Clock Quotes

Advice is sometimes transmitted more successfully through a joke than grave teaching.
– Baltasar Gracian

The Final and Complete List of All Entries Submitted for The Open Laboratory 2009

OpenLab logo.jpg
The Deadline has passed!
There are a total of over 700 submissions for OpenLab 2009. Thank you all for submitting your and other people’s blog posts. I at least opened every one of them, and already read many of them and the overall quality looks very high.
SciCurious is ready (here is her post), judges are ready, and the judging process is about to begin.
And while you are waiting for results, you can read all the submitted entries right here!
And once you are done reading them all, you can go back to the 2006, 2007 and 2008 editions and read them as well.
And keep checking in every now and then….nobody knows exactly on which date the final winners will be announced – whenever we are happy with it and ready.
10 days of science: Astronomical art: Representing Planet Earth
2020 Science: Hooked on science – ten things that inspired me to become a scientist
A Blog Around The Clock: On Being a Nurse- a guest post
A Blog Around The Clock: Why social insects do not suffer from ill effects of rotating and night shift work?
A Blog Around The Clock: Circadian Rhythm of Aggression in Crayfish
A Blog Around The Clock: Co-Researching spaces for Freelance Scientists?
A Blog Around The Clock: The Shock Value of Science Blogs
A Blog Around The Clock: Defining the Journalism vs. Blogging Debate, with a Science Reporting angle
A Hot Cup of Joe: Artificial Cranial Modification: Trephination
A Hot Cup of Joe: Artificial Cranial Modification: Head Shaping
a k8, a cat, a mission: Moms asking for help
a k8, a cat, a mission: What does good mentorship look like?
a k8, a cat, a mission: Praise and Appreciation
a k8, a cat, a mission: Proximate mechanisms
a k8, a cat, a mission: The lives of women in science
A Primate of Modern Aspect: Ganlea megacanina: Saki of the Eocene
A Primate of Modern Aspect: She has her father’s coat, and her mother’s testosterone
A Posteriori: Relativity and the Electromagnetic field
A Schooner of Science: Chemistry of Kissing
A Schooner of Science: Dandelions a Natural Source of Latex
A Schooner of Science: Frankenstein’s Monster
A Schooner of Science: Effects of Alcohol – Why You Shouldn’t Drink on an Empty Stomach
A simple prop: The Roots of ID
A Stubborn Mule’s Perspective: Deleveraging and Australian Property Prices
A Wonderful Day for Anthropology: Neither Man Nor Woman: The Hijras of India
Aardvarchaeology: The Knowledge of the Ancients
Aardvarchaeology: Making the Archaeological Record
Aardvarchaeology: Open Source Dendrochronology
Aardvarchaeology: Digging at the Finnestorp War Booty Sacrificial Site
Adventures in Ethics and Science: How does salt melt snails?
Adventures in Ethics and Science: Vaccine refuseniks are free-riders.
Adventures in Ethics and Science: Impediments to dialogue about animal research (part 2)., Adventures in Ethics and Science: Impediments to dialogue about animal research (part 3). and Adventures in Ethics and Science: Impediments to dialogue about animal research (part 4). fused into one.
AK’s Rambling Thoughts: The Nature of the Neocortex
Ambivalent Academic: Some days I want to kick Science in the teeth
Ambivalent Academic: What exactly am I ambivalent about? Part I
Ambivalent Academic: What exactly am I ambivalent about? Part Deux
Ambivalent Academic: Motivation: what works and what doesn’t
Anna’s Bones: Stripped, Part II – ‘The Aquiline Nose’
Archetype: Richard Owen’s archetype
Archetype: Homology Weekly: Tentorial Pits
Archetype: Homology Weekly: Metapleural Gland
Archetype: Homology Weekly: Clypeus
Archetype: Homology Weekly: Petiole, Postpetiole and ‘Tubulation’
Archetype: Homology (Bi)Weekly: Dentiform Labral Setae
Archy: Zombies of the mammoth steppes
Archy: Fragments of my research – VIII
Archy: A mammoth literary mystery
Archy: A very brief history of plagiarism
Archy: The intellectual dishonesty of Allan Quist
Archy: Quist, Antarctica, and all that
Archy: Mammoth on ice
Archy: Mammoth illustrations
Archy: Where’s my mammelephant?
Archy: The first great mammoth
Archy: Mastodon nightmares
The Artful Amoeba: Moss That Swings Both (All?) Ways
The Artful Amoeba: The Six Million Dollar Moss: Why Biology is WAY Cooler Than Nuclear Physics
The Artful Amoeba: Thwarting ‘Beaver Fever’
Articulate Matter: Proper Lab Technique (original art)
Astroblog: Galileos’ DNA, and different forms of Blindness
The Astronomist: This is just to say (poem)
The Astronomist: Hubble Ultra Deep Field Part 2
The Astronomist: Caustics
Austin Science Policy Examiner: Climate Change Denial 101
The Austringer: Another Look at Law and Theory
Backreaction: The Variational Principle
Bayblab: Celebrate Darwin Day with a Phylum Feast
Bayblab: Good Head
The Beagle Project Blog: What is the difference between HMS Beagle and RMS Titanic?
The Beagle Project Blog: Cosmopithecus (guest post by astronaut Mike Barrat)
The Beagle Project Blog: The new Beagle: a flagship for science in a new age of sail
Beetles In The Bush: Trees of Lake Tahoe – The ‘Other’ Conifers
Beetles In The Bush: A Silver Anniversary
Beetles In The Bush: Trees of Lake Tahoe – The Pines
Bench TwentyOne: Aspatame and Audrey
Bench TwentyOne: Erm, does anyone have any new antibitoics?
Bench TwentyOne: Ur-ine trouble if you’ve been eating asparagus
Bench TwentyOne: Tom Kuhn and his Paradigm shifts
The Bernoulli Trial: How to talk back to a statistic
Beyond the Short Coat: Hard Conversations: Vaccines and Autism, Part 1
Beyond the Short Coat: Starting off strong
Beyond the Short Coat: Bittersweet
The Big Blog Theory: S03E04: The Pirate Solution
Biochemical Soul: Darwin and the Heart of Evolution
BioLOG: Publish or Perish: Writing Strategies
Birds and Science: Caged budgerigars and invasive parakeets
Birds and Science: How do huge bird colonies synchronize?
Birds and Science: Fight and coordination in bird duets
Birds and Science: The magic of a dancing flock of starlings
Birds and Science: Bird moult allometry
Birds and Science: Feather mites and God?
Bitesize Bio: Reality TV for Scientists
Brontossauros em meu Jardim: Navigation is required*: the incredible case of the desert ant
Bruceleeeowe’s Blog: Oh…. Earth is Haunted!
Bruceleeeowe’s Blog: Review On Time Machine Plans
Bruceleeeowe’s Blog: Credibility of Ancient Astronauts Hypothesis
Bruceleeeowe’s Blog: Structure of Universe: Is It Correct?
Bruceleeeowe’s Blog: String Theory Cosmology: Review
Bruceleeeowe’s Blog: Before the Big Bang..?
Bruceleeeowe’s Blog: Extra Dimensions in Newtonian Gravity
Bruceleeeowe’s Blog: Review On Some Of The Most Popular Mysteries And Conspiracies
Bug Girl’s Blog: Are there roaches in your coffee and chocolate?
Bug Girl’s Blog: Cochineal: it’s a bug AND a feature!
Building Blogs of Science: Not just a pretty face: The facial ruff of barn owls and sound localisation
Building Blogs of Science: On the instinct in the cockroach
Building Blogs of Science: How is human noise affecting the environment?
Byte Size Biology: Glowing like a horse
Byte Size Biology: Skin flick
Byte Size Biology: Skin Flick 2: Statistic Boogaloo
Byte Size Biology: The Incredible Shrinking Genome
Byte Size Biology: Science 2.0: things that work and things that don’t
Byte Size Biology: Distant homology and being a little pregnant
Byte Size Biology: The New Natural History
Byte Size Biology: The medium-rare biosphere
Byte Size Biology: Searching for Life on Earth
C&ENtral Science: Wisps of Metal, Whispers of History
C&ENtral Science: Some Thoughts on Lab Incidents
C&ENtral Science: Kindergarten And Crystallography
CABI Blogs: Hand Picked…and Carefully Sorted: We caught malignant malaria from chimpanzees — but when exactly?
CABI Blogs: Hand Picked…and Carefully Sorted: Forest destruction threatens Kenya’s economy
CABI Blogs: Hand Picked … and Carefully Sorted: Trees on farms – area twice the size of the Amazon
CABI Blogs: Hand Picked … and Carefully Sorted: What would catastrophic climate change involve?
Canadian Girl Postdoc in America: Slow Science gets the Shaft – Part I
Canadian Girl Postdoc in America: The Gaza Strip of Graduate School
Canadian Girl Postdoc in America: Science’s true tragedy
Canadian Girl Postdoc in America: The Value of Science in Canada
Catalogue of Organisms: Define ‘Published’
Catalogue of Organisms: Amoeba: Much Wierder than You Think
Catalogue of Organisms: Crossing the Algal Divide
Catalogue of Organisms: The Really Abominable Mystery
Catalogue of Organisms: Before the Word for World was Forest
Caribbean Paleobiology: From land to sea
Cheese Grits: Being Green
Cheese Grits: First Robin of Spring
Chemical Engineering For Life: Plastics
Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster: The Spaghetti Constant
Ciências e Ideias: Hi… come here often?
The Clean Industrial Revolution: Where Does Andrew Bolt Get Book Sales From?
Cognitive Daily: Super-recognizers: people with an amazing ability to recognize faces
Cognitive Daily: How wrong is it to use a kitten for personal sexual pleasure? Depends on whether you’ve washed your hands
Cognitive Daily: Does faking amnesia permanently distort your memory?
Cognitive Daily: ‘Free choice’ may not be as free as it seems
Cognitive Daily: We’re more likely to behave ethically when we see rivals behaving badly
Cosmic Variance: The Grid of Disputation
Coyote Crossing: Spermophilus
The Culture of Chemistry: Sweet leads
The Culture of Chemistry: The pressure to preserve
Dan’s Wild Wild Science Journal: Shed A Tear For The Cryosphere
Dan’s Wild Wild Science Journal: The Case of The Missing Sun Spots
Dan’s Wild Wild Science Journal: A Profound Quote From Carl Sagan
Data Not Shown: Gene angst: finding a DNA barcode for plants
Data Not Shown: Why Darwinius is not our ancestor
Dave Hone’s Archosaur Musings: Media tracking
Deep Sea News: Biodiversity Pt. 1: Richness vs. Evenness or What Kinds Of Beer Are In My Refrigerator
Deep Sea News: Deep-corals are world’s oldest animal
Deep Sea News: More Mercury Deeper
Deep Sea News: Deep Sea Corals and Methane Seeps
Deep Sea News: DSN’s 7 Simple Rules for Marine Conservation Expedition Safety
Deep Sea News: Shrimp Tails: Describing a New Species
Deep Sea News: Why Are There No Super Whales?
Deep Thoughts and Silliness: Kin are a Group
Deep Thoughts and Silliness: Do We Need a Scientific Literature?
Deep Thoughts and Silliness: On the Evolution of Porifera
Deep Thoughts and Silliness: Darwin WAS wrong
The Descent of Brain: ‘And through strange aeons, even Death may die’
Desmogblog: Climategate in Perspective, Featuring Isaac Newton
The Digital Cuttlefish: Science Is Cephalopod (poem and cartoon)
The Digital Cuttlefish: Selection Favours Prepared Cephalapod (poem and cartoon)
The Digital Cuttlefish: I’m In Love! (poem)
The Digital Cuttlefish: Lonely Percy (poem)
The Digital Cuttlefish: The Introspection Fish (poem)
The Digital Cuttlefish: The Cuttlefish Genome Project (poem)
The Digital Cuttlefish: The Worms Go In (poem)
Discovering Biology in a Digital World: How NOT to encourage diversity in the scientific community
The Dispersal of Darwin: Evolution Quote Mining in the 19th-Century
The Dispersal of Darwin: Darwin Day 2009: Take to Nature and Draw Your Own Conclusions
Dot Physics: The development of the atomic model
Dot Physics: The physics of Michael Jackson’s moonwalk
Dot Physics: Error propagation and the distance to the sun
Dot Physics: The price of a piece of LEGO
Dot Physics: When the centrifugal force is the centripetal force
The Dragon’s Tales: The KT Extinction: The Day the Sky Fell
Drawing Flies: Grey Marker Frenzy (cartoon)
Dr Aust’s Spleen: Kneed in the Nutts – or shot in the foot?
Dr Aust’s Spleen: Keeping it unreal
Dr Aust’s Spleen: The Tragic Human Cost of Political Idiocy and AIDS Pseudoscience
Dr Aust’s Spleen: The twelve days of (alternative) Christmas
Dr Aust’s Spleen: Electro (-nic mail) static
Dr. Jekyll & Mrs. Hyde: Things I learned in grad school 4: Thinking vs doing
Dr. Jekyll & Mrs. Hyde: The cost of a paper
Dr. Jekyll & Mrs. Hyde: Breastatistics
Ed Boyden’s blog: Civilization as Experiment
Ed Boyden’s Blog: The Singularity and the Fixed Point
Effect Measure: Human seasonal H1N1 flu in Giant Anteaters
Effect Measure: More on the science of the ‘cytokine storm’
Effect Measure: Why the epidemiology of swine flu matters
Effect Measure: Mutation found in swine flu virus; what does it mean?
Effect Measure: Swine flu this fall: turbulence ahead
Effect Measure: The California swine flu cases
Effect Measure: Important flu paper on immune response
Endless Forms: Can Diversity Beat Adversity for Tigers?
Endless Forms: How Do Bats Delay Senescence?
Endless Forms: Hot Mommas Make Boys
Endless Forms: Family or Function? The Diversity Debate
The End Of The Pier Show: Harry Potter and the Eponyms of Anatomy
The Enlightenment 2.0: Question: Is Competition in Science a Good Thing?
The Ethical Palaeontologist: Back to the Jurassic
The Ethical Palaeontologist: The Woman Who Looks Back At Me
Evidence-based public health: The Ironic Ape
Evolutionary Novelties: The glamour of marine biology
Evolving Thoughts: Apes and evolution in the news
Evolving Thoughts: The Demon Spencer
Evolving Thoughts: Social dominance hierarchies
Evolving Thoughts: Tautology 1a: corrections
Evolving Thoughts: It was 150 years ago tomorrow
Expression Patterns: A Squishy Topic
Expression Patterns: Mr. Darwin, you make me blush
Expression Patterns: To science!
Faculty of 1000 blog: How many more times?
Faculty of 1000 blog: Strange news from a distant star
Faculty of 1000 blog: Who will fight for researchers’ rights?
Faculty of 1000 blog: Just like a woman
Fat Science: Causation, Correlation, Dogma, Weight, and Health
Fat Science: Health At Every Size (HAES)
Female Science Professor: Start Seeing Micro-inequities
The Flying Trilobite: ‘Science-Chess Accommodating Religion’…contest! (original art)
Frontal Cortex: Smell and Memory
Fundscience.org: Science publishing on the fast lane, plus optionally in journals
Geófagos: Carbon sequestration by soils
Geotripper: 10 Things a Geology Major Should Know (An Alternate View)
Geotripper: And the Old World Passed Away…A Geologic History of the Colorado Plateau
