Worlds.
Moral indignation is jealousy with a halo.
Whilst there is a chance of the world getting through its troubles, I hold that a reasonable man has to behave as though he were sure of it. If at the end your cheerfulness is not justified, at any rate you will have been cheerful.
Adapt or perish, now as ever, is nature’s inexorable imperative.
After people have repeated a phrase a great number of times, they begin to realize it has meaning and may even be true.
I see knowledge increasing and human power increasing. I see ever-increasing possibilities before life, And I see no limits set to it at all, Existence impresses me as a perpetual dawn. Our lives, as I apprehend, are great in expectations.
The crisis of today is the joke of tomorrow.

– All from Herbert George Wells, 1866 – 1946

Source: Quote Of The Day

Change of Shift

Change of Shift, the nursing carnival, has ventured out to a new host. The 7th edition is now up on kt.

Tripoli Six

Five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor have been wrongfully charged and are awaiting execution by firing squad in Libya for allegedly infecting children with HIV. They were tortured and forced to sign “confessions” written in Arabic they did not understand. In fact, the poor hygiene and bad practices in the hospital are to blame.
You can get more information in Nature (free access) editorial and news report and even more detail in an official report (pdf) and a letter (pdf) to Qaddafi.
What can you do?
First, ask your congresscritters what are they going to do about this – are they going to put international pressure on Libya to release the prisoners?
Second, e-mail your story to friends and, if you have a blog, write a post about this. Make sure that you have the words “Tripoli Six” in your post so that it gets picked up by Connotea, Technorati and Google blogsearch engines. Update: For Google (and Google News) you can also use “Benghazi Six” as well as “Tripoli Six”.
You can also see what my SciBlings have written about it so far.
More information and commentary:
Saratoga Spirit
Declan Butler
Pharyngula
Method
Thoughts In A Haystack
Gene Expression
Stranger Fruit
Effect Measure
Deltoid
Adventures in Ethics and Science
Dr. Joan Bushwell’s Chimpanzee Refuge
Pure Pedantry
Respectful Insolence
Aetiology
Uncertain Principles
The Questionable Authority (the best source of action/contact information)
Science Ripsaw
Firedoglake
LeftWorld
DailyKos
The World’s Fair
Majikthise
Terra Sigillata
Open Reading Frame
Maya’s Corner
Maya’s Corner
Maya’s Corner
Tinkerty Tonk
Thoughts From Kansas
Ovidio
Cyberspace Rendezvous
Effect Measure
Lingual Tremors
Crooked Timber
Cosmic Variance
BlinkBits
Nascent
Malaysian Medical Resources
Serialdeviant
Paeonia
Bouphonia
Alternet PEEK

Denialist Rhetoric

People argue bad science, psuedoscience and nonsense for a variety of reasons, some religiously motivated, some politically motivated, some out of ignorance, some out of arrogance, some out emotional needs, some due to psychological problems.
When they encroach onto the scinetific turf and argue nonsense within a scientific domain, they use a limited set of rhetorical tools. The exact choice of tools depends on the motivation, as well as the forum where they advocate the nonsense. Some, the generals in the army in War On Science, have big soapboxes, e.g., TV, radio and newspapers. Some teach and preach in schools and churches. Some run blogs, and some – the footsoldiers of The War – troll on other people’s blogs.
So, when the motivation is political, when they are pushing for debunked conservative ideas, from femiphobic stances on anti-abortion and anti-stem-cell-research, through thinly-veiled racism of the War On Terror, to failed economic policies (“trickle-down”) and global-warming denial, they mainly use one set of rhetorical strategies.
When the motivation is religious, as in Creationism, the strategies are similar, but not exactly the same. Loony fringe pseudoscience, from the Left or the Right (and sometimes it is difficult to figure out if they come from the Left or the Right) – appears to employ very similar rhetorical devices as the religiously motivated pseudoscience, suggesting that perhaps both are sharing the same underlying emotional disturbances.
Pseudoscientists of various colors, the denialists of reality, have been the topic of a couple of interesitng blog posts recently, most notably this one on GiveUp Blog. PZ Myers chimed in as well, adding a couple of other rhetorical devices. A number of commenters also added some good ones, e.g., David Harmon:

— binary splitting (everything MUST be one way or another, no mixing)
— idealization and denigration (combines with the previous, e.g., “good” must be perfect; any contamination of “evil” makes something entirely “evil”)
— projection (assigning to others the characteristics they reject in themself)

and adspar:

Another common tactic is to magnify doubt, which goes along with setting impossible expectations. Chris Mooney mentions numerous examples of this tactic in his book.
If you can’t say something is 100% certain, or if your statistics have some margin of error, they jump all over it as if any sliver of doubt undermines a scientific claim.

