Tesla links of the day

Apparently, there is yet another movie made about Tesla this year.
Violet Fire Opera is an opera about Tesla. It will open in National Theater in Belgrade on July 10th.
There is some stuff about the history of radio and moving pictures. Both essays mention Tesla’s contributions.
Tesla Roadster is creating quite a buzz. I wish I could afford it. Perhaps the Model II will be a little cheaper.
A new livejournal takes it’s name after Tesla’s tower – Wardenclyffe Tower.
The best source on everything Tesla is the Tesla Museum in Belgrade.
And here is another fan.
Check the links to previous posts about Tesla here, here and here.

Obligatory Readings of the Day – Publius is on the roll

WHY DAVID BRODER AND MARSHALL WITTMAN THREATEN DEMOCRACY:

If you look out over the landscape and think that both sides are equally bad and that the answer is somewhere in the middle, then you aren’t looking very closely. In fact, you’re not looking at all. You’re letting a pre-existing concept (the vanity of your own conspicuous centrism and bipartisan goodness) warp your perceptions of reality.

AND ALL THE PUNDITS ARE INSANE :

The fact that the GOP isn’t getting chased out of town and harassed endlessly by adopting this policy shows just how skewed everyone’s center of gravity is. There really needs to be a seismic shift in how these things are perceived.

Science Teachers in action

The fifth part of Kevin’s snake research in rural China is coming up on this blog today at noon. How do you think Kevin became such a scientist at such a young age? And how can we get more Kevins? Answer: science teachers in our schools. That is why we need to help teachers make science alive and exciting for their little charges. Just lookk at what is needed:
How about Dino-Mite!, in which a SC teacher needs just $221 dinosaur books for the school library.
Or Scientists in the Making, for a teacher in a Gifter & Talented Magnet school in rural North Carolina in which 48% of the students are from low income families. They need just $308 to subscribe to Scholastic’s Super Science magazine.
Or Bacteria All Around Us!, in which an 8th grade teacher needs an agar plate kit for growing bacteria. Only $180 are still needed for this project to be fully funded.
Or a 1st grade teacher in a San Jose, CA, school with 74% low-income students? Science Experiements, Reading and Writing, all in One needs just $714 to buy the needed books.
Or look at other projects on my list, or lists of other SB bloggers. Ten dollars is enough, if many of us contribute.

There need not be anything wrong with Kansas…

…if we all pitch in an help the challengers to get elected to the Kansas School Board – those people who are trying to replace the Creationists and get science education in the state back on track. How can you help? Josh Rosenau of Thoughts From Kansas has all the information put together so you can get the information and, if you can, help.

It was the battery….

…so now you know. CFeagans, Mike Dunford and Dave S. were the closest to the correct diagnosis in the comments. You should start a car-repair show on NPR, guys!
I also needed – badly – new front tires and alignment. Total cost = St.Peter’s scrambled eggs!

EduBlogging of the week

Carnival of Education #73 is up on The Lilting House.
Carnival of Homeschooling #26 is up on The Homeschool Cafe.

Creationism Is Just One Symptom Of Conservative Pathology

Creationism Is Just One Symptom Of Conservative Pathology
This is one a couple of posts about Creationism, written originally on May 1st, 2005.

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Science News in Brief

* Best way to build children’s brains: play with them
Love beats trendy toys, classes or music as brain food for preschoolers, a report says.
* Radioactive scorpion venom deemed safe cancer treatment:
Scientists are exploring an unusual new treatment for an aggressive brain cancer.
* Human-dolphin partnership inspires gov’t protection:
The government of Myanmar has moved to safeguard a dolphin-fisherman collaboration.
* The science of sniping on eBay:
A despised practice of placing last-second bids is actually the best strategy in online auctions, according to scientists.
* Startling variety in planetary birthplaces:
Astronomers once thought the dusty clouds that spawn planets all looked pretty much the same. But no more.

Human rights for Apes?

Spanish Parliament Supports Rights for Apes
Spanish MPs push for apes’ rights
What do you think?