Going on a bear hunt…: BITE 2: The Cookie Crumbles
Greg Laden’s Blog: The Natural Basis for Inequality of the Sexes
Greg Laden’s Blog: Reflections on the Origin of Species
Greg Laden’s Blog: The poor and the dark skinned have more babies than the rich and the light skinned
Greg Laden’s Blog: A Day In the Life (Bathing with the Hippos)
Highlight HEALTH: MicroRNAs in Human Health and Disease
Highlight HEALTH: Need For Less Sleep Associated with Gene Mutation
Highlight HEALTH: Clearing Up Concerns Over Vicks VapoRub
Highlight HEALTH: Lack of Sleep Increases Susceptibility to the Common Cold
Highly Allochthonous: Is the Earth’s magnetic field about to flip?
Highly Allochthonous: The amazing disappearing asymmetric magnetic reversals
Highly Allochthonous: It’s official: we really have saved the ozone layer
Horatio Algeranon’s: Jabberbloggy (poem)
Horatio Algeranon’s: Stupid is as stupid does (poem)
Horatio Algeranon’s: The Bjorn-again Environmentalist (poem)
Hydro365: Drilling on hard-rock aquifer: foothills of the Sierra Nevada
Hydro365: Locating high yield well in alluvial aquifer: Fresno-Clovis area
ICBS Everywhere: Clever Dave
ICBS Everywhere: Naughty Elmo
ICBS Everywhere: NCCAM = National Scam
ICBS Everywhere: B.S. for Christians… and I’m not talking about religion!
ICBS Everywhere: Even More BS for AntiVaxxers: Homeopathic Alternatives
ICBS Everywhere: B.S. for Type A Personalities: Visual Illusion B.S.
I, Editor: What I Think About When I Think About Manuscripts
I, Editor: An Sesquicentennial Thought
I, Editor: Science as a Religion that Worships Doubt as its God
The Intersection: Singled Out
The Inverse Square Blog: Science Bloggers v. Science Journalists: first thoughts
The Inverse Square Blog: On the Origin of Science Writing: Joseph Priestley/Isaac Newton edition
The Inverse Square Blog: History Matters (and so does the environoment) — Steven Pinker/Personal Genomics dept.
The Inverse Square Blog: Friday (Isaac) Newton blogging: Monday/Newton+Darwin Edition
The Inverse Square Blog: Torture…An Unnecessary Post, Part Two (The prehistory edition)
The Inverse Square Blog: Science and the Law: Why Antonin Scalia is not just wrong, but incapable
The Inverse Square Blog: We Will Fight Them On The Beaches!: Why Does The Atlantic Hate Science so Damn Much Edition.
The Inverse Square Blog: Andrew Sullivan Fouls One Off — and Then Grotesquely Strikes Out: God, Evil, and Auschwitz edition, part one
The Inverse Square Blog: The Stupid, It Burns…Crunchy Con takes on Cosmology Edition
The Inverse Square Blog: Why Does Anyone Listen To David Brooks? Women and Sex Scare Me edition
The Inverse Square Blog: Sexual terror kills people: a sort-of follow up to David Brooks’ sexual queasiness.
The Inverse Square Blog: It’s not that McArdle can’t read…it’s that she can’t (won’t) think: part one, part two, part three and part four, fused into a single essay.
Island of Doubt: Sea level rise a red herring?
Island of Doubt: What goes up must come down
It’s A Micro World After All: Ode To My Peer Reviews (poem)
I was lost but now I live here: The evolution of scientific impact
Jill S. Schneiderman: Contemplating Sabbatical
Killing The Buddha: The Most Beautiful System
Laboratory for Evolutionary Endocrinology Blog: What does this anthropologist think about hormonal birth control? Part V
Lab Rat: Bacterial Photography
Lab Rat: Living without a cell wall…
Laelaps: Poor, poor Ida, Or: “‘Overselling an Adapid’
Laelaps: At long last, meet Ardipithecus ramidus
Laelaps: The Ape-Man from Colorado
Laelaps: Repost: The Tragedy of Saartje Baartman
Laelaps: Maiacetus, the good mother whale
Laelaps: Darwin and the African apes
Laelaps: The horse as an evolutionary paradox
Language Log: Betting on the poor boy: Whorf strikes back
The Lay Scientist: Catching Snowflakes: The Media and Public Perceptions of Disease
The Lay Scientist: Guest Post: Reflections on the Realities of Measles
The Lay Scientist: Wasting 500 hours a month on Facebook. Or how not to use statistics.
The Leatherhosen Paradox: On David and Goliath…
Life is Good!: What will you be doing on September 9th, 2040 at 7:00 PM?
Life Science Tools of the Trade: Mr. Darwin’s magic hammer
Life Science Tools of the Trade: The scientific treatment of Shakespeare’s naughty nether regions.
Lindsey Hoshaw: Watching the world pass by, one toilet seat at a time
Living the Scientific Life: Plumage Color Influences Choice of Mates and Sex of Chicks in Gouldian Finches, Erythrura gouldiae
Living the Scientific Life: Let’s Give Three Bronx Cheers for Bumblebees!
Living the Scientific Life: Dead Birds Do Tell Tales
Living the Scientific Life: When is a Honeyeater not a Honeyeater? The Tricks of Convergent Evolution
Leaving the Laboratory: Agroforestry in Ghana: Moringa Oleifera
Less Wrong: Cached Selves
Less Wrong: The Apologist and the Revolutionary
Looking for Detachment: Mountain Mahogany and Rhyolite
Looking for Detachment: Our Camp in Meadow Valley Wash
Looking for Detachment: Caliente Camp Continued: Part 3
Looking for Detachment: Caliente Camp Continued: Part 4
Looking for Detachment: Caliente Camp Continued: Part 5
The Loom: The Origin of Big
The Loom: A Tapeworm To Call My Own
Lounge of the Lab Lemming: A thirsty southern star
Lounge of the Lab Lemming: Asteroid 2008TC3 is now the Almahata Sitta meteorite
The MacGuffin: Topiramate Does Not Treat Alcohol Dependnece: Part 1
Made With Molecules: Hey Baby, what’s your AVPR1A like?
Mad Scientist, Junior: Pretty Pictures That Toaster Takes
Mad Scientist, Junior: MAGIC!!!
The magic of computer science (The 2009 Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition): The user error that almost cost me my bike
Malaria, Bedbugs, Sea Lice, and Sunsets: An Interesting Patch of Quicksand
Malaria, Bedbugs, Sea Lice, and Sunsets: Size Matters: The sequel
Mama Joules: What is global warming?
Mama Joules: Cricket ears are amazing
Mama Joules: Grow a science garden
Mama Joules: Science Poem: Intrasolar interloper (poem)
Mario’s Entangled Bank: Happy birthday The Origin of Species
Marmorkrebs: Great moments in crayfish research: Before he was famous
Marmorkrebs: Great moments in crayfish research: Muscle receptor organs
Marmorkrebs: Haiku (poem)
Masks of Eris: Mathematics instruction as a fish
Mauka to Makai: The Hurdles of Nurdles
Mauka to Makai: Baby-Making
Mauka to Makai: Overfishing Simplified…Then Complexified
Mauka to Makai: Butt Litter
Mauka to Makai: Saving the Screwed
Mauka to Makai: Sperm Wars
Mental Indigestion: Anatomy of (preparing to write) a scientific paper…
Mental indigestion: The strength of great apes…
Mental indigestion: Mimicry: survival or flattery?…
Mental Indigestion: Holes in the ice…
Migrations: What Use is Half a Wing – Evolution of Flight
Mind the Gap: In which science gets a bit more sexy than it might have wanted to
Mind the Gap: In which I ponder economies of scale
Mind the Gap: In which I tend a strange garden
Mind the Gap: In which I ramp up
Mind the Gap: In which I muster a hypothesis
Mind the Gap: In which I continue to suspend disbelief
Mind the Gap: In which the data back up our habitual suspicions
Mind the Gap: In which I wade through the fringes of textbook fact
Mind the Gap: In which I dally with both sides
Mind the Gap: In which I am given weird treasures
Mind the Gap: In which I confront the aging process
Mind the Gap: In which I remember where I was when I heard – or possibly not
Mind the Gap: In which I defend the editorial profession – belatedly
Mind the Gap: In which I revisit the dark arts
Mind the Gap: In which I react
Mind the Gap: In which things develop
The Mind Wobbles: Attribution vs Citation: Do you know the difference? and Peanutbutter: Attribution vs Citation: Do you know the difference? in tandem.
More Grumbine Science: Science Jabberwocky
More Grumbine Science: Results on deciding trends
More Grumbine Science: Good science, wrong answer
More Grumbine Science: How CO2 matters
The Mouse Trap: Action-selection and Attention-allocation: a common problem and a common solution?
The Mouse Trap: The Default Brain Network: implications for Autism and Schizophrenia
The Mouse Trap: The Varieties of Altruistic Experiences
The Mouse Trap: Psychosis and Salience dysregulation
The Mouse Trap: The bipolar phenotype: Excessive self-regulatory focus?
The Mouse Trap: Self relevance and the reality-fictional blur
The Mouse Trap: Evidence for heightened Agency in Schizophrenia
The Mouse Trap: Cultural differences are Vodoo correlations: I beg to differ
The Mouse Trap: Low Mood and Risk Aversion: a poor State outcome?
The Mouse Trap: What it is like to be a zombie?
The Mouse Trap: Major conscious and unconscious processes in the brain: part 4: the easy problem of A-consciousness
The Mouse Trap: Major conscious and unconscious processes in the brain
The Mr Science Show: The curse of the duck
The Mr Science Show: Correlation of the Week: Eclipses and the economy
The Mr Science Show: Sumo vs Chess – how their ranking systems work
The Mr Science Show: Correlation of the Week: Zombies, Vampires, Democrats and Republicans
The Mr Science Show: Correlation of the Week: Ashes success and El Nino
The Mr Science Show: Science, Psychology and Cricket
The Mr Science Show: The Home Advantage
The Mr Science Show: Correlation of the Week: Shark attacks and the Global Financial Crisis
The Mr Science Show: Who do you trust to build your synchrotron? (this cannot be printed in a book – it’s just a movie clip!)
The Mr Science Show: Ep 107: Ranking Cricketers
A sorry saga – the crumbling cookie
Myrmecos Blog: Pyramica vs Strumigenys: why does it matter?
NeuroDojo: Are big brains for adulterous cheating?
NeuroDojo: The princess and the perfume, a hermit crab fairy tale
NeuroDojo: I want to be Carl Sagan, but can’t
NeuroDojo: Is the mimic octopus misnamed?
Neuron Culture: The Weird History of Vaccine Adjuvants
Neuron Culture: Blogosphere, MSM journalism, and the PTSD story
Neurophilosophy: Amnesia in the movies
Neurophilosophy: Brain & behaviour of dinosaurs
Neurophilosophy: Voluntary amputation and extra phantom limbs
Neurotopia: The Value of Stupidity: are we doing it right?
Neurotopia: Why I’m a Scientist
Neurotopia: Korsakoff’s Psychic Disorder in Conjunction with Peripheral Neuritis
Neurotopia: Friday Weird Science: Female Ejaculation
Neurotopia: Things I like to Blog About: Addiction and the Opponent Process Theory
Neurotopia: Opponent-Process Theory: Welcome to the dark side
Neurotopia: Eating Grad Style: Free Food
Neurotopia: Poem of the Day: #4 (poem)
Neurotopia: An Open Letter
Neurotopia: No Crybabies in Science
Neurotopia: In which Sci amuses the internets (poem)
Neurotopia: ‘Oh Tiktaalik, Transitional Form’ (poem)
New York Blog: Celebrity-based science and the decline of journalism
New York Blog: Food Tripping
New York Blog: The Restructuring of Graduate Education
New York blog: Left Socks and Negative Data
New York blog: The impact of the Impact Factor
New York blog: Frenzy over fossil misses the link
New York Minutes: Be afraid, be very afraid…wait, why?
Next Generation Science: Unpublished Data, No Pictures Please
Next Generation Science: ResearchBlogging.org: Interview with Dave Munger
No Moods, Ads or Cutesy Fucking Icons (Re-reloaded): Because As We All Know, The Green Party Runs the World.
NoR: Confessions of a Science Fair Dad (almost)
Not Exactly Rocket Science: Darwinius changes everything
Not Exactly Rocket Science: Gender gap in maths driven by social factors, not biological differences
Not Exactly Rocket Science: How research saved the Large Blue butterfly
Not Exactly Rocket Science: 35,000-year-old German flutes display excellent kraftwerk
Not Exactly Rocket Science: Do lost people really go round in circles?
Not Exactly Rocket Science: Rapamycin – the Easter Island drug that extends lifespan of old mice
Not Exactly Rocket Science: How light or dark is Barack Obama’s skin? Depends on your political stance…
Not Exactly Rocket Science: Delay not deviance: brains of children with ADHD mature later than other
Nothing’s Shocking: Should authors decide whether their revised paper is re-reviewed??
Nothing’s Shocking: No longer considered to be ‘Leaving Science’
Observations of a Nerd: How big things relate to sex, stress and testosterone
Observations of a Nerd: Why I am not a Darwinist, but we should celebrate Darwin Day
Observations of a Nerd: Darwin’s Degenerates – Evolution’s Finest
Observations of a Nerd: A Marine Biologist’s Story
Observations of a Nerd: The End Of The Age Of Man?
Observations of a Nerd: Pan-Fried Conservation: How to eat our way to healthy reefs
Observations of a Nerd: When Good Genes Go Bad
OCD: My Flashback and Concern For OCDian’s
Oh, For The Love Of Science!: West Nile Virus in a Warming World
The OpenHelix Blog: Margaret Dayhoff, a founder of the field of bioinformatics
Open Minds and Parachutes: Which scientists can you trust?
Open Parachute: Human Morality I: Religious confusion
Open Parachute: Human Morality II: Objective morality
Open Parachute: Human Morality III: Moral intuition
Open Parachute: Human Morality IV: Role of religion
Open Parachute: Human Morality V: The secular conscience
The Other 95%: Cephalopod-tastic Friday
The Other 95%: Mr. Arthrobalanus
The Other 95%: SpeciesDay – Unionidae
The Oyster’s Garter: Why you didn’t really want the job, Waiting for Godot edition
The Oyster’s Garter (Double X edition): A ‘Novel’ Take on the Climate Change Report
The Panda’s Thumb: Where do comets come from?
The Panda’s Thumb: The Real Reason Biologists Laugh at Creationists
The Panda’s Thumb: It’s all about Science Envy
PartiallyClips: Scary Story (comic)
PartiallyClips: Bacteria (comic)
PartiallyClips: Scientist at Microscope (comic)
Pharyngula: A brief moment in the magnificent history of mankind
Piled Higher & Deeper (PHDComics): Great Tweets of Science (comic strip)
Piled Higher & Deeper (PHDComics): If TV science was more like real science (comic strip)
Pleiotropy: B:III evidence for evolution (which is just a theory)
Pleiotropy: Genomic obesity
Pleiotropy: Darwin was wrong about the human appendix being vestigial
Pleiotropy: Bottle feeding simulates child loss
Pleiotropy: Darwin’s theory can handle the landscape
Pleiotropy: Homosexuality is not a choice
Pleiotropy: Evolution-proof malaria control