Prometheus of Photon In The Darkness blog wrote a similar list of The Seven Most Common Thinking Errors of Highly Amusing Quacks and Pseudoscientists, in four installments: Part I, Part II, Part III and Part IV. This was done with a lot of care for detail and is well worth your time to read.
I do not have too much to add to this, though I’d like to see a complete taxonomy of rhetorical strategies, tabulated as to which ones are more likely to be used by politically motivated vs. religiously motivated purveyors of nonsense, which are more likely to be found on big bully-pulpits and which in comment threads on blogs.
Recently, when looking at an example of medical quackery (another category of pseudoscience), I identified several more rhetorical strategies, which are all familiar to you, I’m sure:
Reverence for the Past
Reverence for the Ancient Wisdom of the Orient
Naive Scientism
Complexity
Appeal to Mathematics
Prosecution Complex (which may foster Secrecy)
What do you think?

From DonorsChoose:

I have some great news to share. Thanks to an amazing outpouring of support in the first three weeks of The North Carolina Back to School Challenge we have raised over $24,569 for North Carolina kids!
When we started this campaign, we knew we were setting the bar high. But we’re counting on you. And we know you won’t let us down.
Fund a proposal before the campaign ends a week from Saturday–many proposals are ‘almost there’.
Imagine the students that will be left out in the cold if we DON’T reach our $50,000 goal. Without your support today, some classrooms just won’t get what they need this fall. We don’t want to let that happen.
Scores of exciting proposals have already won the hearts of our donors. We’ve been madly purchasing supplies, and they are already on their way to North Carolina classrooms. Others need just a few more dollars to come to life!
You’ve funded projects for outstanding public school teachers all over North Carolina. Let’s face it: these teachers are heroes. Every single one of them, just by posting on DonorsChoose, has gone above and beyond for their students. If not for the generosity of supporters like you, some would be paying for these supplies out of their own pockets. Others couldn’t afford it, and students would simply go without.
Our ambitious campaign will mean MORE learning for MORE students. But only with YOUR help.
Bring us one step closer to reaching our goal.

But HOW do they do it?

Bird Moms Manipulate Birth Order To Protect Sons:

—————-snip——————-
Since 2002, Badyaev, Oh and their colleagues have been intensively documenting the lives of a population of house finches (Carpodacus mexicanus) on the UA campus.
Throughout the year, the researchers capture birds several times a week to band and measure them and to take DNA and hormone samples. During the breeding season, the researchers locate the nests, keep track of activity in the nest, follow nestling growth and development, and take DNA samples from the chicks.
The researchers have also been counting the numbers of mites on the birds and documented a seasonal pattern. When breeding starts in February, the mites are absent. As winter turns to spring, mites start showing up on the adult females, in their nests and on their nestlings. The exact timing depends on the year.
Mites can kill nestlings.
“When it is safer inside the nest than outside, then there’s no need for young to leave the nest until growth is complete, but when mortality risk of staying in the nest is great, chicks need to complete their growth fast and get out as soon as they can,” Badyaev said. “What should a mother do in the face of shifting mortality risk?”
“To leave the nests sooner and still survive outside of nests, the kids need to grow faster,” Badyaev said. “But the mechanisms which regulate nestling growth in relation to changing mortality were not known.”
So the researchers looked to see how finch moms changed their child-rearing strategy so as to always do best by their kids.
The birds lay one egg per day. To successfully raise baby finches in the presence of mites, the mothers altered the order in which male and female eggs were laid.
When mites were absent, the chances of any particular egg being male or female were even. But once mites came into the picture, the mothers laid female eggs first and male eggs last.
Males that grew during mite season did more of their development in the egg before hatching. Their mothers accelerated their sons’ growth, both in the egg and after they hatched.
“Mothers essentially hid their sons in the eggs,” Badyaev said.
It’s remarkable that the fledglings have such similar morphology with or without mites, he said. “Mothers did that by modifying the order of laying of male and female eggs and the pattern of their growth.”

This is cool ecology and evolution. But where is the physiology, i.e., the mechanism of birth-order of sexes?

Paramecium is such a cool organism to work with!

Paramecia Adapt Their Swimming To Changing Gravitational Force:

The researchers placed a vial with pond water and live paramecia inside a high-powered electromagnet at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory in Tallahassee, Fla. The organisms are less susceptible to a magnetic field than plain water is, so the magnetic field generated inside the vial “pulls” harder on the water than on the cells. If the field is pulling down, the cells float. If it’s pulling up, they sink.
Using water alone, Valles and Guevorkian were able to increase the effect of gravity by about 50 percent. To increase the effect even further, they added a compound called Gd-DTPA* to the water. Gd-DPTA is highly susceptible to induced magnetic fields such as those generated in electromagnets. This allowed the researchers to make the water much “heavier” or “lighter,” relative to the paramecia, achieving an effect up to 10 times that of normal gravity. The magnetic field is continuously adjustable, so Valles and Guevorkian were also able to create conditions simulating zero-gravity and inverse-gravity.
By dialing the magnetic field up or down, the researchers could change the swimming behavior of the paramecia dramatically. In high gravity, the organisms swam upward mightily to maintain their place in the water column. In zero gravity, they swam up and down equally. And in reverse gravity, they dove for where the sediments ought to be.
“If you want to make something float more,” said Valles, “you put it in a fluid and you pull the fluid down harder than you pull the thing down. And that’s what we basically do with the magnet. That causes the cell to float more – and that turns gravity upside down for the cell.”
Cranking the field intensity even higher, Valles and Guevorkian could test the limits of protozoan endurance. At about eight times normal gravity, the little swimmers stalled, swimming upward, but making no progress. At this break-even point, the physicists could measure the force needed to counter the gravitational effect: 0.7 nano-Newtons. For comparison, the force required to press a key on a computer keyboard is about 22 Newtons or more than 3 billion times as strong.