Updates, updates

A bunch of updates are in store. First the DonorsChoose update. Let’s look at the whole SEED scienceblogs action first (thanks Janet for all the information):
Total raised so far: 13,535.14
Total donors so far: 170
Excluding Pharyngula (because Pharyngula is done), the top 5 in terms of …
Amt/donor:
Stranger Fruit ($132.64)
A Blog Around the Clock ($116.50)
Good Math, Bad Math ($110.34)
Terra Sigillata ($86.35)
The Scientific Activist ($86.25)

Donors per 1000 hits:

Terra Sigillata (4.96)
Evolgen (2.35)
Stranger Fruit (2.02)
Afarensis (1.89)
The Questionable Authority (1.74)

$ raised per hit:

Terra Sigillata ($0.43)
Stranger Fruit ($0.27)
Afarensis ($0.13)
Uncertain Principles ($0.10)
Evolgen ($0.082)

Closest to reaching goals:

Stranger Fruit (47.4%)
The World’s Fair (30.4%)
The Questionable Authority (24.4%)
Terra Sigillata (17.3%)
Cognitive Daily (16.6%)
If you are not from the USA, you are not supposed to donate, due to the Patriot Act!!!!! Yes, it is considered a terrorist activity to help American science teachers get supplies for their classes in the low-income neighborhood schools. Of course, you can get around it – just pick a state. They say that donors from India pick Indiana. I wonder if Brits from the Shires pick New Hampshire, while those from Northern England pick New York?
Also, you should be aware that there is friendly competition going on between blogs on the Biology channel, the Brain & Behavior channel, the Medicine channel and the Physical Science channel. So, to help the Biology channel and to help me move up in the stats, and most importantly to help science teachers around the country, click here:

Other updates…my car is in the shop. I should get it back tomorrow and will let you know what it was. Today, I had to do a LOT of walking. I should have thought about fixing my bike earlier….
Because of not having a car available I had to fax in my grades yesterday. So, my class is officially over. Next month, I am teaching only the lab and in September I think I’ll be teaching lab and lecture again. Now that all of my lecture notes are online, it will be twice as easy to prepare for each lecture in the future.
And, more posts are in the works. Give me some time – some of them require quite a lot of literature research.

Approaching Tesla’s birthday – the buzz in the blogosphere

Check out the Brief Look at the Life of Nikola Tesla on Strange Culture.
The Genius Of Persistence
What is Tesla Press?
If you are in Burlington, VT on July 9th, you can go to the mad Tesla birthday party. It’s at this guy’s place.
Carnegie Mellon University unveils bust of great inventor Tesla.
And at UWA, they are putting on a play.
Another person is going to read the Five Fists of Science.
And another one.
Here’s another fan.
This ie very interesting about Mark Twain, including a photo of him playing with electricity in Tesla’s lab.
This cats’ name is Tesla.
Getting Acquainted with the Famous Nikola Tesla
Check the links to previous posts about Tesla here and here.

Happy blogiversary

IAMB of Pooflingers Anonymous is celebrating his first blogiversary today. So, go there and say Hello and check out the Achives if you have not done so before.

Daily Rhythms in Cnidaria

Blogging on Peer-Reviewed Research

The origin and early evolution of circadian clocks are far from clear. It is now widely believed that the clocks in cyanobacteria and the clocks in Eukarya evolved independently from each other. It is also possible that some Archaea possess clock – at least they have clock genes, thought to have arived there by lateral transfer from cyanobacteria.[continued under the fold]

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At The Science Fair

At The Science Fair
Thsi post (and you can always click on the icon to check out the original) was written on April 29, 2005. Those are my observation about the in-class science fair in my daughter’s classroom.

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Sexsomnia Revisited

The article I linked to in my previous post on the topic of having sex while asleep (or is it ‘being sleep while having sex’?), e.g., the one I got pointed to by someone (e-mail?), is actually, quite terrible. So, instead, if you are interested in the topic, you should check out a much more serious website – Sleepsex.org, which focuses entirely on the phenomenon of sexsomnia.
I need to thank Karmen for pointing out that site to me. The site has extensive links to other sources of information, including links to all of Dr. Shapiro’s papers on the topic. For instance, this paper (pdf) appears much more trustworthy than the little online survey mentioned in the article I linked a few days ago.
On a less scientific, but perhaps more exciting note, you should check out the story of a woman whose boyfriend left her because of sexsomnia (masturbating in her sleep). And, since the original article mentioned potential legal consequences of sexsomnia (e.g., having sex with a minor), there was a case in Canada last year in which they found a man innocent of rape because he suffered from sexsomnia (the weird part is, he woke up with a condom on!)