Pleiotropy: Finger lengths predicts stockbrokers’ success
Pleiotropy: Contact with hobbits simplified languages?
Pleiotropy: Wealthy men’s women have more orgasms
Plus Magazine: Shine a light on dodgy stats
Plus Magazine: You aren’t what your mother eats
Podblack Cat Blog: Are U(FO) Dreaming Of A Paranormal Christmas?
Podblack Cat Blog: Luck Of The Irish And Other Reasons To Avoid The Pub Today
Podblack Cat Blog: Pet Ownership – Maybe Not For Better Health, Perhaps Sense Of Humour?
Podblack Cat Blog: The Ode Less Practiced – Ericsson and Charness, 1994 / Fry, 2005
PodBlack Cat Blog: Sex And The Single Somnambulist
PodBlack Cat Blog: On Women, Paranormal Belief And When Yahoo Answers Wrong
PodBlack Cat Blog: Ninja Kittens Don’t Steal The Moon – Crime Rates And Lunar Phase Research
PodBlack Cat Blog: Not In Mother’s Good Linen! Apparitional Observations And Findings
PodBlack Cat Blog: The Process of Skeptical Blogging – The Bridge
Postcards from an intellectual odyssey: A (hopefully) comprehensible explanation of something complicated or… why DNA is hard to read
Prerogative of Harlots: He Blinded Me With Science
The Primate Diaries: The Nature of Partisan Politics
The Primate Diaries: Introducing a Primate
The Primate Diaries: Male Chauvinist Chimps or the Meat Market of Public Opinion?
The Primate Diaries: Superorganisms and Group Selection
The Primate Diaries: Rivalry Among the Reefs
The Primate Diaries: An Anthropologist in District 9
The Primate Diaries: Does Taking Birth Control Alter Women’s Sexual Choices?
The Primate Diaries: Reexamining Ardipithecus ramidus in Light of Human Origins
The Primate Diaries: Misunderstanding Dawkins: The Role of Metaphor in Science
The Primate Diaries: The Struggle for Coexistence
Promega Connections: Introverts Aging, Gracefully
Promega Connections: When Five Hundred Tigers Are Not Enough
Promega Connections: The Play is Over
Promega Connections: Accepted Without Revision
The Quantum Lobe Chronicles: Chronic stress and its effects on brain plasticity
The Quantum Lobe Chronicles: Early-exposure to a high fat diet shapes future preference
The Quantum Lobe Chronicles: The negative health effects of perceived discrimination
The Quantum Lobe Chronicles: Do adults with Asperger syndrome really have ToM?
The Quantum Lobe Chronicles: Did sleepwalking once serve as an adaptive function?
The Quantum Lobe Chronicles: Tone deaf? blame it on poor connectivity
The Quantum Lobe Chronicles: Bid farewell to sleep deprivation’s adverse effects on memory
The Quantum Lobe Chronicles: The peripheral attenton deficit of primary psychopaths
The Quantum Lobe Chronicles: The neural correlates of lucid dreaming
The Quantum Lobe Chronicles: Erasing phobias early in life
The Quantum Lobe Chronicles: Is inhibition a measure of free will?
The Quantum Lobe Chronicles: Observation of tool use activates specific brain area only in humans
The Quantum Lobe Chronicles: Why middle-agers shouldn’t join the army
The Quantum Lobe Chronicles: The somniloquy hypothesis: How the immature brain learns facts
Reciprocal Space: This is not good enough
Reciprocal Space: Respect my Authority
Reciprocal Space: I’m reviewing the situation
Reciprocal Space: Imagine there’s no Earth
Reciprocal Space: And then just drizzle some liquid nitrogen…
Reciprocal Space: To be, or not to be great
Reciprocal Space: Eye-opening access
Reciprocal Space: Are you going to this seminar? Huxley’s speaking.
Reciprocal Space: Oddly Connect
Reciprocal Space: My Nobel prize acceptance speech, 2010
Reconciliation Ecology: Lost Sounds
Reconciliation Ecology: El Condor Pasa
Reconciliation Ecology: Plagiarism, peer-review, and protecting the integrity of science
The Red Notebook: The Moor Walk
The Renaissance Mathematicus: In defence of the indefensible.
rENNISance woman: Obnoxious scientist alert
Reptilian Rants: New paper says dinosaurs were endomorphs.
Reptilian Rants: New paper dispells Komodo myth. Also Megalania may have been the world’s largest venomous animal.
Reptilian Rants: Sprawling crocodylians walk straight even if there isn’t much O2 to go around.
Reptilian Rants: A critical evaluation of Tianyulong confiusci – part 1
Reptilian Rants: A critical evaluation of Tianyulong confiusci – part 2
Reptilian Rants: A critical evalution of Tianyulong confiusci – part 3: Plucking at the idea of feathered dinosaurs
Respectful Insolence: Academia: Slowing down the search for cures?
Ricardiblog: On reading Charles Darwin’s autobiography
Sandwalk: Did Life Arise 3.5 Billion Years Ago?
SarahAskew: IAU: The singular future of astronomy
SarahAskew: Revamped Hubble breaks new ground
Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal: How Science Reporting Works (cartoon)
Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal: Wrong approach / Right approach (cartoon)
Science After Sunclipse: Where Does Our Information Come From? (art/cartoon)
Science-Based Medicine: Astrology with needles
Science Based Medicine: ‘There must be a reason,’ or how we support our own false beliefs
Science behind the scenes: How to explain science to your friends
Science in Paradise: Busting Marine Myths: Sharks DO Get Cancer!
Science Made Cool: Fish Tales in Sushi Restaurants
Science Made Cool: Natural History at the Time of Darwin’s Birth
Science. Why not?: Niche partitioning in orb-weaver spiders of Louisiana
Science. Why not?: The development of agriculture by the Attini tribe over the past 50 million years
Science. Why not?: American political opportunities are loaded against those who are simultaneously intelligent and honest
Science. Why not?: Could Pterosaurs Actually Fly?
Science. Why not?: Language is Culture and Culture is Language
Sciencewomen: Ask Sciencewomen: What name should I publish under?
Sciencewomen: Little Red Hens find their own peer mentors
Sciencewomen: Trailblazing teacher and role-model: an interview with a woman scientist who went before
Sciencewomen: Ask sciencewomen: If I’m happy with an MS should I get a PhD?
The Scientific Activist: Why Swine Flu Is Resistant to Adamantane Drugs
The Scientific Activist: On Mimicking Phophotyrosine
The Scientist: On the nature of faith: Part 1
The Scientist: On the last days
The Scientist: On the passing of reprints
The Scientist: On saying goodbye
The Scientist: Ontology
The Scientist: Ontology #2
The Scientist: On winding down
The Scientist: On the weekend
The Scientist: On small victories
The Scientist: On the nature of networking: reprise
The Scientist: Grey Council
The Scientist: On interfaces
The Scientist: Coincidental Chemistry
The Scientist: On the Future
The Scientist: The year of living dangerously–Part 1
The Scientist: The year of living dangerously–Part 2
The Scientist: The year of living dangerously–Finale
The Scientist: What I want to do when I grow up
The Scientist: Inspiration
The Scientist: In which I watch the Watchmen, and land a new job
The Scientist: Ongoing
The Scientist: On Differences
The Scientist: On whizzy things and how they fall apart
The Scientist: On kit culture
The Scientist: On saying goodbye
The Scientist: On Open Access
SEAPLEX Science: From Walden Pond to the North Pacific Gyre
Skeptic Wonder: The Myth of Evolutionary Ascent
Skulls in the Stars: Michael Faraday, grand unified theorist? (1851)
Skulls in the Stars: Levitation and diamagnetism, or: LEAVE EARNSHAW ALONE!!!
Skulls in the Stars: Lord Rayleigh vs. the Aether! (1902)
Skulls in the Stars: The Discoverie of Witchcraft, by Reginald Scot (1584)
Song for jasmine: Charles Darwin’s first theory of evolution
Southern Fried Science: The ecological disaster that is dolphin safe tuna
Southern Fried Science: Bonehenge – Community action in science outreach
Southern Fried Science: Ethical debate: Personal liberty, jobs, conservation, and shark diving.
Southern Fried Science: Heroes and Villains
Southern Fried Science: A curious case of convergent evolution?
Southern Fried Science: Beyond Salmon
Southern Fried Science: Four things EVERYONE needs to know about sharks
Southern Fried Science: Interview with Discovery Channel Executive Paul Gasek
Southern Fried Science: What the hell happened to the environmental movement
Southern Fried Science: How to brew beer in a coffee maker, using only materials commonly found on a modestly sized oceanographic research vessel.
Southern Fried Science: Sharks are sub-par, at best
Southern Fried Science: The Serpent and the Platypus
Southern Fried Science: Ethical debate: Is conserving North Atlantic Right Whales worth the trouble?
Southern Fried Science: Blood and Brains – can vampires survive a zombie apocalypse?
Southern Fried Science: What a good conservation organization looks like
Southern Fried Science: A dinner table ethical debate: Should we pay fisherman not to fish?
Southern Fried Science: From Birth to Origin – The Great Darwin Beard Challenge
Southern Fried Science: My thoughts on Shark Week
Southern Fried Science: Ten ways to make Shark Week better
Southern Fried Science: Daniel Nidzgorski: saving trees to help the oceans?
Southern Fried Science: Interview with Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus Director Jack Perez
Southern Fried Science: Ethical debate: A potential new species, or an invasive pest?
Star Stryder: You must have Power to Stop Discrimination
Starts With A Bang!: The Camera that Changed the Universe: Part 1
Starts With A Bang: Making the Elements in the Universe
Stripped Science: The right pairing (comic strip)
Stripped Science: Catfight (cartoon)
Stripped Science: The Nobel Prize in Medicine 2009 (comic strip)
Stupid Dinosaur Lies: Dino Den, The Worst Dinosaur Exhibit Ever!
Stupid Dinosaur Lies: Dino/human FAIL!
Stupid Dinosaur Lies: How Creationists Deal with Velociraptor Stupidly
Stupid Dinosaur Lies: Psittacosaurus as ‘Duck billed Dinosaurs’ (RFLMBO)
Stupid Dinosaur Lies: How Creationists Deal with Tyrannosaurus Rex Stupidly
Stupid Dinosaur Lies: The Riddle of the Sauropods
Stupid Dinosaur Lies: The Stegosaurus Carving That Isn’t
Suppertime Sonnets: In Which I Celebrate A Certain Member of the Lycaenidae Family (poem)
Tangled Up In Blue Guy: Accommodation and New Atheism in Brief
Terra Sigillata: Dear Dad, with love
Tessa’s Braces: Exploratorium (comic strip)
Tetrapod Zoology: Publishing with a hidden agenda: why birds simply cannot be dinosaurs
This Week at Hilton Pond: Fledgling Bird: Looking their Age
This Week at Hilton Pond: To John Muir: Thank You For Our National Parks
This Week at Hilton Pond: Big Trees: Redwoods & Sequoias
This Week at Hilton Pond: Insects That Sting: A Naturalist’s Dilemma
This Week at Hilton Pond: What Good Is A Butterfly? Ruminations on Ecology & Science Education
This Week at Hilton Pond: Damsels & Dragons: Autumn Odonata
This Week at Hilton Pond: Not-So-Confusing Fall Warblers
This Week at Hilton Pond: ‘Big fat’: An On-going Saga of Obesity in Ruby-throated Hummingbirds
This Week at Hilton Pond: Cedar Waxwing: ‘Most elegant’ Bird In North America
Thoughtomics: Hydras, Microbes and Immunity
Tomorrow’s Table: A Chef Discovers Science
Tomorrow’s Table: Who Can We Trust?
Tom Paine’s Ghost: Taking Earth’s Temperature
Tom Paine’s Ghost: Beyond Energy (poem)
Tom Paine’s Ghost: Swimming in Ethanol’s Ethos
Tom Paine’s Ghost: The Biochemistry of Halloween: Installment II
Tom Paine’s Ghost: Seeing is Believing
Tom Paine’s Ghost: Limeriks of Learning (poem)
The Tree of Life: Overselling genomics award #6: Quake/Helicos & the ‘democratization’ of sequencing
The Tree of Life: Can’t get much worse than this: soaking my shorts before my 1st conference talk. Other bad experiences?
Tumors Galore: Tree Tumors
Tumors Galore: Lions, and tigers, and boils! Oh, my!
Tumors Galore: Maintenance Therapy
Uncertain Principles: This Is My Job
Uncertain Principles: Science Is What Makes Us Human
Understanding Uncertainty: A Worrier’s Guide to Risk
Understanding Uncertainty: 2845 ways to spin the Risk
Urban Science Adventures! ©: Pollinators make the world go round (Travelog Europe)
Urban Science Adventures! © (YBP Guide): The Rightful Place of Science in Society and the African-American Community
Vagina Dentata: Ruthless, sex-fiend, testosterone-fuelled women gamblers found by scientists
Vagina Dentata: New ‘Scientist’ at it again
Vaviblog: The origin of fragrant rice
WalterJessen.com: Visualizing Gene Ontologies
Watching the World Wake Up: Darwin, The Aeneid, and Days of our Lives
Ways.org: The journal scope in focus — putting scholarly communication in context
Ways.org: Implementing Fantasy Science Funding
Ways.org: Science as a means of cross-cultural communication
Ways.org: The corpus of science – a biophysical perspective
Ways.org: What would science look like if it were invented today?
When Pigs Fly Returns: Horns & Spikes, Part 1: Postorbital Horns
When Pigs Fly Returns: Horns & Spikes, Part 2: Nasal Horns
When Pigs Fly Returns: Horns & Spikes Part 3: Jugal ‘Horns’
When Pigs Fly Returns: Horns & Spikes, Part 4: The Frill
The Whirlpool of Life: Can Dinosaurs Save the World?
White Coat Underground: Journeys
White Coat Underground: Fountain Pens
White Coat Underground: Service
White Coat Underground: A pox on your house? How fighting one disease brought back another
Why Evolution is True: The discovery of heredity
Why is science important?: Richard P. Grant: beautiful and essential
Why is science important?: Jennifer Rohn: severe skepticism, as natural as breathing
Why is science important?: Steffi Suhr: sure it’s pretty, but it’s much more impressive when you know why
Why is science important?: Sandeep Gautam: Asato Ma Sadgamay (lead me from Falsity to Truth)
Wild Muse: Urban bird strikes
Wild Muse: Naming species, to know a place
Wild Muse: Mesopredators gone wild
Wild Muse: Forget megafauna, let’s talk magnetic fauna
Wild Muse: Evolution of a coywolf, and range expansion
Wild Muse: Genital mimicry, social erections and spotted hyenas
Wired Science: Freaky Sleep Paralysis: Being Awake in Your Nightmares
Wired Science: Forgotten Drug Helps Stem Cells Repair Bone Marrow
Wired Science: Doctors Kill Parasitic Worms By Poisoning the Bacteria in Their Innards
Wired Science: Sushi DNA Tests Reveal Fraud
The X-Change Files: Talking Incentives
xkcd: Correlation (cartoon)
xkcd: Newton and Leibniz (cartoon)
xkcd: Crossbows (cartoon)