Alternative sleep therapies

Over 1.6 Million Americans Use Alternative Medicine For Insomnia Or Trouble Sleeping:

A recent analysis of national survey data reveals that over 1.6 million American adults use some form of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) to treat insomnia or trouble sleeping according to scientists at the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM), part of the National Institutes of Health.
———–snip——————
Those using CAM to treat insomnia or trouble sleeping were more likely to use biologically based therapies (nearly 65 percent), such as herbal therapies, or mind-body therapies (more than 39 percent), such as relaxation techniques. A majority of people who used herbal or relaxation therapies for their insomnia reported that they were helpful. The two most common reasons people gave for using CAM to treat insomnia were they thought it would be interesting to try (nearly 67 percent) and they thought CAM combined with a conventional treatment would be helpful (nearly 64 percent).

I don’t really know what to think. On one hand, someone is making a lot of money on this. On the other hand, placebo effect may be quite effective for relaxing a person enough to fall asleep. Meditation certainly will help a person relax – it is so boring you have to fall asleep after a while. And who knows, one of those therapies may actually have some effectiveness after all – we don’t know because it was never tested. On the other hand, many herbal remedies, because they are never tested and approved, may contain some nasty chemicals that can kill you. Such deadly molecules were discovered in some brands of melatonin a few years back. So, they are not safe even if they are effective. I’d like to see Orac and Abel comment on this.

In addition to looking at the data on CAM use and insomnia, the researchers also looked at the connection between trouble sleeping and five significant health conditions: diabetes, hypertension, congestive heart failure, anxiety and depression, and obesity. They found that insomnia or trouble sleeping is highly associated with four of the five conditions: hypertension, congestive heart failure, anxiety and depression, and obesity.

All of those connecitons have been seen before and some of those have been studied in quite a lot of detail. Unfortunately, there appears to be a vicious cycle – these conditions negatively affect sleep and lack of sleep negatively affects these conditions.

Drinking the Clouds

Team Describes Unique Desert Cloud Forest:

Trees that live in an odd desert forest in Oman have found an unusual way to water themselves by extracting moisture from low-lying clouds, MIT scientists report.
In an area that is characterized mostly by desert, the trees have preserved an ecological niche because they exploit a wispy-thin source of water that only occurs seasonally, said Elfatih A.B. Eltahir, professor of civil and environmental engineering, and former MIT graduate student Anke Hildebrandt.
After studying the Oman site, they also expressed concern that the unusual forest could be driven into extinction if hungry camels continue eating too much of the foliage. As the greenery disappears it’s possible the trees will lose the ability to pull water from the mist and recharge underground reservoirs.

EduBlogging of the Week

Carnival of Education #85 is up on The Median Sib
Carnival of Homeschooling Week 38: The Five W’s and One H, is up on The Thinking Mother

A new meaning of ‘having a buzz’

A new meaning of 'having a buzz'This strange November 09, 2005 post should really be posted on Friday as part of the Friday Weird Sex Blogging….

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This is a really cool science class

In Ormond Beach Middle School:

Developed by teacher Tucker Harris and School Resource Deputy Karen Pierce, the investigation program is an innovative way to teach sixth-grade science students the scientific method. The CSI class takes students out of the classroom and into a crime scene orchestrated by the deputy.
Pierce developed a fictional situation involving a property theft at the school. During the class, Pierce “briefed” the students on the crime, and the students received written statements from the victim and three suspects. The students then visited the crime scene, where they gathered evidence to take back to the classroom, or “police station.”
The students are applying the scientific method to solve the crime. Two more situations will follow — one involving drugs, the other battery with bullying — and each will become more intense, said Pierce. All 290 sixth-graders will participate.

This is so cool. I use crime-scene detection kits for hair-type and blood-type, as well as a DNA-fingerprinting exercise when I teach the Into Bio lab.

The Homunculus

Amanda makes a correct connection between preformationism of old and the anti-abortion ideology of today. The only thing missing is the connection of both to Dawkinsian genocentrism which is just preformationism with modern rhetoric of DNA and genes and “blueprints of life”. The history of the war between epigenetics and preformationism and, within preformationism, between spermists and ovists is masterfully covered in Clara Pinto-Corriea’s book Ovary of Eve.