Someone else also likes Five Fists Of Science!

I am glad I am not alone! There are other Tesla fans in the blogosphere. Jennifer Ouellette (of the wonderful Cocktail Party Physics blog) has also read the comic strip “Five Fists of Science” with Tesla and Twain saving the world from the evil Edison and J.P.Morgan, and wrote a review (much better than mine, of course – she is a writer!) which you can…er, should, …er, MUST read here.

Bad, Grand, and Green

Carnival of Bad History is back from hiatus and will, under the new management, become a monthly carnival. Excellent new issue, number 6, is now up on Frog In A Wall – Japan. Enjoy!
New Grand Rounds are up on Medview.
Carnival of the Green #33 is up on Jen’s Green Journal.

Comissar in the Seventh House

There is a whole slew of responses to this silly post by Comissar/
It is a typical effort to make “balance” between Left and Right in order to make the Right appear more palatable, …or palatable at all. The typical He-said-She-said approach that tries to equalize the enormously dangerous policies of the Right (see my previous post below) with follies of some powerless, silly people on the fringes that nominally belong to the Left (and vote Nader when it really matters!).
But, since when was Astrology part of the Democratic Party platform, even at state level, like Creationism and Global Warming Denial are in the GOP? Which party did Nancy Reagan belong to? And who the hell is Jerome Armstrong and why should I care? Is he just another Ward Churchill, a nobody that the vicious Right can beat up on blogs every day?
So, read the responses (and excellent comments) by:
PZ Myers, Ed Brayton, DarkSyde, Brent Rassmussen and Alon Levy.
It is funny that Comissar lists people who are so different from each other politically, some closer to Comissar himself than to the DNC. It is also funny that Comissar lists people who have, originally, when it was still fun before more dangerous and pressing things happened to the world in November 2000, written against astrology and other pseudoscience. It is also funny that he lists people who have invented the Skeptic’s Circle and Carnival of the Godless where such stuff is debunked (and the founder of Tangled Bank in which such stuff was debunked before the founding of the Skeptic’s Circle).
And I have chimed in on this topic before in Lefty and Righty excesses of pseudo-science.

Obligatory Reading of the Day

Bush Is Not Incompetent by George Lakoff:

Progressives have fallen into a trap. Emboldened by President Bush’s plummeting approval ratings, progressives increasingly point to Bush’s “failures” and label him and his administration as incompetent. Self-satisfying as this criticism may be, it misses the bigger point. Bush’s disasters — Katrina, the Iraq War, the budget deficit — are not so much a testament to his incompetence or a failure of execution. Rather, they are the natural, even inevitable result of his conservative governing philosophy. It is conservatism itself, carried out according to plan, that is at fault.

The article is long and elaborate, but the core idea is exactly what I wrote back in September 2005: Stop Beating on Bush!

JETLAG – new circadian gene in Drosophila

Blogging on Peer-Reviewed Research

drosophila.jpg
In the beginning, there was period.
Before 1995, the only known circadian clock genes were period (Per) in Drosophila melanogaster (wine fly) and frequency (Frq) in Neurospora crassa (bread mold). Some mutations, though not characterized at the molecular level, were also known in Chlamydomonas, Euglena as well as the famous Tau-mutation in hamsters.
I still remember the strained mathematical models attempting to account for a 24-hour rhythm with just a single gene controlling its own expression. We now know that multiple genes are involved in circadian function in invertebrates and vertebrates, many of which are the same across the animal kingdom and even play the same roles within the circadian mechanism.
But back in 1995, the discovery of TIMELESS (tim) by Amita Seghal was a really big deal – here was a protein that binds to Per in the cytoplasm and is degraded by exposure of the animal to light. That was the beginning of the molecular revolution in chronobiology – finally there was a system in which both the freerunning rhythms and entrainment by light could be studied at the level of the molecules.
It is not surprising that Dr.Seghal, among other things, still pursues the study of TIMELESS. Although this gene is not at all involved in the circadian clock in mammals (where the role is taken by cryptochrome, which has its own role in the Drosophila clock), it is one of the key players in the Drosophila system which, in turn, is the key system for every genetic investigation imaginable. In other words, even if the identities of players are different between invertebrates and vertebrates, the logic of the circadian system is likely to be the same.
Drosophila%20clock.jpeg
In the latest paper in Science, Dr.Seghal and collaborators report the identification of a new gene involved in circadian regulation. They named it JETLAG (Jet). In a series of elegant experiments they show that light, by induction of 3D transformation of CRY (cryptochrome protein), induces the phosphorilation of TIMELESS. JET, then, is capable of binding to TIM and helps degrade TIMELESS protein:

Our results, together with those of previous studies, suggest the following model of how light resets the clock in Drosophila. Upon light exposure, CRY undergoes conformational change, allowing it to bind TIM. TIM is then modified by phosphorylation, which allows JET to target TIM for ubiquitination and rapid degradation by the proteasome pathway.

ClockTutorial #2: Basic Concepts and Terms

From the Archives
This is the second in the series of posts designed to provide the basics of the field of Chronobiology. See the first part: ClockTutorial #1 – What Is Chronobiology and check out the rest of them here – they will all, over time, get moved to this blog.

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Chestnut Tree Circadian Clock Stops In Winter

Blogging on Peer-Reviewed Research

chestnuttree.jpgThe persistence of circadian rhythmicity during long bouts of hibernation in mammals has been a somewhat controversial topic in the literature. While some studies suggest that circadian clock is active during hibernation, other studies dispute this. Apparently, the truth is somewhere in-between – it differs between species:

Not all hibernating animals retain apparent circadian rhythmicity during the hibernation season. Whereas some species, such as bats and golden-mantled ground squirrels, maintain circadian rhythmicity in Tb throughout the hibernation season when held in constant conditions, other species, such as European hamsters, Syrian hamsters, and hedgehogs, lose circadian rhythmicity in Tb.

The outputs of the clock measured in these studies range from body temperature abd brain temperature, to timing of waking, to metabolic and behavioral parameters. But, to my knowledge, nobody has yet looked if the circadian pattern of expression of “core clock gene” persists during hibernation.
Thus, it was really interesting to see a study on the state of hibernation in a completely different kind of organism – a tree. About a year ago, a group from Spain, did exactly what was needed – they measured the levels of expression of circadian clock genes in the chestnut tree.
They measured the expression of clock genes both during naturally occuring winter dormancy and in the laboratory experiments involving chilling of seedlings combining with exposure to different photoperiods. In both cases, the core molecular mechanism of the circadian clock stopped entirely if the temperature and photoperiod both indicated ‘winter’, and was revived by warming-up the seedlings or the onset of spring.
Circadian clocks exhibit temperature independence, i.e., the period of the rhythm is not affected by temperature, within relatively broad limits. Apparently, the winter temperatures are outside the lower limit in the chestnut tree. Furthermore, it appears that the chestnut actively stops the clock with the onset of winter.
How can we interpret these data?
Overwintering is the stage in which all energetically expensive processes are minimized or shut down. However, workings of the clock itself are not very energetically expensive, so this is an unlikely reason for the elimination of rhythmicity during winter.
Second interpretation would be that, as the tree shuts down all its processes, there is nothing for the clock to regulate any more. There is also no feedback from the rest of metabolism into the clock. Thus, circadian rhythmicity fades as a by-product of overall dormancy of the plant.
Third, the clock itself may be a part of the mechanism that keeps everything else down. In other words, a clock stopped at (for instance – this is a random choice of phase) midnight will keep giving the midnight signal to the rest of the plant for months on end, keeping all the other processes at their normal midnight level (which may be very low). Thus, the clock may be central to the overal mechanism of hibernation in trees – i.e., the autumnal stopping of the clock is an evolved adaptation.

Social Isolation?

Paul has the scoop on the WaPo article I quoted earlier, about a new study on social isolation. Check it out.

Anyone knows car engines around here?