This kid’s art is great

owl drawing.jpgCheck out this etsy shop – wolves, lions, horses, owls. Great stuff, especially for someone that young.

Best of November

I posted 143 times in November.
This was a busy month, getting to the end of the submission period for Open Lab 2009 and getting ready for ScienceOnline2010, so most of the posts had something to do with one of those two topics.
And I posted quite a few good videos and a couple of cool photographs. I decided that I did Tweetlinks long enough for everyone to get it that I post a lot of cool links there, so if interested, you know where to find me on Twitter.
But I did blog about science as well – in this long post I covered several science-related events I attended and discussed the science I heard there.
Work-wise, we announced the PLoS Store and the October blog pick of the month.
I also posted the interview with Christian Casper and a brief review of the Leonard Cohen concert.

PLoS ONE Blog Pick of the Month for November 2009….

…has been announced on the everyONE blog.

AIDS Day (and Techie Tuesday) in RTP in an hour

You can follow the event virtually in Second Life – just click here and teleport.

Announcing the Keynote Speaker at ScienceOnline2010

scienceonline2010logoMedium.jpg
mspecter.jpgWhile the rest of the Program has been set for more than a month now, we have not yet announced who the Friday night Keynote Speaker will be at ScienceOnline2010. But now that all the negotiations have been done, we can do so. It is my pleasure to announce that we will have an exciting – and somewhat controversial – speaker that day – Michael Specter.
Michael Specter has started out in journalism at The Washington Post where he was, among else, the national science reporter and later their New York City bureau chief. He later moved to the Times and was the co-chief of the Times Moscow bureau and then the correspondent based in Rome. For the past decade or so, he has been the staff writer, focusing on science and technology, at The New Yorker.
Denialism cover.jpgMichael’s latest book is Denialism: How Irrational Thinking Hinders Scientific Progress, Harms the Planet, and Threatens Our Lives (order from Amazon, my copy is on its way). Of course, the topic is explosive, so the reviews span the entire spectrum. See, for example, two very different reviews in New York Times – here and here. Or compare the reviews in Grist and Boston Globe. There is an interesting four-part discussion on Slate between Michael Specter and Chris Mooney that is worth your time.
You can watch Michael give a talk here, discuss denialism with Chris Mooney on Bloggingheads.tv and you can see him on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart on December 3rd. He will appear at TED in February (yes, we got him first).

Welcome the newest SciBling!

Go say Hello to Rhett Allain at Dot Physics.

ScienceOnline2010 – introducing the participants

scienceonline2010logoMedium.jpg
As you know you can see everyone who’s registered for the conference, but I highlight 4-6 participants every day as this may be an easier way for you to digest the list. You can also look at the Program so see who is doing what.
Glendon Mellow is a freelance artist-illustrator, currently a student at York University. He blogs at The Flying Trilobite and tweets. I interviewed Glendon earlier this year. At the conference, he will co-moderate the session on Art and Science: Visual Metaphors and lead a workshop where he’ll teach how to Paint your blog images using a digital tablet.
Annie Crawley is a producer, underwater cinematographer, Scuba Instructor, boat captain, writer, motivational speaker, and the founder of Dive Into Your Imagination. She tweets both for Dive Into Your Imagination and as herself. At the conference, Annie will be quite busy – she’ll co-moderate the session Talking Trash: Online Outreach from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, do a demo of Dive Into Your Imagination and give an Ignite talk on a related topic – education about ocean and environment.
Chris Brodie is a freelance writer, scientist, contributing editor at American Scientist magazine, Fulbright Scholar in science communication (Norway ’08), adjunct faculty in Communication at NC State, founder of SCONC, a blogger and tweeterer.
Alla Katsnelson is the Associate Editor and the ‘News and Lab Tools’ editor at The Scientist. And she is on Twitter.
Michael Taffe is Associate Professor at the Committee On The Neurobiology Of Addictive Disorders at The Scripps Research Institute.
Kerstin Hoppenhaus is a scientist and a documentary film-maker and director in Berlin, Germany.

New and Exciting in PLoS ONE

There are 30 new articles in PLoS ONE published yesterday and another 23 today. As always, you should rate the articles, post notes and comments and send trackbacks when you blog about the papers. You can now also easily place articles on various social services (CiteULike, Mendeley, Connotea, Stumbleupon, Facebook and Digg) with just one click. Here are my own picks for the week – you go and look for your own favourites:
Systematic Differences in Impact across Publication Tracks at PNAS:

Citation data can be used to evaluate the editorial policies and procedures of scientific journals. Here we investigate citation counts for the three different publication tracks of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS). This analysis explores the consequences of differences in editor and referee selection, while controlling for the prestige of the journal in which the papers appear. We find that papers authored and “Contributed” by NAS members (Track III) are on average cited less often than papers that are “Communicated” for others by NAS members (Track I) or submitted directly via the standard peer review process (Track II). However, we also find that the variance in the citation count of Contributed papers, and to a lesser extent Communicated papers, is larger than for direct submissions. Therefore when examining the 10% most-cited papers from each track, Contributed papers receive the most citations, followed by Communicated papers, while Direct submissions receive the least citations. Our findings suggest that PNAS “Contributed” papers, in which NAS-member authors select their own reviewers, balance an overall lower impact with an increased probability of publishing exceptional papers. This analysis demonstrates that different editorial procedures are associated with different levels of impact, even within the same prominent journal, and raises interesting questions about the most appropriate metrics for judging an editorial policy’s success.

Survey of the Quality of Experimental Design, Statistical Analysis and Reporting of Research Using Animals:

For scientific, ethical and economic reasons, experiments involving animals should be appropriately designed, correctly analysed and transparently reported. This increases the scientific validity of the results, and maximises the knowledge gained from each experiment. A minimum amount of relevant information must be included in scientific publications to ensure that the methods and results of a study can be reviewed, analysed and repeated. Omitting essential information can raise scientific and ethical concerns. We report the findings of a systematic survey of reporting, experimental design and statistical analysis in published biomedical research using laboratory animals. Medline and EMBASE were searched for studies reporting research on live rats, mice and non-human primates carried out in UK and US publicly funded research establishments. Detailed information was collected from 271 publications, about the objective or hypothesis of the study, the number, sex, age and/or weight of animals used, and experimental and statistical methods. Only 59% of the studies stated the hypothesis or objective of the study and the number and characteristics of the animals used. Appropriate and efficient experimental design is a critical component of high-quality science. Most of the papers surveyed did not use randomisation (87%) or blinding (86%), to reduce bias in animal selection and outcome assessment. Only 70% of the publications that used statistical methods described their methods and presented the results with a measure of error or variability. This survey has identified a number of issues that need to be addressed in order to improve experimental design and reporting in publications describing research using animals. Scientific publication is a powerful and important source of information; the authors of scientific publications therefore have a responsibility to describe their methods and results comprehensively, accurately and transparently, and peer reviewers and journal editors share the responsibility to ensure that published studies fulfil these criteria.

Why Some Women Look Young for Their Age:

The desire of many to look young for their age has led to the establishment of a large cosmetics industry. However, the features of appearance that primarily determine how old women look for their age and whether genetic or environmental factors predominately influence such features are largely unknown. We studied the facial appearance of 102 pairs of female Danish twins aged 59 to 81 as well as 162 British females aged 45 to 75. Skin wrinkling, hair graying and lip height were significantly and independently associated with how old the women looked for their age. The appearance of facial sun-damage was also found to be significantly correlated to how old women look for their age and was primarily due to its commonality with the appearance of skin wrinkles. There was also considerable variation in the perceived age data that was unaccounted for. Composite facial images created from women who looked young or old for their age indicated that the structure of subcutaneous tissue was partly responsible. Heritability analyses of the appearance features revealed that perceived age, pigmented age spots, skin wrinkles and the appearance of sun-damage were influenced more or less equally by genetic and environmental factors. Hair graying, recession of hair from the forehead and lip height were influenced mainly by genetic factors whereas environmental factors influenced hair thinning. These findings indicate that women who look young for their age have large lips, avoid sun-exposure and possess genetic factors that protect against the development of gray hair and skin wrinkles. The findings also demonstrate that perceived age is a better biomarker of skin, hair and facial aging than chronological age.

Maggot Secretions Skew Monocyte-Macrophage Differentiation Away from a Pro-Inflammatory to a Pro-Angiogenic Type:

Maggots of the blowfly Lucilia sericata are used for the treatment of chronic wounds. Earlier we reported maggot secretions to inhibit pro-inflammatory responses of human monocytes. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of maggot secretions on the differentiation of monocytes into pro-inflammatory (MØ-1) and anti-inflammatory/pro-angiogenic macrophages (MØ-2) as these cells play a central role in wound healing. Freshly isolated monocytes were incubated with secretions and GM-CSF or M-CSF for 6 days and then stimulated with LPS or LTA for 18 h. The expression of cell surface molecules and the levels of cytokines, chemokines and growth factors in supernatants were measured. Our results showed secretions to affect monocyte-macrophage differentiation leading to MØ-1 with a partial MØ-2-like morphology but lacking CD163, which is characteristic for MØ-2. In response to LPS or LTA, secretions-differentiated MØ-1 produced less pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-12p40 and MIF) than control cells. Similar results were observed for MØ-2 when stimulated with low concentrations of LPS. Furthermore, secretions dose-dependently led to MØ-1 and MØ-2 characterized by an altered chemokine production. Secretions led to MØ-2, but not MØ-1, producing enhanced levels of the growth factors bFGF and VEGF, as compared to control cells. The expression of cell-surface receptors involved in LPS/LTA was enhanced by secretions, that of CD86 and HLA-DR down-regulated, while receptors involved in phagocytosis remained largely unaffected. Maggot secretions skew the differentiation of monocytes into macrophages away from a pro-inflammatory to a pro-angiogenic type.