Diversity in the blogosphere

In light of the recent outburst of blogging about diversity provoked by the all-white meeting of bloggers with Bill Clinton, it is interesting to take a look at Simon Owen’s new informal survey of the diversity in various bligging niches. Go take a look and let Simon know what you think. Also, compare his findings with the last three years of Blogads surveys which do not explicitely ask for “race”, but have additional interesting questions (each year had different questions, though, so check all three). Also, see what Dave says about the survey.

The First Year Teacher, now in her fourth year of teaching, suddenly becomes famous as a blogger

Unfortunately, not in my neighborhood any more, the First Year Teacher gets portrayed, quite positively, in USA Today in an article about teachers-bloggers.

News on familial advanced sleep phase syndrome

So, is extreme “larkiness” due to overphosphorilation or underphosphorilation of PERIOD2?
Hypotheses get tested, studies conflict with each other and, in the end, there is a resolution. In this case, we are still waiting for resolution. Science marches on.

New Sleep Articles

The latest issue of Archives of Internal Medicine is devoted to sleep. The articles are freely available. Here is the press release:
Incorporate Sleep Evaluation Into Routine Medical Care, Expert Says

Sleep is an integral part of health, and assessment of sleep habits should be a standard part of medical care, according to an editorial in the September 18 issue of Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals. The issue is devoted to studies of sleep and health.
“The theme that emerges throughout this issue is that sleep serves as an indicator of health and quality of life and therefore is highly and directly relevant to the practice of medicine,” write guest editor Phyllis C. Zee, M.D., Ph.D., and Fred W. Turek, Ph.D., of Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago.
“Indeed, numerous studies have recently shown that sleep disorders are often comorbid with a broad range of medical and psychiatric conditions and also have a negative impact on health, mood and quality of life,” they continue. “Increasing evidence also points to a bidirectional relationship between sleep and health; that is, sleep disturbances contribute to the development of or increase the severity of various medical and psychiatric disorders, and these same disorders result in poor sleep quality.”
Research results published in this issue of Archives of Internal Medicine “further our understanding of the relationship of sleep and health,” Drs. Zee and Turek write. Studies appearing in this issue find that:
* Fewer hours of sleep may contribute to poor health in young adults, according to an international survey of more than 17,000 university students
* Those in rural areas who sleep fewer hours appear to have a higher average body mass index
* The immune system may play a role in narcolepsy, a disorder marked by a sudden and uncontrollable urge to sleep
* Children with chronic illnesses, especially those on ventilators, tend to have parents with disrupted sleep
* The immune system may be affected by a lack of sleep, altering blood chemistry in a way that potentially contributes to inflammation and a variety of diseases
Over the past decade, it has become apparent that voluntarily limited sleep, as well as sleep disorders such as insomnia and restless legs syndrome, can negatively affect overall health–a connection emphasized by the increasing legitimacy of sleep medicine as a specialty. In addition, medications used to treat a number of physical and psychiatric disorders can affect sleep, making evaluation for sleep problems essential for those following such regimens. “At the very least, assessment of sleep quantity and quality should be integrated into the routine review of systems,” Drs. Zee and Turek conclude. “Sleep is an indicator of health, and sufficient sleep quantity and good quality should be considered as an essential component of a healthy lifestyle, as much as exercise and nutrition.”

How to become a science writer

Jennifer Ouliette offers sage advice.
You don’t need a science degree.
But nobody said you cannot have a PhD to do it.

Brilliant! Absolutely Brilliant!

Chris Clarke explains Berube’s new book (yup, I am hoping to buy it one day) for the masses.
I am assuming that Chris spent quite a lot of time and effort into making this from scratch. I could have saved him some of that by mailing him some of the existing stuff I had and read as a kid. Ah, the glory of growing up in a socialist country!
[Hat-tip: Amanda]

Music of the times

Why, whenever a society is going down the tubes and the people start feeling insecure, the Middle-Eastern beat starts dominating the popular music?
See hip-hop in the States today. Compare to turbo-folk in Serbia in the 1990s.

Twelve Traps to Avoid

This is an excerpt from the first chapter of George Lakoff’s new book Thinking Points. You can read more here or download a PDF of the first chapter here.
You have heard many of these ideas before, including repeatedly on my blog, but it is nice to see them all stated succintly and collected in one place:

1. The Issue Trap
We hear it said all the time: Progressives won’t unite behind any set of ideas. We all have different ideas and care about different issues. The truth is that progressives do agree at the level of values and that there is a real basis for progressive unity. Progressive values cut across issues. So do principles and forms of argument. Conservatives argue conservatism, no matter what the issue. Progressives should argue progressivism. We need to get out of issue silos that isolate arguments and keep us from the values and principles that define an overall progressive vision.
2. The Poll Trap
Many progressives slavishly follow polls. The job of leaders is to lead, not follow. Besides, contrary to popular belief, polls in themselves do not present accurate empirical evidence. Polls are only as accurate as the framing of their questions, which is often inadequate. Real leaders don’t use polls to find out what positions to take; they lead people to new positions.
3. The Laundry List Trap
Progressives tend to believe that people vote on the basis of lists of programs and policies. In fact, people vote based on values, connection, authenticity, trust, and identity.
4. The Rationalism Trap
There is a commonplace–and false–theory that reason is completely conscious, literal (applies directly to the objective world), logical, universal, and unemotional. Cognitive science has shown that every one of these assumptions is false. These assumptions lead progressives into other traps: assuming that hard facts will persuade voters, that voters are “rational” and vote in their self-interest and on the issues, and that negating a frame is an effective way to argue against it.
5. The No-Framing-Necessary Trap
Progressives often argue that “truth doesn’t need to be framed” and that the “facts speak for themselves.” People use frames–deep-seated mental structures about how the world works–to understand facts. Frames are in our brains and define our common sense. It is impossible to think or communicate without activating frames, and so which frame is activated is of crucial importance. Truths need to be framed appropriately to be seen as truths. Facts need a context.
6. The Policies-Are-Values Trap
Progressives regularly mistake policies with values, which are ethical ideas like empathy, responsibility, fairness, freedom, justice, and so on. Policies are not themselves values, though they are, or should be, based on values. Thus, Social Security and universal health insurance are not values; they are policies meant to reflect and codify the values of human dignity, the common good, fairness, and equality.
7. The Centrist Trap
There is a common belief that there is an ideological “center”–a large group of voters either with a consistent ideology of their own or lined up left to right on the issues or forming a “mainstream,” all with the same positions on issues. In fact, the so-called center is actually made up of biconceptuals, people who are conservative in some aspects of life and progressive in others. Voters who self-identify as “conservative” often have significant progressive values in important areas of life. We should address these “partial progressive” biconceptuals through their progressive identities, which are often systematic and extensive.
A common mistaken ideology has convinced many progressives that they must “move to the right” to get more votes. In reality, this is counterproductive. By moving to the right, progressives actually help activate the right’s values and give up on their own. In the process, they also alienate their base.
8. The “Misunderestimating” Trap
Too many progressives think that people who vote conservative are just stupid, especially those who vote against their economic self-interest. Progressives believe that we only have to tell them the real economic facts, and they will change the way they vote. The reality is that those who vote conservative have their reasons, and we had better understand them. Conservative populism is cultural–not economic–in nature. Conservative populists see themselves as oppressed by elitist liberals who look down their noses at them, when they are just ordinary, moral, right-thinking folks. They see liberals as trying to impose an immoral “political correctness” on them, and they are angry about it.
Progressives also paint conservative leaders as incompetent and not very smart, based on a misunderstanding of the conservative agenda. This results from looking at conservative goals through progressive values. Looking at conservative goals through conservative values yields insight and shows just how effective conservatives really are.
9. The Reactive Trap
For the most part, we have been letting conservatives frame the debate. Conservatives are taking the initiative on policy making and getting their ideas out to the public. When progressives react, we echo the conservative frames and values, so our message is not heard or, even worse, reinforces their ideas. Progressives need a collection of proactive policies and communication techniques to get our own values out on our own terms. “War rooms” and “truth squads” must change frames, not reinforce conservative frames. But even then, they are not nearly enough. Progressive leaders, outside of any party, must come together in an ongoing, long-term, organized national campaign that honestly conveys progressive values to the public–day after day, week after week, year after year, no matter what the specific issues of the day are.
10. The Spin Trap
Some progressives believe that winning elections or getting public support is a matter of clever spin and catchy slogans–what we call “surface framing.” Surface framing is meaningless without deep framing–our deepest moral convictions and political principles. Framing, used honestly at both the deep and surface levels, is needed to make the truth visible and our values clear. Spin, on the other hand, is the dishonest use of surface linguistic frames to hide the truth. And progressive values and principles–the deep frames–must be in place before slogans can have an effect; slogans alone accomplish nothing. Conservative slogans work because they have been communicating their deep frames for decades.
11. The Policyspeak Trap
Progressives consistently use legislative jargon and bureaucratic solutions, like “Medicare prescription drug benefits,” to speak to the public about their positions. Instead, progressives should speak in terms of the common concerns of voters–for instance, how a policy will let you send your daughter to college, or how it will let you launch your own business.
12. The Blame Game Trap
It is convenient to blame our problems on the media and on conservative lies. Yes, conservative leaders have regularly lied and used Orwellian language to distort the truth, and yes, the media have been lax, repeating the conservatives’ frames. But we have little control over that. We can control only how we communicate. Simply correcting a lie with the truth is not enough. We must reframe from our moral perspective so that the truth can be understood. This reframing is needed to get our deep frames into public discourse. If enough people around the country honestly, effectively, and regularly express a progressive vision, the media will be much more likely to adopt our frames.

And yeah, the book is also listed somewhere on my wish list

Blog Carnivals And The Future Of Journalism

Blog Carnivals And The Future Of JournalismThis June 01, 2005 post from Science And Politics has been reposted (with mild edits) at several different places by me and others, including on June 01, 2005 on Idea Consultants and on June 10, 2005 on DailyKos. This post, in some way, turned me into some kind of carnival “guru”….