OK, my car won’t start. Here is the information that may be relevant:
– It is a 2000 Ford Winstar minivan.
– It never happened before – not even close.
– It is used every day.
– On most days it covers only a couple of miles. Once or twice a week, it may go to Raleigh (28 miles one way) or to my school (16 miles one way).
– It appears to have plenty of electricity, oil and gas.
– When the key is turned, all the lights come on, radio comes on etc.
– Nothing in the engine appears to move when the key is turned – I cannot see any movement or light anywhere.
– When the key is turned it makes a sound like electrical discharge, a sparkle, or even a Christmas sparkler stick. I cannot figure out where in the engine the sound comes from.
– I drove it to the store yesterday (5 miles each way), my wife drove herself to work last night and back home this morning (5 miles each way), with no complaints.
– It’s been quite yucky around here today and yesterday – much rain and thunder.
If you have any idea, let me know in the comments. Is there something I can do with basic tools and no spare parts? If I take it to the garage (and that has to wait until Wednesday as we are entirely broke), what should I expect them to tell me, what will they fix, how much should that cost?

Into the mind of global warming deniers

Obligatory Reading of the Day: Conspiring to expose the conspiracists

The Synapse

The Synapse, new carnival of neuroscience – from molecules to cognition and everything in-between – is the first carnival that originated here on SEED scienceblogs.com. Today, the first edition saw the light of day, so you should go over to Pure Pedantry to check it out. The homepage of the carnival, with archives, instructions for submission, etc., can be found here.
In two weeks, on July 9th, 2006, the carnival will be held here, on A Blog Around The Clock. Please send your entries to me by July 8th at midnight (Eastern Time). You can send your entries to: the DOT synapse DOT carnival AT gmail, or straight to me at: Coturnix1 AT aol DOT com, or you can use the automatic submission form over on Blogcarnival.com.

Today’s Carnivals

Carnival of the Godless #43 is up on Silly Humans.

The Tar Heel Tavern #70:qualities of life, is up on Another blue puzzle piece.
Radiology Grand Rounds Volume-I are up on Sumer’s Radiology Site.

Carnival Roundup

In chronological order, starting with tomorrow….[under the fold]

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More Banner Art

If you like my banner, you should also go and see what Carel did for his own blog! Gorgeous!

Sean Carrol Interview

DarkSyde interviews Sean Carrol (of Cosmic Variance blog) over on Daily Kos.

Sexsomnia?

Sex While Sleeping Is Real, And May Be No Joke
It is a tiny study but the preliminary results are intriguing. The article does not go much into underlying biology, but it touches on possible legal ramifications. If walking, eating or driving while asleep is possible, why not having sex? After all, you don’t even have to get out of bed. What do you think?

New York City trip – Part VIII: Around Manhattan

Sunday, May 28th
Keeping with our strategy of making sure the kids are having fun (instead of trying to see everything we wanted to see), we decided on Sunda morning to do what kids wanted to do. So, we checked out of the hotel early and took a long walk west towards the river. At the pier, we got on a Circle Line ferry and took a three-hour trip all around the island of Manhattan.
The guide was an obnoxious guy, inserting too much personal and political opinion, but he knew enough about the history and importance of various buildings for us to learn more. We got really close to the Statue of Liberty and the Ellis Island, slid tightly under a few low bridges, and generally relaxed in the gentle breeze on a hot day, enjoying the scenery and soaking up information. That information will come in handy next time – we now have some new ideas as to where we’ll want to go and what to see.
When we got back to the hotel, we had a couple of hours to kill. Unfortunately, because we checked out early, we missed a phone-call by Lindsay – it would have been nice to meet her at last. Next time, I hope.
Apparently on Sundays (or at least some Sundays) they close off a portion of the 7th avenue where they erect some kind of an open-air market, so we went there and looked around. We ate lunch at – of all places – McDonalds, but that is where kids wanted to eat.
Then we hailed a cab and went to LaGuardia. It seemed ridiculous that we had to go through all that security going OUT of New York City, but who said anything about security had to make sense?
The flight was uneventful, and we arrived at RDU airport on time. The airport was practically deserted. We hopped on a bus which took us to the Park&Ride where we left our van, and I drove us all safely home.
The cats were fine and very happy to see us. They most definitely did not run out of food and water while we were gone – I made sure of that before we left. The fish were a little pale and hungry, but that was remedied within minutes. I went to the neighbors’ house and picked up the dog who, apparently, had a grand time playing with the resident Giant Chihuaha.
Now, my wife has already made plans with three of her friends to go to NYC again in October. I’ll stay at home with the kids, but one day it will be my turn again. Not to mention that there are other great cities in the world that we should take the kids to while they are still young enough to want to come with us.
Previously in this series:
New York City trip – Part I: Fear of Flying
New York City trip – Part II:Bryant Park
New York City trip – Part III: SEED
New York City trip – Part IV: Ceres
New York City trip – Part V: Central Park
New York City trip – Part VI: Darwin
New York City trip – Part VII: Spamalot