Influenza Morbidity and Mortality in Elderly Patients Receiving Statins: A Cohort Study:

Statins possess immunomodulatory properties and have been proposed for reducing morbidity during an influenza pandemic. We sought to evaluate the effect of statins on hospitalizations and deaths related to seasonal influenza outbreaks. We conducted a population-based cohort study over 10 influenza seasons (1996 to 2006) using linked administrative databases in Ontario, Canada. We identified all adults older than 65 years who had received an influenza vaccination prior to the start of influenza season and distinguished those also prescribed statins (23%) from those not also prescribed statins (77%). Propensity-based matching, which accounted for each individual’s likelihood of receiving a statin, yielded a final cohort of 2,240,638 patients, exactly half of whom received statins. Statins were associated with small protective effects against pneumonia hospitalization (odds ratio [OR] 0.92; 95% CI 0.89-0.95), 30-day pneumonia mortality (0.84; 95% CI 0.77-0.91), and all-cause mortality (0.87; 95% CI 0.84-0.89). These protective effects attenuated substantially after multivariate adjustment and when we excluded multiple observations for each individual, declined over time, differed across propensity score quintiles and risk groups, and were unchanged during post-influenza season periods. The main limitations of this study were the observational study design, the non-specific outcomes, and the lack of information on medications while hospitalized. Statin use is associated with a statistically significant but minimal protective effect against influenza morbidity that can easily be attributed to residual confounding. Public health officials and clinicians should focus on other measures to reduce morbidity and mortality from the next influenza pandemic.

Toward the Discovery of Vaccine Adjuvants: Coupling In Silico Screening and In Vitro Analysis of Antagonist Binding to Human and Mouse CCR4 Receptors:

Adjuvants enhance or modify an immune response that is made to an antigen. An antagonist of the chemokine CCR4 receptor can display adjuvant-like properties by diminishing the ability of CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) to down-regulate immune responses. Here, we have used protein modelling to create a plausible chemokine receptor model with the aim of using virtual screening to identify potential small molecule chemokine antagonists. A combination of homology modelling and molecular docking was used to create a model of the CCR4 receptor in order to investigate potential lead compounds that display antagonistic properties. Three-dimensional structure-based virtual screening of the CCR4 receptor identified 116 small molecules that were calculated to have a high affinity for the receptor; these were tested experimentally for CCR4 antagonism. Fifteen of these small molecules were shown to inhibit specifically CCR4-mediated cell migration, including that of CCR4+ Tregs. Our CCR4 antagonists act as adjuvants augmenting human T cell proliferation in an in vitro immune response model and compound SP50 increases T cell and antibody responses in vivo when combined with vaccine antigens of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Plasmodium yoelii in mice.

Clock Quotes

Ninety percent of the time things turn out worse than you thought they would. The other ten percent of the time you had no right to expect that much.
– Augustine of Hippo

ScienceOnline2010 – introducing the participants

scienceonline2010logoMedium.jpg
As you know you can see everyone who’s registered for the conference, but I highlight 4-6 participants every day as this may be an easier way for you to digest the list. You can also look at the Program so see who is doing what.
Stephanie Zvan is a science fiction and fantasy writer and editor. She blogs on Almost Diamonds and Quiche Moraine and tweets. I interviewed Stephanie on the blog, and Stephanie interviewed me on the radio. At the conference, she will co-moderate the session on Trust and Critical Thinking.
Bill Hooker is a molecular/cellular biologist and an Open Access evangelist. This will be Bill’s fourth appearance at the conference. He blogs on Open Reading Frame. I interviewed Bill last year.
Michelle Francl is a professor of chemistry at Bryn Mawr College. She blogs on The Culture of Chemistry and Quantum Theology and is on Twitter.
Travis Saunders is an obesity researcher, a PhD student in Exercise Physiology in Ottawa, Canada, a Certified Exercise Physiologist, public speaker, writer and distance runner. He blogs on Obesity Panacea and tweets.
Tracey Switek is the Associate Coordinator at the Rutgers IR-4 Project, and ecologist, photographer, a blogger and twitterer. Oh, btw, she is married to Brian so she is a SciBling in a way as well.
Thomas Linden is the anchor of Journal Watch Audio, the Director of the UNC Science & Medical Journalism Program and a blogger.

The Open Laboratory 2009 – the very lastest call for submission!

OpenLab logo.jpg
Deadline is December 1st at midnight EST!
That is roughly 37 hours to go.
The submissions for OpenLab 2009 to date are under the fold. On December 2nd, I’ll put them all above the fold for all to see all the submissions. And then SciCurious and a large gang of judges will start sorting them all out and judging them until only 50 essays, one poem and one cartoon remain.
Please use the submission form to add more of your and other people’s posts (remember that we are looking for original poems, art, cartoons and comics, as well as essays). Realize that nobody knows your archives as well as you do – there is nothing wrong about submitting your own (about half of the entries, each year, are submitted by authors, and that is just fine).
Make sure that the submitted posts are possible (and relatively easy) to convert into print. Posts that rely too much on video, audio, color photographs, copyrighted images, or multitudes of links just won’t do.
Also check first if a post is already on the list. Submitting duplicates makes our job more difficult.
You can buy the 2006, 2007 and 2008 editions at Lulu.com.
The 2009 book should be published in time for ScienceOnline2010 if possible (but we will not undermine quality for the sake of speed, so the date is approximate).

Continue reading

Today’s carnivals

Change of Shift – Thanksgiving Edition – is up on Emergiblog
Carnival of the Liberals #99 is up on Liberal England
Friday Ark #271 is up on Modulator
Grand Rounds Vol. 6 No. 9 are up on How To Cope With Pain

World AIDS Day and Techie Tuesday in RTP

TECHIE TUESDAY
“Celebration of Life”
Research Triangle Global Health Excellence & World AIDS Day
Date: December 1, 2009
Time: 4:30 pm to 7:30 pm
Location: RTP Headquarters – 12 Davis Drive
Catering By: Nantucket Café & Neomonde
Did you know the Triangle region is a center of excellence in global health?
Help celebrate World AIDS Day and find out how RTP companies and stakeholders are making an impact on HIV/AIDS and other important global health concerns.
Global health organizations in the Park are helping people live longer, more productive lives by working to address HIV/AIDS and other life-threatening conditions. Please join The Research Triangle Park and partner organizations for a special Techie Tuesday to celebrate those that are addressing modern global health challenges, including HIV/AIDS, through research and support services in the RTP and global communities.
PROGRAM SPEAKERS
Throughout the evening, experts in the field of global health will share insights from their work in one of the main conference rooms of the RTP Headquarters.
Dr. Myron S. Cohen
Director, UNC Center for Infectious Diseases
Chief, Division of Infections Diseases
J. Herbert Bate Distinguished Professor of Medicine & Microbiology, Immunology & Public Health
Dr. Nicole Fouche
Executive Director, Triangle Global Health Consortium
triangleglobalhealth.ning.com
FOOD DRIVE
As part of the event, RTP will host a food drive to donate canned goods and non-perishable items to the Alliance for Aids Services Carolina food pantry. Please consider bringing a canned item to the event to help the cause (click here for a list of canned items to donate).
Also, if you are interested in organizing a collection within your company to donate goods at the Techie Tuesday event, please contact Alice Lockhart at unc186@verizon.net for more information.

More information

Clock Quotes

Nothing is a waste of time if you use the experience wisely.
– Francois Auguste Rene Rodin

The Open Laboratory 2009 – Countdown: one more day!

OpenLab logo.jpg
Reminder: Deadline is December 1st at midnight EST!
Here are the submissions for OpenLab 2009 to date (under the fold). You can buy the 2006, 2007 and 2008 editions at Lulu.com. Please use the submission form to add more of your and other people’s posts (remember that we are looking for original poems, art, cartoons and comics, as well as essays):
Make sure that the submitted posts are possible (and relatively easy) to convert into print. Posts that rely too much on video, audio, color photographs, copyrighted images, or multitudes of links just won’t do.

Continue reading

Spider and Fly

The same friend in Equatorial Guinea whose picture of a lightning I posted yesterday also took this picture. This spider lives on his desk. He waited several days for the spider to catch a fly and then took this picture:
pauk i muva.JPG
Anyone venture to ID the species of the spider and/or the fly?

ScienceOnline2010 – the place to meet the rockstars!

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The nicest post about ScienceOnline2010 to date was penned yesterday by Arikia Millikan, the former Overlord of Seed Scienceblogs.com (the image above is by her as well).
At the conference, Arikia will co-moderate the session on Web Science and I already introduced her here.
In her awesome post she compared the meeting to the Bonnaroo concerts. w00t! She writes:

For those on the forefront of the development of the Web, the World Wide Web conference was an event that educated, inspired and forged partnerships by connecting people whose paths would otherwise never cross.
———————-
The described enthusiasm and fervor of WWW conference attendees parallels the enthusiasm I observed of ScienceOnline participants.
And so I hereby dub the ScienceOnline conference, the Bonnaroo of the Blogosphere. I’m 23 and never attended Woodstock, but I think that as meaningful as it was to Sir Berners-Lee’s generation, Bonnaroo probably is to mine. As important as it was to have a meeting in the late ’90s to discuss and define the Web when it was in its infancy, it is as important to do so for the blogosphere today.
———————
Attending the ScienceOnline conference last year was an incredible experience that further solidified my decision to pursue my interest in the Web. It’s a place where, if you’re into science and you’re into the Web, and these are the things that get you really excited academically, professionally and/or socially, you can learn what the game-changers in the field are up to and talking about, and talk about it with them, maybe become a game-changer yourself.

As they say, read the whole thing.

Clock Quotes

Buying books would be a good thing if one could also buy the time to read them in: but as a rule the purchase of books is mistaken for the appropriation of their contents.
– Arthur Schopenhauer

NESCent Travel Award – only two days left to submit your entries!

The application deadline for the NESCent blogging competition and travel award to ScienceOnline2010 is December 1, 2009. So hurry up – see the contest conditions and entries so far and meet the judges.
So, hurry up. Write (or choose an existing) post in the area of evolutionary biology and send it in. Two lucky winners will get travel grants to ScienceOnline2010. Yes, we are full, and there are 101 people on the waiting list. But the two NESCent winners have their spots saved just for them!

Lightning

My friend (I was the Best Man at his wedding, back in the 80s) is in Equatorial Guinea and the other day he took this dramatic photograph of a lightning:
munja.jpg

The Open Laboratory 2009 – Countdown: two more days!

OpenLab logo.jpg
Reminder: Deadline is December 1st at midnight EST!
Here are the submissions for OpenLab 2009 to date (under the fold). You can buy the 2006, 2007 and 2008 editions at Lulu.com. Please use the submission form to add more of your and other people’s posts (remember that we are looking for original poems, art, cartoons and comics, as well as essays):
Make sure that the submitted posts are possible (and relatively easy) to convert into print. Posts that rely too much on video, audio, color photographs, copyrighted images, or multitudes of links just won’t do.