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So much ado about one picture

Clinton%20blogger%20dinner.jpg
Its’a all about sex, sexual repression and sexual politics:
Jessica
Lindsay
Ezra
David Neiwert
Lance
Berube
Jill
Zuzu
PZ
Sisyphus Shrugged
Scott
Echidne
Amanda
Roy
Jessica
Lauren
Amanda
Heretic
Jane
Scott
Jessica
Driftglass
Pam
Lance

Synaptic Grand Rounds

Grand Rounds, v.2, n.52 is up on Tundra Medicine Dreams. Gorgeous pictures from Alaska and the best of medical blogging.
The Synapse v.1, n.7 is up on GNIF Brain Blogger

Anthrax Redux

Yesterday was the fifth anniversary of the anthrax attack. It was the Big Topic for the media for about as long as any Missing White Woman story, …. or was it until it was realized that the perpetrators were not “Islamofascists” (the term that was not, but could have been, invented at the time) but the more domestic kind?
Dave and Tara have much more.

It’s Not Rumsfeld, Stupid!

Demand an Exit Strategy Not a Facelift:

By pointing the finger at Rumsfeld, they deflect blame from Bush’s neo-conservative agenda. It is that agenda that drew the nation to Iraq, that has distracted from a smarter struggle against terrorists and terrorism, that has resulted in the erosion of our civil liberties, that has incurred the wrath of the international community.
Identifying Rumsfeld as the problem reinforces the “bad apple frame,” which is among the common frames we examine in our new book, Thinking Points. This frame derives from the old saying that one bad apple spoils the barrel. The implication is that if you get rid of that one bad apple, the rest of the apples in the barrel will be fine. Replacing Rumsfeld is hardly a solution to the problem. Every apple remaining in the Bush administration barrel will be no less rotten when he is removed.

Last night

Sorry for scarce posting Monday – I hope you liked that long re-post from 11am, long enough to be sufficient reading for one day.
Anton has posted the summary of the Blogger MeetUp. I really like to have this kind of semi-structured meetup once a month. I was impressed by wiki.com – it is simple enough for a compidiot like me to set up and use. And Lyceum, whle still being developed, looks like a promising platform for a classroom multi-blogging use.
Then, I went to Top Of The Hill and had a couple of beers with my fellow ScienceBloggers Orac and Abel. That was fun – I have not met Orac in person before although we have been reading each other for almost two years. It is always cool to meet blogfriends in real life.

Influence of Light Cycle on Dominance Status and Aggression in Crayfish

Influence of Light Cycle on Dominance Status and Aggression in CrayfishIn this post from April 06, 2006, I present some unpublished data that you may find interesting.

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Archaeology non-carnival

Alun Salt of the wonderful Archaeoastronomy blog has started a weekly roundup of blogposts about the past. Check out Vidi-1 and Vidi-2. Who knows, if this catches on and others get interested, Vidi may become a real carnival, rotating hosts and everything….

Finding readers in the most unusual places

The coooolest thing ever!
My son’s science teacher broke his shoulder so he had to be out for two weeks (he’s the one who was instrumental in the district adopting the science textbook I like, and he teaches evolution “straight-up”).
During that time, they had a substitute teacher. She gave them their first assignment – to find something interesting science-related and write a short report.
Then, she started listing which sources are legit and which are not. Then, my son raised his hand and asked if they were allowed to find information on science blogs, for instance on one his Dad writes.
She asked:”What’s your Dad’s name”.
He said “Bora”.
She yelled:”Nooooo waaaaay! YOUR DAD writes A Blog Around The Clock!!!!”
I guess this blog is popular around here….
Well, being a sub, she is not in school any more, so my son cannot just say Hello, but she reads this blog – now I know this! I’d love to get a comment or e-mail….

NC Blogging

Tar HeelTavern #82 is up on Mel’s Kitchen.
Don’t forget to come to the first Chapel Hill – Carrboro blogger meetup tomorrow in the Library at 7pm. You don’t have to be a blogger – being a reader and/or commenter or someone interested in blogging is enough – it is a very open group.
And don’t forget to register (for free!) for the October 14th ConvergeSouth.
WNCNN - Where Western NC Comes For its God Fearin' News!