Spiders and Bycicles

From The Archives
Since everyone is posting about spiders this week, I though I’d republish a sweet old post of mine, which ran on April 19, 2006 under the title “Happy Bicycle Day!” I hope you like this little post as much as I enjoyed writing it:

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Knowledge Is A Drug

Is this what makes us scientists function on a daily basis? Are we just junkies for comprehension?

Neuroscientists have proposed a simple explanation for the pleasure of grasping a new concept: The brain is getting its fix.

Hat-tip: Shakespeare’s Sister

176 Years!

Harriet, the famous Galapagos tortoise has died.

Is this a spider week on scienceblogs?

Just check out these recent posts by Karmen, Afarensis, Afarensis again, PZ and Tara.

MySpace, family picnics, or church?

This is a longish article, but I excerpted a few sentences for you. What do you think?
Social Isolation Growing in U.S., Study Says

Americans are far more socially isolated today than they were two decades ago, and a sharply growing number of people say they have no one in whom they can confide, according to a comprehensive new evaluation of the decline of social ties in the United States.
A quarter of Americans say they have no one with whom they can discuss personal troubles, more than double the number who were similarly isolated in 1985. Overall, the number of people Americans have in their closest circle of confidants has dropped from around three to about two.
The comprehensive new study paints a sobering picture of an increasingly fragmented America, where intimate social ties — once seen as an integral part of daily life and associated with a host of psychological and civic benefits — are shrinking or nonexistent. In bad times, far more people appear to suffer alone.
————–snip—————
“We know these close ties are what people depend on in bad times,” she said. “We’re not saying people are completely isolated. They may have 600 friends on Facebook.com [a popular networking Web site] and e-mail 25 people a day, but they are not discussing matters that are personally important.”
————–snip—————
Smith-Lovin said increased professional responsibilities, including working two or more jobs to make ends meet, and long commutes leave many people too exhausted to seek social — as well as family — connections: “Maybe sitting around watching ‘Desperate Housewives’ . . . is what counts for family interaction.”
————–snip—————
But University of Toronto sociologist Barry Wellman questioned whether the study’s focus on intimate ties means that social ties in general are fraying. He said people’s overall ties are actually growing, compared with previous decades, thanks in part to the Internet. Wellman has calculated that the average person today has about 250 ties with friends and relatives.
————–snip—————
“The current structure of workplace regulations assumes everyone works from 9 to 5, five days a week,” Putnam said. “If we gave people much more flexibility in their work life, they would use that time to spend more time with their aging mom or best friend.”

Viagra – The Future, part 2

From L.A.Times (you’ll have to click – I am purposefully citing out of context for humorous purposes):

Military researchers are considering a study to see whether Viagra could help soldiers function better at high altitudes.

High altitudes? How high? Who/what needs to get that high?

None of the cyclists reported an erection during the trials, she said.

Self-reporting, self-schmeporting! What do you think they were thinking about while “cycling”?

“If we send a group of guys into the mountains of Afghanistan, they need to be able to deal with the altitude,” Fulco said.

Eh, as if our boys over there were not rambunctious enough, and sex-deprived by definition. Why do you think they used to but bromine in soldiers’ tea?