Continue reading

ScienceOnline2010 – Program highlights 4

scienceonline2010logoMedium.jpg
Continuing with the introductions to the sessions on the Program, here is what will happen on Saturday, January 16th at 2 – 3:05pm:
A. Citizen Science and Students – Sandra Porter, Tara Richerson (science_goddess), and Antony Williams
Description: Students are a great resource for projects that require large numbers of volunteers. We will discuss examples of projects that combine student learning with authentic research and the power of blogs to connect students with projects. Discuss here.
B. Medicine 2.0 and Science 2.0–where do they intersect? – Walter Jessen
Description: Medicine 2.0 applications, services and tools are defined as Web-based services for healthcare consumers/patients, health professionals and biomedical researchers that use Web 2.0 technologies and/or semantic web and virtual reality approaches to enable and facilitate (1) social networking; (2) participation; (3) apomediation (guidance generated and available from peripheral mediators); (4) openness; and (5) collaboration within and between these user groups for the purposes of maintaining and/or restoring human health. How are these themes being applied in scientific research? What are the reasons some themes are better applied than others? How are researchers integrating Science 2.0 tools into their workflows? Do they offer an immediate benefit? Where could there be improvement? What are the social and cultural obstacles to widespread adoption of Medicine 2.0 and Science 2.0? Discuss here.
C. Scientists! What can your librarian do for you? – Stephanie Willen Brown and Dorothea Salo
Description: Find free, scholarly, science stuff on the Internet, via your public or state library, or on the “free Web.” Learn tips & tricks for getting full-text science research at all levels, through resources like DOAJ and NC Live (for those with a North Carolina library card; other states often offer free resources to library card holders). Find out about some options for storing science material at your academic institution’s Institutional Repository. We will also talk about the broader access to material stored in institutional repositories and elsewhere on the Web. Discuss here.
D. Science and Entertainment: Beyond Blogging – Tamara Krinsky and Jennifer Ouellette
Description: Over the past several years, the Internet has tangibly changed the way that movies and TV shows are produced and marketed. Blogs will call out ridiculous scientific errors found in stories and the critique can go viral very quickly; therefore, science advising is on the rise in an attempt to add some semblance of plausibility to your favorite flicks. As tools on the web continue to evolve, filmmakers and television creators are finding new ways to connect with and market to their viewers. For some shows, this has meant tapping into the science featured in their content, ranging from an exploration of the roots of the science that has been fictionalized to the expansion of a scientific topic explored in a documentary. In this session, we’ll look at how online video and social networking tools are playing a part in connecting science, Hollywood and its fans. Discuss here.
E. Demos
Deutsches Museum and Lampenfieber – Jessica Riccò
Description: Introducing Deutsches Museum and Lampenfieber kids’ science magazine.
Science Media Centre and Sciblogs, New Zealand – Fabiana Kubke
Description: As part of the strategy to engage New Zealanders with science and technology the Ministry of Research, Science & Technology (MoRST) announced a three-year pilot Science & Technology Media Centre for New Zealand. The Science Media Centre, conceptualised on the success of the SMC’s in the UK and Australia, serves as an independent source of expert comment and information for journalists covering science and technology. Its aim is to promote accurate, bias-free reporting on science and technology by helping the media work more closely with the scientific community. On September 30, 2009, SMC launched a major new science communication effort with Sciblogs, a network of science blogs covering everything from clinical health to climate change with 26 bloggers, including scientists from universities, Crown Research Institutes and private research organisations along the length of the country. It is the largest online hub for science-related content relevant to New Zealand. The Sciblogs platform is the first major implementation of the opensource WordPress MU (multiple user) blogging system in New Zealand. Duscuss here.
Doing science in Second Life – Jean-Claude Bradley
Description: Doing science in Second Life – molecule docking. Discuss here.
The Open Dinosaur Project – Andy Farke
Description: “Open Dinosaur Project”:http://opendino.wordpress.com/ (ODP) was created to involve scientists and the public alike in developing a comprehensive database of dinosaur limb bone measurements, in order to investigate questions of dinosaur function and evolution. An untapped wealth of measurements is contained within the scientific literature, but a massive research team is needed to digitize these data into a usable form. With the rise of digital journals (many of which are open access) and internet collaboration tools, it is now feasible to crowd-source this digitization effort. The ODP emphasizes open science (so that all data are available immediately) while engaging the general public in real research. This demo will highlight several aspects of the project, including 1) coordinating efforts by professional paleontologists and interested amateurs; 2) data entry and verification; 3) blogging the research process; and 4) soliciting meaningful involvement in project design from participants of diverse backgrounds. Discuss here.

Clock Quotes

The time comes when you realize that you haven’t only been specializing in something – something has been specializing in you.
– Arthur Miller

Visualization of maritime empires’ decline

Explained here. Critiques in the comments are (mostly) valid, but for a first effort at using this kind of visualization technique, I’d say it’s pretty impressive.

ScienceOnline2010 – introducing the participants

scienceonline2010logoMedium.jpg
As you know you can see everyone who’s registered for the conference, but I highlight 4-6 participants every day as this may be an easier way for you to digest the list. You can also look at the Program so see who is doing what.
Beatrice Lugger is a freelance science journalist and consultant, one of the founders of ScienceBlogs Germany and a twitterer. At the conference, Beatrice will co-moderate the session on Science online talks between generations.
Danica Radovanovic is a PhD student at the Oxford Internet Institute, a blogger and a twitterer. I interviewed her a couple of months ago – you can read it here. At the conference, Danica will lead a workshop on Social media for beginners.
Ian Oeschger is a writer, the editor of the hyper-local Wilminton NC journalism Grove Project, and an IBM information architect. He is also on Twitter.
Simon Frantz is the Senior Editor of the Nobel Prize website. And he tweets.
Evelyn Lynge is the Co-President of the Jacksonville branch of The American Association of University Women and one of the people who has been to every one of our conferences so far.
Salman Hameed is the Assistant Professor of Integrated Science & Humanities at Hampshire College where he teaches on Science And Religion. And he writes a blog.

New and Exciting in PLoS this week

Quantification of Circadian Rhythms in Single Cells:

Earth’s 24-h-rotation around its axis is mirrored in the circadian clock that resides within each of our cells, controlling expression of ~10% of all genes. The circadian clock is constructed as a negative feedback loop, in which clock proteins inhibit their own synthesis. During the last decade, a picture has emerged in which each cell is a self-sustained circadian oscillator that runs even without synchronizing cues. Here, we investigated state-of-the-art single-cell bioluminescence recordings of clock gene expression. It turns out that these time series are very well described by low-dimensional models, enabling us to extract descriptive parameters that characterize each cell. We find that different cell types do not differ much in their dynamics. However, different mutations in core clock genes yield different dynamic characteristics. Furthermore, we could not statistically reject the idea that the cells are in fact damped oscillators driven by noise. We thus declare the question of whether the circadian clock is a damped or self-sustained oscillator still unresolved. Further, we propose a way to resolve this question by examining the frequency-dependent response of single cells to periodic stimuli. We will then be in a better position to understand how cells coordinate and synchronize their circadian rhythms.

The Photobiology of Microbial Pathogenesis:

Light is an abundant signal that many organisms use to assess the status of their environment. Species from all kingdoms have evolved the capacity to sense and respond to wavelengths across the visible spectrum. Light has long been linked to disease (Figure 1); however, the mechanisms behind many of these observations are not well understood. Recently, a direct link has been established between specific protein photosensors and the ability to cause disease in both pathogenic bacteria and fungi [1]-[3]; thus, certain pathogens require these photosensors for full virulence. A role for photoperception is likely to emerge as a common theme in microbial pathogenesis.

A High-Throughput Screening Approach to Discovering Good Forms of Biologically Inspired Visual Representation:

One of the primary obstacles to understanding the computational underpinnings of biological vision is its sheer scale–the visual system is a massively parallel computer, comprised of billions of elements. While this scale has historically been beyond the reach of even the fastest super-computing systems, recent advances in commodity graphics processors (such as those found in the PlayStation 3 and high-end NVIDIA graphics cards) have made unprecedented computational resources broadly available. Here, we describe a high-throughput approach that harnesses the power of modern graphics hardware to search a vast space of large-scale, biologically inspired candidate models of the visual system. The best of these models, drawn from thousands of candidates, outperformed a variety of state-of-the-art vision systems across a range of object and face recognition tasks. We argue that these experiments point a new way forward, both in the creation of machine vision systems and in providing insights into the computational underpinnings of biological vision.

Clock Quotes

So. The time has come for me to get my kite flying, stretch out in the sun, kick off my shoes, and speak my piece. ‘The days of struggle are over,’ I should be able to say. ‘I can look back now and tell myself I don’t have a single regret.’ But I do. Many.
– Arthur Marx

The Open Laboratory 2009 – Countdown: four more days!

OpenLab logo.jpg
Reminder: Deadline is December 1st at midnight EST!
Here are the submissions for OpenLab 2009 to date (under the fold). You can buy the 2006, 2007 and 2008 editions at Lulu.com. Please use the submission form to add more of your and other people’s posts (remember that we are looking for original poems, art, cartoons and comics, as well as essays):
Make sure that the submitted posts are possible (and relatively easy) to convert into print. Posts that rely too much on video, audio, color photographs, copyrighted images, or multitudes of links just won’t do.

Continue reading

ScienceOnline2010 – introducing the participants

scienceonline2010logoMedium.jpg
As you know you can see everyone who’s registered for the conference, but I highlight 4-6 participants every day as this may be an easier way for you to digest the list. You can also look at the Program so see who is doing what.
Ken Liu is the V.P. for Business Development at SciVee, Inc and he will do a demo of SciVee.tv at the conference.
Allyson Bennett is a Professor in the Department of Physiology and Pharmacology at Wake Forest University School of Medicine. She blogs on Speaking of Research.
Paolo Mangiafico is the Director of Digital Information Strategy at the Duke University Libraries. He is also on Twitter.
Steve Burnett is a technical writer and information developer, an experimental musician, a blogger and twitterer.
Nancy Shepherd is a geneticist and the Founder and CEO of Shepherd Research, LLC. She is also on Twitter.
Julie Kelsey is a biologist and journalist, she blogs on Mama Joules and tweets.
Maria Minno runs NatureFinder.net and tweets.

New and Exciting in PLoS ONE

There are 19 new articles in PLoS ONE today. As always, you should rate the articles, post notes and comments and send trackbacks when you blog about the papers. You can now also easily place articles on various social services (CiteULike, Mendeley, Connotea, Stumbleupon, Facebook and Digg) with just one click. Here are my own picks for the week – you go and look for your own favourites:
Structures of KaiC Circadian Clock Mutant Proteins: A New Phosphorylation Site at T426 and Mechanisms of Kinase, ATPase and Phosphatase:

The circadian clock of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus can be reconstituted in vitro by three proteins, KaiA, KaiB and KaiC. Homo-hexameric KaiC displays kinase, phosphatase and ATPase activities; KaiA enhances KaiC phosphorylation and KaiB antagonizes KaiA. Phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of the two known sites in the C-terminal half of KaiC subunits, T432 and S431, follow a strict order (TS→pTS→pTpS→TpS→TS) over the daily cycle, the origin of which is not understood. To address this void and to analyze the roles of KaiC active site residues, in particular T426, we determined structures of single and double P-site mutants of S. elongatus KaiC. The conformations of the loop region harboring P-site residues T432 and S431 in the crystal structures of six KaiC mutant proteins exhibit subtle differences that result in various distances between Thr (or Ala/Asn/Glu) and Ser (or Ala/Asp) residues and the ATP γ-phosphate. T432 is phosphorylated first because it lies consistently closer to Pγ. The structures of the S431A and T432E/S431A mutants reveal phosphorylation at T426. The environments of the latter residue in the structures and functional data for T426 mutants in vitro and in vivo imply a role in dephosphorylation. We provide evidence for a third phosphorylation site in KaiC at T426. T426 and S431 are closely spaced and a KaiC subunit cannot carry phosphates at both sites simultaneously. Fewer subunits are phosphorylated at T426 in the two KaiC mutants compared to phosphorylated T432 and/or S431 residues in the structures of wt and other mutant KaiCs, suggesting that T426 phosphorylation may be labile. The structures combined with functional data for a host of KaiC mutant proteins help rationalize why S431 trails T432 in the loss of its phosphate and shed light on the mechanisms of the KaiC kinase, ATPase and phosphatase activities.

Crop Diversity for Yield Increase:

Traditional farming practices suggest that cultivation of a mixture of crop species in the same field through temporal and spatial management may be advantageous in boosting yields and preventing disease, but evidence from large-scale field testing is limited. Increasing crop diversity through intercropping addresses the problem of increasing land utilization and crop productivity. In collaboration with farmers and extension personnel, we tested intercropping of tobacco, maize, sugarcane, potato, wheat and broad bean – either by relay cropping or by mixing crop species based on differences in their heights, and practiced these patterns on 15,302 hectares in ten counties in Yunnan Province, China. The results of observation plots within these areas showed that some combinations increased crop yields for the same season between 33.2 and 84.7% and reached a land equivalent ratio (LER) of between 1.31 and 1.84. This approach can be easily applied in developing countries, which is crucial in face of dwindling arable land and increasing food demand.

Hyperspectral and Physiological Analyses of Coral-Algal Interactions:

Space limitation leads to competition between benthic, sessile organisms on coral reefs. As a primary example, reef-building corals are in direct contact with each other and many different species and functional groups of algae. Here we characterize interactions between three coral genera and three algal functional groups using a combination of hyperspectral imaging and oxygen microprofiling. We also performed in situ interaction transects to quantify the relative occurrence of these interaction on coral reefs. These studies were conducted in the Southern Line Islands, home to some of the most remote and near-pristine reefs in the world. Our goal was to determine if different types of coral-coral and coral-algal interactions were characterized by unique fine-scale physiological signatures. This is the first report using hyperspectral imaging for characterization of marine benthic organisms at the micron scale and proved to be a valuable tool for discriminating among different photosynthetic organisms. Consistent patterns emerged in physiology across different types of competitive interactions. In cases where corals were in direct contact with turf or macroalgae, there was a zone of hypoxia and altered pigmentation on the coral. In contrast, interaction zones between corals and crustose coralline algae (CCA) were not hypoxic and the coral tissue was consistent across the colony. Our results suggest that at least two main characteristic coral interaction phenotypes exist: 1) hypoxia and coral tissue disruption, seen with interactions between corals and fleshy turf and/or some species of macroalgae, and 2) no hypoxia or tissue disruption, seen with interactions between corals and some species of CCA. Hyperspectral imaging in combination with oxygen profiling provided useful information on competitive interactions between benthic reef organisms, and demonstrated that some turf and fleshy macroalgae can be a constant source of stress for corals, while CCA are not.

Impact of Empire Expansion on Household Diet: The Inka in Northern Chile’s Atacama Desert:

The impact of expanding civilization on the health of American indigenous societies has long been studied. Most studies have focused on infections and malnutrition that occurred when less complex societies were incorporated into more complex civilizations. The details of dietary change, however, have rarely been explored. Using the analysis of starch residues recovered from coprolites, here we evaluate the dietary adaptations of indigenous farmers in northern Chile’s Atacama Desert during the time that the Inka Empire incorporated these communities into their economic system. This system has been described as “complementarity” because it involves interaction and trade in goods produced at different Andean elevations. We find that as local farming societies adapted to this new asymmetric system, a portion of their labor had to be given up to the Inka elite through a corvée tax system for maize production. In return, the Inka system of complementarity introduced previously rare foods from the Andean highlands into local economies. These changes caused a disruption of traditional communities as they instituted a state-level economic system on local farmers. Combined with previously published infection information for the same populations under Inka rule, the data suggest that there may have been a dual health impact from disruption of nutrition and introduction of crowd disease.

Clock Quotes

There comes a time when for every addition of knowledge you forget something that you knew before. It is of the highest importance, therefore, not to have useless facts elbowing out the useful ones.
– Arthur Conan Doyle

Best video ever: Bohemian Rhapsody by The Muppets!