The most miniscule gods

Animalcules v.1, n.12 is up on Viva La Evolucion
Carnival of the Godless #49 is up on Grounded In Reality

MRI getting smaller (and cheaper)

It’s looking good. Certainly much smaller than the roomful of metal we are used to seeing in hospitals.
Do you remember when computers used to fill entire rooms? Now take a look at your cell phone. Now think MRI in 10-20 years…
See what I’m getting at?
I am patiently waiting for the time when MRIs are small and light enough to be mounted on heads of freely behaving animals (in the wild or in captivity), at least large animals like elephants, dolphins, horses, crocs or sharks… Then you use radiotelemetry to get the info loaded on your computer and you observe the brain activity in real time as the animal is interacting with its environment.
I hope this happens while I am still young and active enough to use such technology in research…

Future of blogs appears bright

From Ed Cone, via Steve Rubel, through Shel Israel, we find that Charlene Li published a new study of blog use and discovered that a quarter of Generation Y reads blogs, which is twice as much as Generation X and three times as much as Boomers (which generation was Generation F and, once the Generation Z of my kids grows up, will there be another generation after them at all, or do we start using the Greek alphabet instead?).
MySpace is for highschoolers. Facebook is for college students (who tolerate, for now, a small number of highschoolers, grad students, faculty and staff, but may leave in a stampedo if/when Facebook lets non-“edu” addresses in). So, what kinds of blogs do they read/write? Were MySpace blogs, Facebook Notes, MSNSpaces, AOLblogs, Xanga and LiveJournals counted in the study?
Joe McCarthy takes a long hard look at a whole series of polls and studies on blog use by various age groups.
Out of millions of Gen-Y-ers reading and writing blogs, I hope at least some cover science-related topics sometimes, or come to ScienceBlogs to interact with us. How many of my readers are Gen Y?

Can blogging raise your SAT scores?

Don’t know, but we can test this hypothesis.
Go to Cognitive Daily and/or Uncertain Principles and take the test (and read what they have to say about it, each from his own perspective).
It is just the essay part of the test. You get the prompt. You write. After 20 minutes (you are typing – kids who write with pencils get 25 minutes), it is over. You can choose to submit your essay or not once you are done.
Dave and Chad will score the results and have the essays graded by professionals (English teachers, hopefully some real-life SAT scorers), as well as blog-readers. Then, they will post the results (and essays) and we can all discuss them.
I have not done mine yet – waiting to have guaranteed 20 minutes of peace and quite – but I am afraid.
With blogging, we choose our prompts. If I want to react fast to some breaking news, I post a link, a quote and a one-liner.
Longer, more thoughtful essays sometimes go quick, but more often take days to write – thinking about it and writing it in my head first, then doing online research looking for additional info and appropriate links, then the actual writing (which usually does not take long), then quick spellchecking and editing, then posting. It takes more like 20 hours than 20 minutes. How about you?

‘Prussian Blue’ not making their white neighbors happy after all

Town Tells White Separatist Singers ‘No Hate Here’

The girls, their mother, April, and stepfather Mark Harrington recently moved to Montana from Bakersfield, Calif., after April told “Primetime” that Bakersfield was “not white enough.” Now Kalispell has put the family on notice, “Not in my backyard.”
Last week a group of neighbors printed information sheets about the family and distributed them door to door.
“This letter is not written as a means to harass the family or to begin a witch hunt,” the flier said. “We wish the family no harm. Our goal is to peacefully communicate that this kind of hate and ignorance will not be accepted here in our neighborhood where we live and raise our families.”
Lamb and Lynx created the band Prussian Blue to communicate their white separatist views musically. The song “Sacrifice” praises Nazi leader Rudolph Hess, Adolph Hitler’s deputy. The two have modeled T-shirts featuring Hitler smiley faces. They mostly appear at rallies for white nationalist causes and maintain a Web site with links to other white separatist organizations
—–snip———–
Rebecca Kushner-Metteer, one of the people who handed out the fliers, says the teens and their parents moved into her south Kalispell neighborhood a couple of weeks ago. At first, no one paid much attention until another neighbor showed a rerun of the “Primetime” broadcast. They then recognized their new neighbors.
Now Kushner-Metteer and other families say they have received threats.
—–snip———–
Kalispell Police Chief Frank Garner says all the threats have come from outside the region but are being investigated. He also says none contained death threats.
In the “Primetime” interview, Lynx who was 13 at the time, says she and her sister were “proud of being white.”
“We want our people to stay white,” she says. “We don’t want to just be, you know, a big muddle. We just want to preserve our race.”
—–snip———–
The Gaedes apparently want to be left alone. They have refused to answer their door or telephone.
However, the Kalispell Police Department has heard from the family. The police say they received a complaint that the family was being “harassed” by the neighbors posting the fliers.
In an irony not lost on many in the community, the officers had to explain that the neighbors’ free speech rights made the fliers perfectly legal.
Just as legal as the free speech rights afforded Lynx and Lamb Gaede.
Although a date has yet to be set, the 1,400-member Montana Human Rights Network is planning a rally in Kalispell. Seems all area residents are now exercising their free speech rights in northwest Montana.

Montana may be white, but it is also fiercely devoted to individual freedoms. More info on the duo here and here.

March Of The Penguins, again

Hungry Hyena has an interesting critique of the movie.

Fossils are, by definition, dead

The phrase “Living Fossil” is second to only “Missing Link” on my list of irks-me-to-no-end abuses of English language. Darren Naish now explains exactly what is wrong with the term, using as the case study the recent rediscovery of the Sumatran rhino. This is your Most Obligatory reading of the day!

Do we torture with a grimace or do we torture with a smile?