Kevin in China, part 4 – Snakebites as a Daily Hobby

Here is the fourth part of Kevin’s journey. I have just realized that I posted the previous two in the wrong order, thus post #2 should be third and post #3 should be second. I was going by the order in which I received them instead of dates in the journal. And I am doing these things late at night (having them automatically published at a preset time – noon), doing all the HTML for italicising the species names, running the spellcheck, expanding IM-style contractions into full-length words, breaking long paragraphs into multiples of shorter ones for ease of reading on a computer screen, fighting with images, etc. Sorry about that. Also, the series will continue as soon as I get the next report from Kevin….

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Moral Order

ClockWeb%20logo2.JPG This was an early post of mine building upon George Lakoff analysis of the psychology underlying political ideology. It was first published on September 04, 2004 (mildly edited):

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Phase-Dependence of Rozerem Effectiveness?

Rozerem is a selective melatonin agonist. It acts on melatonin receptors at the suprachiasmatic nucleus. It is prescribed as a non-addictive sleep aid for people having difficulties with the onset of sleep, i.e., falling asleep in the evening.
While melatonin itself appears unlikely to be a molecule that directly induces sleep, it does have phase-resetting effects on the circadian clock. Thus, Rozerem appears ideal as an aid for extreme “owls” to help them fall asleep (if they need to wake up early in the morning, as some jobs require). By mimicking melatonin, it would phase-advance the clock by a couple of hours and make it easier to fall asleep at a more socially acceptable time.
I did not really spend much time thinking about this, but my wife just told me something interesting. Last night, she took Rozerem and fell asleep practically instantly and had a great night of sleep. But, last week, when she tried using Rozerem in the morning after coming back home from her 12-hour night shift, there was no effect.
Perhaps Rozerem, just like melatonin, is incapable of inducing instant 12-hour phase-shifts of the circadian clock in the SCN. Shifting by a couple of hours is fine, but shifting the cycle by 180 degrees is a different story altogether – it may take several days to accomplish.
Perhaps the clock in the SCN has its own Phase-Response Curve (PRC) to melatonin – presence of the molecule induces smaller or bigger (or not at all) phase-advances or phase-delays depending on the phase of the cycle in which it is applied.
So, perhaps Rozerem given in the evening hits the PRC at the phase in which a large (i.e., 2-3 hours) phase-advance is induced, thus placing the body at the right time for the onset of sleep. By the same logic, application of Rozerem in the morning may hit the PRC at the phase in which it has no effect or an effect in the wrong direction – phase-advance again, which would bring the body at the proper time for brunch! I guess I’ll need to dig through the old literature on the melatonin PRCs in humans to see how it looks like and if this notion may be correct.
Perhaps if one works a night shift and repeatedly applies Rozerem every morning, there would be a gradual shift of the clock, over several days, until the correct phase is achieved at which the drug would work as advertised. Also, avoiding any conflicting cues to the clock (e.g., light, noise, etc.) would seem important to ensure that a morning dose of Rozerem has its intended effect for night-shift workers. All of this is late-night speculation, though, so do not take my word for it. It is based on a single data-point. More research is needed….

4 Meme

Josh Rosenau tagged me with the 4 Meme and I cannot say No. Here it is:

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Friday Weird Sex Blogging

There is a tradition in the blogosphere of posting something light on Fridays.
Some people do the Friday Random Ten, but I do not have an iPod, and keep my computer on Mute, so I do not listen to music or can generated a random ten.
Most people post pictures of variousanimals, mostly cats, but I do not like doing what everyone else is doing. And once I’ve posted pictures of my cats (and I did, a couple of times, though never on a Friday), what’s the point of doing it again?
Some people got away from cats and pets and post pictures of cooler animals, like ants, or, well, ants. birds. Or birs on Monday. Or nudibranchs. Or cephalopods. Or plants. Or invasive species.
Some are moving away from living stuff altogether, with Friday Fractals or Organic People Chemistry or Sunday mineral blogging.
Update: Arrrrgh! How could I have forgotten
Friday Sprog Blogging and Map The Campus!
What can I do? How about something that is sure to bring in Google searchers?
Sex!
That’s it. Every Friday, I’ll try to find an example of some cool organism involved in a strange reproductive practice. Today is the first such Friday. Enjoy….