The Open Laboratory 2009 – one of the very lastest calls for submission!

OpenLab logo.jpg
Reminder: Deadline is December 1st at midnight EST!
Here are the submissions for OpenLab 2009 to date (under the fold). You can buy the 2006, 2007 and 2008 editions at Lulu.com. Please use the submission form to add more of your and other people’s posts (remember that we are looking for original poems, art, cartoons and comics, as well as essays):
Make sure that the submitted posts are possible (and relatively easy) to convert into print. Posts that rely too much on video, audio, color photographs, copyrighted images, or multitudes of links just won’t do.

Continue reading

ScienceOnline2010 – introducing the participants: even more SciBlings

scienceonline2010logoMedium.jpg
As you know you can see everyone who’s registered for the conference, but I highlight 4-6 participants every day as this may be an easier way for you to digest the list. You can also look at the Program so see who is doing what.
Erin Johnson is the Seed Overlord, running the Scienceblogs.com site, a.k.a. herding cats. She blogs on Page 3.14 and tweets as Scienceblogs.
Dave Munger is a writer. He blogs on Cognitive Daily and Word Munger. Dave is the founder of ResearchBlogging.org (where he also runs the blog) and he tweets (also here). At the conference, Dave will run a workshop Blogging 102.
Greta Munger is a professor of psychology at Davidson College and also blogs on Cognitive Daily.
Eric Michael Johnson is an evolutionary anthropologist, a historian of science and a blogger at The Primate Diaries. He is also on Twitter. At the conference, Eric will co-moderate the session An Open History of Science.
Greg Laden is an antropologist and writer. He blogs on the eponimous blog and tweets. At the conference, Greg will co-moderate the session on Trust and Critical Thinking.

New and Exciting in PLoS ONE

There are 25 new articles in PLoS ONE today. As always, you should rate the articles, post notes and comments and send trackbacks when you blog about the papers. You can now also easily place articles on various social services (CiteULike, Mendeley, Connotea, Stumbleupon, Facebook and Digg) with just one click. Here are my own picks for the week – you go and look for your own favourites:
The Molecular Ecology of the Extinct New Zealand Huia:

The extinct Huia (Heteralocha acutirostris) of New Zealand represents the most extreme example of beak dimorphism known in birds. We used a combination of nuclear genotyping methods, molecular sexing, and morphometric analyses of museum specimens collected in the late 19th and early 20th centuries to quantify the sexual dimorphism and population structure of this extraordinary species. We report that the classical description of Huia as having distinctive sex-linked morphologies is not universally correct. Four Huia, sexed as females had short beaks and, on this basis, were indistinguishable from males. Hence, we suggest it is likely that Huia males and females were indistinguishable as juveniles and that the well-known beak dimorphism is the result of differential beak growth rates in males and females. Furthermore, we tested the prediction that the social organisation and limited powers of flight of Huia resulted in high levels of population genetic structure. Using a suite of microsatellite DNA loci, we report high levels of genetic diversity in Huia, and we detected no significant population genetic structure. In addition, using mitochondrial hypervariable region sequences, and likely mutation rates and generation times, we estimated that the census population size of Huia was moderately high. We conclude that the social organization and limited powers of flight did not result in a highly structured population.

Intramolecular Regulation of Phosphorylation Status of the Circadian Clock Protein KaiC:

KaiC, a central clock protein in cyanobacteria, undergoes circadian oscillations between hypophosphorylated and hyperphosphorylated forms in vivo and in vitro. Structural analyses of KaiC crystals have identified threonine and serine residues in KaiC at three residues (T426, S431, and T432) as potential sites at which KaiC is phosphorylated; mutation of any of these three sites to alanine abolishes rhythmicity, revealing an essential clock role for each residue separately and for KaiC phosphorylation in general. Mass spectrometry studies confirmed that the S431 and T432 residues are key phosphorylation sites, however, the role of the threonine residue at position 426 was not clear from the mass spectrometry measurements. Mutational approaches and biochemical analyses of KaiC support a key role for T426 in control of the KaiC phosphorylation status in vivo and in vitro and demonstrates that alternative amino acids at residue 426 dramatically affect KaiC’s properties in vivo and in vitro, especially genetic dominance/recessive relationships, KaiC dephosphorylation, and the formation of complexes of KaiC with KaiA and KaiB. These mutations alter key circadian properties, including period, amplitude, robustness, and temperature compensation. Crystallographic analyses indicate that the T426 site is phosphorylatible under some conditions, and in vitro phosphorylation assays of KaiC demonstrate labile phosphorylation of KaiC when the primary S431 and T432 sites are blocked. T426 is a crucial site that regulates KaiC phosphorylation status in vivo and in vitro and these studies underscore the importance of KaiC phosphorylation status in the essential cyanobacterial circadian functions. The regulatory roles of these phosphorylation sites-including T426-within KaiC enhance our understanding of the molecular mechanism underlying circadian rhythm generation in cyanobacteria.

Coral Skeletons Defend against Ultraviolet Radiation:

Many coral reef organisms are photosynthetic or have evolved in tight symbiosis with photosynthetic symbionts. As such, the tissues of reef organisms are often exposed to intense solar radiation in clear tropical waters and have adapted to trap and harness photosynthetically active radiation (PAR). High levels of ultraviolet radiation (UVR) associated with sunlight, however, represent a potential problem in terms of tissue damage. By measuring UVR and PAR reflectance from intact and ground bare coral skeletons we show that the property of calcium carbonate skeletons to absorb downwelling UVR to a significant extent, while reflecting PAR back to the overlying tissue, has biological advantages. We placed cnidarians on top of bare skeletons and a UVR reflective substrate and showed that under ambient UVR levels, UVR transmitted through the tissues of cnidarians placed on top of bare skeletons were four times lower compared to their counterparts placed on a UVR reflective white substrate. In accordance with the lower levels of UVR measured in cnidarians on top of coral skeletons, a similar drop in UVR damage to their DNA was detected. The skeletons emitted absorbed UVR as yellow fluorescence, which allows for safe dissipation of the otherwise harmful radiation. Our study presents a novel defensive role for coral skeletons and reveals that the strong UVR absorbance by the skeleton can contribute to the ability of corals, and potentially other calcifiers, to thrive under UVR levels that are detrimental to most marine life.

The Progressive Increase of Food Waste in America and Its Environmental Impact:

Food waste contributes to excess consumption of freshwater and fossil fuels which, along with methane and CO2 emissions from decomposing food, impacts global climate change. Here, we calculate the energy content of nationwide food waste from the difference between the US food supply and the food consumed by the population. The latter was estimated using a validated mathematical model of metabolism relating body weight to the amount of food eaten. We found that US per capita food waste has progressively increased by ~50% since 1974 reaching more than 1400 kcal per person per day or 150 trillion kcal per year. Food waste now accounts for more than one quarter of the total freshwater consumption and ~300 million barrels of oil per year.

A Method for Investigating Population Declines of Migratory Birds Using Stable Isotopes: Origins of Harvested Lesser Scaup in North America:

Elucidating geographic locations from where migratory birds are recruited into adult breeding populations is a fundamental but largely elusive goal in conservation biology. This is especially true for species that breed in remote northern areas where field-based demographic assessments are logistically challenging. Here we used hydrogen isotopes (δD) to determine natal origins of migrating hatch-year lesser scaup (Aythya affinis) harvested by hunters in the United States from all North American flyways during the hunting seasons of 1999-2000 (n = 412) and 2000-2001 (n = 455). We combined geospatial, observational, and analytical data sources, including known scaup breeding range, δD values of feathers from juveniles at natal sites, models of δD for growing-season precipitation, and scaup band-recovery data to generate probabilistic natal origin landscapes for individual scaup. We then used Monte Carlo integration to model assignment uncertainty from among individual δD variance estimates from birds of known molt origin and also from band-return data summarized at the flyway level. We compared the distribution of scaup natal origin with the distribution of breeding population counts obtained from systematic long-term surveys. Our analysis revealed that the proportion of young scaup produced in the northern (above 60°N) versus the southern boreal and Prairie-Parkland region was inversely related to the proportions of breeding adults using these regions, suggesting that despite having a higher relative abundance of breeding adults, the northern boreal region was less productive for scaup recruitment into the harvest than more southern biomes. Our approach for evaluating population declines of migratory birds (particularly game birds) synthesizes all available distributional data and exploits the advantages of intrinsic isotopic markers that link individuals to geography.

Predatory Functional Morphology in Raptors: Interdigital Variation in Talon Size Is Related to Prey Restraint and Immobilisation Technique:

Despite the ubiquity of raptors in terrestrial ecosystems, many aspects of their predatory behaviour remain poorly understood. Surprisingly little is known about the morphology of raptor talons and how they are employed during feeding behaviour. Talon size variation among digits can be used to distinguish families of raptors and is related to different techniques of prey restraint and immobilisation. The hypertrophied talons on digits (D) I and II in Accipitridae have evolved primarily to restrain large struggling prey while they are immobilised by dismemberment. Falconidae have only modest talons on each digit and only slightly enlarged D-I and II. For immobilisation, Falconini rely more strongly on strike impact and breaking the necks of their prey, having evolved a ‘tooth’ on the beak to aid in doing so. Pandionidae have enlarged, highly recurved talons on each digit, an adaptation for piscivory, convergently seen to a lesser extent in fishing eagles. Strigiformes bear enlarged talons with comparatively low curvature on each digit, part of a suite of adaptations to increase constriction efficiency by maximising grip strength, indicative of specialisation on small prey. Restraint and immobilisation strategy change as prey increase in size. Small prey are restrained by containment within the foot and immobilised by constriction and beak attacks. Large prey are restrained by pinning under the bodyweight of the raptor, maintaining grip with the talons, and immobilised by dismemberment (Accipitridae), or severing the spinal cord (Falconini). Within all raptors, physical attributes of the feet trade off against each other to attain great strength, but it is the variable means by which this is achieved that distinguishes them ecologically. Our findings show that interdigital talon morphology varies consistently among raptor families, and that this is directly correlative with variation in their typical prey capture and restraint strategy.

Modulation of Motor Area Activity by the Outcome for a Player during Observation of a Baseball Game:

Observing competitive games such as sports is a pervasive entertainment among humans. The inclination to watch others play may be based on our social-cognitive ability to understand the internal states of others. The mirror neuron system, which is activated when a subject observes the actions of others, as well as when they perform the same action themselves, seems to play a crucial role in this process. Our previous study showed that activity of the mirror neuron system was modulated by the outcome of the subject’s favored player during observation of a simple competitive game (rock-paper-scissors). However, whether the mirror neuron system responds similarly in a more complex and naturalistic sports game has not yet been fully investigated. In the present study, we measured the activity of motor areas when the subjects, who were amateur baseball field players (non-pitchers), watched short movie clips of scenes in professional baseball games. The subjects were instructed to support either a batter or a pitcher when observing the movie clip. The results showed that activity in the motor area exhibited a strong interaction between the subject’s supported side (batter or pitcher) and the outcome (a hit or an out). When the subject supported the batter, motor area activity was significantly higher when the batter made an out than when he made a hit. However, such modulation was not apparent when the subject supported the pitcher. This result indicates that mirror neuron system activity is modulated by the outcome for a particular player in a competitive game even when observing a complex and naturalistic sports game. We suggest that our inclination to watch competitive games is facilitated by this characteristic of the mirror neuron system.

A Note on Trader Sharpe Ratios:

Traders in the financial world are assessed by the amount of money they make and, increasingly, by the amount of money they make per unit of risk taken, a measure known as the Sharpe Ratio. Little is known about the average Sharpe Ratio among traders, but the Efficient Market Hypothesis suggests that traders, like asset managers, should not outperform the broad market. Here we report the findings of a study conducted in the City of London which shows that a population of experienced traders attain Sharpe Ratios significantly higher than the broad market. To explain this anomaly we examine a surrogate marker of prenatal androgen exposure, the second-to-fourth finger length ratio (2D:4D), which has previously been identified as predicting a trader’s long term profitability. We find that it predicts the amount of risk taken by traders but not their Sharpe Ratios. We do, however, find that the traders’ Sharpe Ratios increase markedly with the number of years they have traded, a result suggesting that learning plays a role in increasing the returns of traders. Our findings present anomalous data for the Efficient Markets Hypothesis.

A Prospective Controlled Trial of Routine Opt-Out HIV Testing in a Men’s Jail:

Approximately 10 million Americans enter jails annually. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention now recommends routine opt-out HIV testing in these settings. The logistics for performing routine opt-out HIV testing within jails, however, remain controversial. The objective of this study was to evaluate the optimal time to routinely HIV test newly incarcerated jail detainees using an opt-out strategy. This prospective, controlled trial of routine opt-out HIV testing was conducted among 298 newly incarcerated male inmates in an urban men’s jail in New Haven, Connecticut. 298 sequential entrants to the men’s jail over a three week period in March and April 2008 were assigned to be offered routine opt-out HIV testing at one of three points after incarceration: immediate (same day, n = 103), early (next day, n = 98), or delayed (7 days, n = 97). The primary outcome was the proportion of men in each group consenting to testing. Routine opt-out HIV testing was significantly higher for the early (53%: AOR = 2.6; 95% CI = 1.5 to 4.7) and immediate (45%: AOR = 2.3; 95% CI = 1.3 to 4.0) testing groups compared to the delayed (33%) testing group. The immediate and early testing groups, however, did not significantly differ (p = 0.67). In multivariate analyses, factors significantly associated with routine opt-out HIV testing were assignment to the ‘early’ testing group (p = 0.0003) and low (bond ≥$5,000, immigration or federal charges or pre-sentencing >30 days) likelihood of early release (p = 0.04). Two subjects received preliminary positive results and one of them was subsequently confirmed HIV seropositive. In this men’s jail where attrition was high, routine opt-out HIV testing was not only feasible, but resulted in the highest rates of HIV testing when performed within 24 hours of incarceration.