Publius has an interesting hypothesis about the way the torture/Geneva convention issue may blow back into BushCo face. Publius has been over optimistic before, but do you think he is overoptimistic now?
My feeling was that the split between two alternative military commission bills was a ruse – there is hardly any difference between them. By letting the McCain version win, Bush gets to do torture as much as he wants, while getting an opportunity to show public humility and going along with “the way the system works” and duping the nation that the “softer” version of the bill does not actually condone torture.
But even if that may have been correct initially, Publius argues that it has gone much further than Rove wanted and turned into a debate of what America stands for – something that BushCo does not want to have, of course. In the end, it may work well for those Republicans who have distanced themselves from Bush – and these are legion – and help them win in November, so who knows who the winner is going to be in the end. Your thoughts?

Good article on science blogging

Eva of Easternblot has written an article about science blogging that is very good.
In the article, she interviews Tara Smith, PZ Myers, the Trio Fantasticus of the Inkycircus, Carl Zimmer and Oliver Morton.
The article appears in the latest issue of Hypothesis Journal and you can download the article here (pdf)
At the bottom, there is a short list of other interesting science blogs and one of the titles looks vaguely familiar…

Going to church is bad for your health

Holy Smoke: Burning incense, candles pollute air in churches:

Incense and candles release substantial quantities of pollutants that may harm health, a detailed new study of air quality in a Roman Catholic church suggests.
Even brief exposure to contaminated air during a religious service could be harmful to some people, says atmospheric scientist Stephan Weber of the University of Duisburg-Essen in Essen, Germany. A previous study in the Netherlands indicated that the pollutants in smoke from incense and candles may be more toxic than fine-particle pollution from sources such as vehicle engines.

No word about the dangers to one’s mental health, though…
Hat-tip: Radagast

Four Conceptions of God in America

An interesting new study of religiosity in America:
One God, four views:

“Not all Americans see the powerful old man in the sky”

Really?

The authors suggest religion may most successfully motivate individuals through what it can offer them in spiritual intimacy and congregational connectivity rather than through demands backed by threats of divine punishment. Believers in an “angry” God tend to reject the idea that church and state are or can be separate, and are more likely to feel that one’s religious faith is exclusively the correct path of righteousness.

Read the whole thing…

“Boy, this is going to be hard…”

…and it will stay hard for another 4 hours.
[That is Friday Weird Sex Blogging for this week….]

The best of Higher Ed blogging

Teaching Carnival #12 is up on Scrivenings.
Next time, on October 1st, the carnival will be hosted by me here. I will be posting an official ‘call for submissions’ in a few days, but in the meantime, if you write a post that has something to do with Academia and Higher Ed, please try to remember to tag it with the “teaching-carnival” tag. Still, since the tagging technology is unreliable at best, you can only be guaranteed the inclusion of your entries (and yes, multiple entries are welcome) if you e-mail them to me at: Coturnix@gmail.com. Put “Teaching Carnival” in the title and inquire again if you do not get a Thank You note from me within 24 hours.

A new Maryland school off to a healthy start

Indian Creek dedicates new Upper School:

Mrs. Mattingly highlighted the major components of the college preparatory curriculum that fills the school day beginning at 8:50 a.m. and continues until 5 p.m. The hours are designed to accommodate teens’ circadian rhythms.

Periodic Table continued

S through W – now on Page 3.14

A hundred Psittacosauruses

Paleontologists Find 67 Dinosaurs In One Week:

He was specifically looking for Psittacosaurus fossils because it was a very common dinosaur and would give him lots of specimens, Horner said. It would also keep away poachers and commercial fossil hunters who work in the area, but prefer rare fossils. Horner wants a large number of fossils so he can compare variations between skeletons and changes during growth.
————-snip—————
The paleontologists found two meat-eating fossils in Mongolia in addition to the Psittacosaurus, Horner said. One of them looked like a raptor and may be a new species, but Horner said, “We find new species all the time. … A hundred Psittacosauruses are a lot more interesting to me than new species.”

Wide Awake

I feel a professional duty to watch – once it is available – and review this movie about sleep deprivation and insomnia. Sounds pretty good and informed, as well as entertaining, at least according to the article:

Night after night for some 40 years, the US independent filmmaker, Alan Berliner, has battled with his sleep demons.
He has tried everything to defeat them, including meditation, acupuncture, herbal remedies, “lots of sex” and earplugs.
Recently, he made Wide Awake, a film investigating both insomnia in general, and his affliction in particular. In the film, we watch as night vision cameras capture his nightly torment.
He says the process of making the film “induced, over time, a kind of madness”, and his mother suggests on camera that the process is damaging him. “Night after night I am watching myself watch myself not be able to sleep,” Berliner says of the 18-month project. “Each night, going to bed was a research opportunity. And that can be tiring.”

Garden of History

Mendel’s Garden #6 is up on The Voltage Gate.
History Carnival #39 is up on Cliopatria

Wow! A Real Futurist!

Sara Robinson explains.