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Circus of the Spineless – call for submissions

Next edition of the Circus of the Spineless, the wonderful carnival of creepy-crawlies and everything living without a spine, will be hosted by David of Science And Sensibility, a wonderful New Zealand science blog. The carnival should appear on June 30th, so send your entries on time – about a day in advance – to: winda002 AT student DOT otago DOT ac DOT nz

Blogger MeetUp report

I went to the Chapel Hill/Carrboro Bloggers Meetup today. Most of the usual suspect opted out tonight, so there were only four of us there, but that did not make it any less interesting.
Who was there? Jackson Fox, Dave Johnson, David Warlick and myself.
What did we talk about? I talked about how great it was for me to move to SEED’s stable of science bloggers.
We talked about the future of book publishing and science publishing, about aggregating science-related blogging, about the BarCampRDU unconference, and the new way to blog a conference.
If you follow all of those links above, you are bound to find something interesting…so go ahead, take a plunge and explore….

100!

This is one hundredth post since I moved to scienceblogs.com! Wow – that was fast! And only nine of those are re-published old posts from old blogs.
OK, tomorrow at noon will be the second septidieversary (two weeks, OK?) of this blog. Time to take stock again.
I got 183 comments in two weeks! Thank you all – that is great! Only a few of those I had to dig out of the Junk Folder. The spam-prevention software appears to be working just fine, especially for Trackbacks.
This blog is ranked 8th out of SEED scienceblogs in the total amount given by readers to the DonorsChoose educational programs. Do you think we can do better than that? Just click on this button:

MovableType is still a challenge. I am a computeridiot and I got spoiled by Blogger. MT does not have a WYSYWIG! This means I have to do everything in HTML. This is the biggest problem with inserting images. In Blogger, once you download the image you can play with it any way you want: move it, make multiple copies of it, expand it, shrink it, stretch it – all just by pulling at the edge of the picture. Here, I have to calculate how much is a decrease by 30% going to be and then download the picture again…and again and again!
Finally – traffic. After the initial huge boom (links from Digg, Fark/tech and Stumbleupon), the traffic is settling down to about 820 visits per day according to Sitemeter (about 1000 by Google Analytics). That is like my old three blogs combined at the best time of year – and now it is summer with its slump in traffic.
Also, unlike the old blogs, this one is too new to have much content or to be rated high enough by Google, so there are preciously few people coming here via Google searches. This is bound to steadily increase over time.
In the meantime, most of the visitors are coming from the main page or the “Last 24 Hours” page of SEED scienceblogs, as well as via direct hits. Some arrive via Bloglines (apparently the /atom.xml feed is working better than the /index.xml feed, so you may want to switch), which is nice to see – those are the die-hard regulars. Please, if you have not done this yet, change your bookmarks, blogrolls and newsfeeds to reflect my move here to this URL.
Most importantly, it feels really good to be a part of a lively scienceblogging community. I hope that the readers are also enjoying the one-stop shopping of science blogging that SEED provides. I will keep trying to link to blogs outside of SEED – they should not be left out of the loop just because they are not part of scienceblogs.com (yet).

Skeptic’s Circle

37th meeting of the Skeptic’s Circle is now a Triangle with a distinctly marine flavour..as in…Bermuda! Go check it out at Autism Diva.

Kevin in China, part 3 – The First Westerner in Town

Below the fold is the third report from Kevin. This time it really gets interesting, even fascinating! Hunting snakes, rural China, the people….Kevin has interesting observations about everything.
Since the way Kevin embeds pictures in MSWord makes it very tricky to extract them and still have them look decent, I urge you to go check out the photos he managed to upload onto Photobucket. Enjoy:

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Teaching Scientific Method

ClockWeb%20logo2.JPG This is an early post of mine concerning the approaches to teaching science. It was first published on March 15, 2005. I have employed both of the methods described in this post since then. The jigsaw puzzle works much better as it is more fun. I have described how it actually went in the classroom here:

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Nikola Tesla – approaching the Big Anniversary

The big day – 150th anniversary of the birth of Nikola Tesla – is approaching fast – July 10th.
Tesla.jpg
I am sure that I will remind you of this a couple of more times until then – I have a couple of posts about him in the making – but first look at the older posts in which I have mentioned him so far….[more under the fold]

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