Routine Opt-Out HIV Testing Strategies in a Female Jail Setting: A Prospective Controlled Trial:

Ten million Americans enter jails annually. The objective was to evaluate new CDC guidelines for routine opt-out HIV testing and examine the optimal time to implement routine opt-out HIV testing among newly incarcerated jail detainees. This prospective, controlled trial of routine opt-out HIV testing was conducted among 323 newly incarcerated female inmates in Connecticut’s only women’s jail. 323 sequential entrants to the women’s jail over a five week period in August and September 2007 were assigned to be offered routine opt-out HIV testing at one of three points after incarceration: immediate (same day, n = 108), early (next day, n = 108), or delayed (7 days, n = 107). The primary outcome was the proportion of women in each group consenting to testing. Routine opt-out HIV testing was significantly highest (73%) among the early testing group compared to 55% for immediate and 50% for 7 days post-entry groups. Other factors significantly (p = 0.01) associated with being HIV tested were younger age and low likelihood of early release from jail based on bond value or type of charge for which women were arrested. In this correctional facility, routine opt-out HIV testing in a jail setting was feasible, with highest rates of testing if performed the day after incarceration. Lower testing rates were seen with immediate testing, where there is a high prevalence of inability or unwillingness to test, and with delayed testing, where attrition from jail increases with each passing day.

Population-Level Associations between Preschool Vulnerability and Grade-Four Basic Skills:

This is a predictive validity study examining the extent to which developmental vulnerability at kindergarten entry (as measured by the Early Development Instrument, EDI) is associated with children’s basic skills in 4th grade (as measured by the Foundation Skills Assessment, FSA). Relative risk analysis was performed on a large database linking individual-level EDI ratings to the scores the same children obtained on a provincial assessment of academic skills (FSA – Foundation Skills Assessment) four years later. We found that early vulnerability in kindergarten is associated with the basic skills that underlie populations of children’s academic achievement in reading, writing and math, indicating that the Early Development Instrument permits to predict achievement-related skills four years in advance. The EDI can be used to predict children’s educational trends at the population level and can help select early prevention and intervention programs targeting pre-school populations at minimum cost.

Clock Quotes

All the best stories are but one story in reality – the story of escape. It is the only thing which interests us all and at all times, how to escape.
– Arthur Christopher Benson

Recent Science-Related Events in the Triangle

Last couple of weeks months were awfully busy, on many fronts, not least finalizing the ScienceOnline2010 program, herding cats almost 100 moderators/presenters to do various stuff (e.g., respond to my e-mails) in a timely manner, and making sure that registration goes smoothly. This is also the time of year when activation energy for doing anything except going to bed to hide under the covers is very high for people suffering from SAD. Thus, you did not see many ‘original’ posts here lately, I know.
But, it’s not that I have been totally idle. Apart from teaching my BIO101 lab again, I also went to several science-related events in the Triangle over the past two months. I feel like I should blog about each one of them separately, at length and with nuance, as this hangs over my neck like the Sword of Damocles – I feel I should not blog about anything else until all of these event reports are out of the way.
So, in a compromise solution, instead of a bunch of long separate posts, I will collect all the brief reports from all the events here, in a single post, get that over with and mentally free myself to blog about other stuff soon.
Lisa Sanders at UNC
Lisa Sanders is a physician and a professor of medicine, but you probably heard of her in a different context: Lisa writes the Diagnosis column in The New York Times, has recently published a book Every Patient Tells a Story, and has inspired and acts as the medical adviser to the TV show House (of which I heard, not being a TV watcher, at the beginning of her talk).
Lisa Sanders came to the Triangle last month and gave talks at Duke and UNC. Bride of Coturnix and I went to the UNC talk which filled a large auditorium. Her book is being read by all the UNC medical students who will then discuss the book in smaller groups.
The process of diagnosis has three steps: interview, physical exam and laboratory tests.
Laboratory tests have become more and more dominant as the preferred part of the diagnosis process, for a number of (cultural) reasons:
First, they are the quickest, thus save the physician time (others do the work).
Second, unlike interviews that seem subjective, or physical exams that look medieval, lab tests look like ScienceTM! – there are numbers there. And you can’t argue against numbers, can you? This works great on the background of lack of statistical sophistication (or outright innumeracy) on the part of both physicians and patients. No arguing. No second opinions. The process moves on smoothly for everyone. Except, the numbers cannot be trusted as much they usually are.
Third, a number is not an opinion, thus it is a safeguard against lawsuits. It saves physician’s asses in such cases.
Both the frenzy and the (perceived) lack of time and the fear of lawsuits would be diminished if we had a real healthcare reform (not the compromise of a compromise of a compromise bill that is brewing in the US Senate right now, but an actual reform) in which the physicians could get their authority and trust back and be able to practice their art and craft and science with some degree of freedom. In a system in which insurance companies determine how care is done, physicians are just technicians and cannot earn authority and trust.
So, with everyone jumping onto lab tests, the art of interview and the art of physical examination are slowly dying out. They are not even taught in some medical schools any more. Where they are taught, as soon as newly minted physicans are on their own they join the medical culture that frowns upon these two steps of the diagnostic process.
Yet, Dr.Sanders showed data from two studies (done in different countries by different people in different years), both providing almost exactly the same results. In about 75-80% of the cases (physician encountering a new patient for the first time), the physician comes up with a correct diagnosis after the interview. In about 10-12% of the cases, the doctor has to correct her/himself after the physical exam in order to arrive at the correct diagnosis. And in only the remaining 10-12% or so cases did the lab tests provide information that forced the physician to change one’s mind and come up with the correct diagnosis. In 8 out of 10 cases, the interview was sufficient!
When asked why they are shunning the interviews, physicians respond that they have no time – the system is forcing them to see too many patients per day. A study shows that physicians interrupt patients’ stories abruptly, very soon, sometimes as early as 3 seconds into the interview. Yet, in another study, when doctors were asked specifically not to interrupt, the interviews lasted only one minute longer. Just one minute! Thus interruption does not really save any time – it’s an illusion.
But what is more important is that the interruption itself means something. First, it means that the physician is not really listening. Second, it tells the patient that the doctor is not listening. By relaxing for that extra minute and actively listening to the patient, not just fishing for diagnostically important information in the account but also listening to hear how the patient perceives him/herself, and how that perception is altered by the illness, the physician gains a better understanding of the patient, can probably come up with a better diagnosis and, most importantly, gains trust with the patient. That trust is very important later, when the physician needs to rely on the patients to be disciplined about the treatment. The interruption loses that trust, something that smooth-talking medical quacks are quick to jump on, offering to listen even if their treatments are completely bogus.
What a patient does during the interview is story-telling. A physician needs to be trained to listen to and understand such stories – to glean how the change in health status affects the self-confidence, self-view and self-worth of the patient, how it changes one’s life-plans and ambitions, what fears it brings, what difficult adjustments in lifestyle it requires. To see the patient as a person, not just a disease.
And then, the story-telling does not end with the interview. The physicians and nurses need to communicate with each other about the patient and that also entails, when done right, story-telling (which need not be spoken, it can be in the chart). Finally, the healthcare providers need to know how to tell the story back to the patient, both to convey the diagnosis and to gain the trust needed for the patient to accept and follow through with the treatment. Quick recitatiton of code-numbers and Latin words just won’t do.
So Lisa Sanders, with her book, her column, her advising of House MD and her speaking tour, tries to teach the importance of the interview and the physical exam, the art of listening and storytelling. I am glad that UNC is taking her seriously.
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The next day, a bunch of us met with Dr.Sanders at the West End Wine Bar in Durham. It was great fun to talk to her in an informal setting and to ask questions that I did not dare ask at the public talk in front of hundreds of med school professors and students and something like the entire nursing school of UNC. After all, my only perspective on medicine is from the position of a patient (and a reader of some med-blogs) so I learned a lot, yet was aware how little I actually know about medical training and practice. Anton organized that meet-up with the local science communicators and wrote his summary of the week’s events on his blog:
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Steven Churchill at Sigma Xi
Steven Churchill is a professor of Evolutionary Anthropology at Duke University. His focus is on the role of projectile weapons in the evolution of humans. Dr.Churchill gave a talk at Sigma Xi as a part of their Pizza Lunch monthly series.
November 001.jpgWhat is a projectile weapon? It is something that can be thrown far away – more than just a couple of meters – and with sufficient power to seriously injure or kill a large animal. A non-projectile weapon, even if it can be thrown with force to a shorter distance of a couple of meters, requires either ambush hunting or chasing the prey into a corner or a bog where it can be approached and stabbed from a close distance. A projectile weapon allows hunters to hunt out in the open, perhaps just hiding in the tall grass. Thus two types of weaponry target different kinds of prey.
But inventing projectile weapons requires refinement in technical skills of making them, technical skills in throwing them, and changes in anatomy to make projectile weapons effective. And once invented, projectile weapons have novel ecological impacts, including impacts on further cultural evolution of humans.
This is what Dr.Churchill is studying. He is focusing on Europe, the invention of projectile weapons by modern (“Cro-Magnon”) humans and lack of such invention in Neanderthals, how that impacted the ecological relationship between the two species, and how that contributed to Neanderthal extinction as well as extinction (through competitive exclusion, as well as direct competition by killing) of all the large European carnivores except wolves.
In the talk, Dr.Churchill surveyed several different aspects of his research. He is approaching the question from several different angles. One is the study of spear tips in the archaeological record – their shape and size, the weight, the aerodynamics of the shape, etc. all tell something about their use as either close-contact or projectile weapons. Some (rare) spear handles and spear-throwers tell their own stories.
Then there is the fossil record of humans, Neanderthals and other large carnivores that show numbers and geographical distributions, migrations and dates of extinctions.
Next, there are anatomical cues – skeleton is malleable during development and bones in the upper arm develop differently in cultures that use contact weapons versus those that use projectile weapons as the stabbing technique is different from the throwing technique – throwers have different torsion angles in the humerus and also the humerus of one arm gets thicker than that of the other arm – this pattern is found in humans, but not in Neanderthals.
Finally, the general shape of Neanderthals would make them strong stabbers but poor throwers, so even if they tried throwing (perhaps by seeing the spears used that way by modern humans) they would not have been effective hunters with that technique.
November 004.jpgThen, there are wounds in the bones of some fossil humans and Neanderthals. By conducting an experiment – throwing spears into pig carcasses at various speeds, powers and distances (yes, throwing done by a machine) and analyzing the effects on bones – Churchill and his students could conclude that the wounds in the fossil bones were indeed the result of projectile weapons thrown from a distance.
The talk was, as is usually the case on these occasions, a quick survey of various studies. I did not read all the papers by him or his competitors, so I cannot write anything from a position of my own expertise. But my feeling is this:
Each piece of evidence he showed is weak on its own, but put together they make a strong case. And the strength is not purely additive, i.e., in the sense that more data is stronger than fewer data. The strength comes from consilience. Let me try to explain how that works.
Let’s call his preferred hypothesis ‘Hypothesis A’. One piece of evidence he shows is consistent with Hypothesis A, and weakens (or eliminates) an alternative Hypothesis B, but is also strongly vulnerable to alternative Hypothesis C. Another piece of evidence is consistent with his Hypothesis A, and weakens an alternative Hypothesis C, but is also strongly vulnerable to alternative Hypothesis D. Yet another piece of evidence is consistent with his Hypothesis A, and weakens an alternative Hypothesis D, but is also strongly vulnerable to alternative Hypothesis B. When you look at all of his evidence together, all of it is consistent with Hypothesis A and all alternatives look weak. Thus with all pieces being individually weak, the whole edifice still looks very powerful.
Now, to make clear, Dr.Churchill pointed out several times that the research he focuses on, his Hypothesis A, is not the one and only explanation for the extinction of Neanderthals (and other large predators). He just asserts that it is an important component of the process that led to this result and perhaps a more important component than some other people in the field are ready to admit. Of course, that’s how science works: different people focus on different aspects of a problem, and the strength of each person’s data will determine how the whole picture is built in the end.
This was definitely an interesting talk on a topic I never thought about before. DeLene was also there and wrote her thoughts about the lecture on her blog Wild Muse as well as on the Science In The Triangle blog.
RTI Fellows Symposium: Integrating Basic and Applied Research
This was a two-day event at the University of North Carolina’s Friday Center in Chapel Hill. This was also the first time I saw the Friday Center from within and I was looking at it with the eyes of a conference organizer. It has a Goldilocks quality to it: not so pleasant, intimate and science-themed as Sigma Xi, and not as big, cold and corporate as the Raleigh Convention Center. Just the right size and feel. But expensive as hell – Sigma Xi has been good to us over the years, not sure if we could negotiate a similar deal with Friday…..though we have definitely grown and a 420-seat main conference room at Friday Center looks good.
I could attend only the Monday morning portion of the meeting, but Sabine Vollmer was at the Symposium for the whole thing and wrote two blogs posts about the rest of the program here and here with a lot of details.
There were four broad themes entertained by the symposium: Personalized Medicine, Behavioral Neuroscience of Alcoholism, Global Climate Change and Education Opportunity and Achievement. Each of the themes had its own breakout session later, but Monday morning was reserved for Keynote Speakers, one on each of the four topics, each of interest to me in one way or another.
Let me first dispose of the things I did not like about the conference before I get into things I liked.
Over the past few years, most of the conferences I go to are informal, unconference or unconference-like events: from Scifoo in Mountain View, to Science FEST in Trieste, to ConvergeSouth in Greensboro, to our own ScienceOnline meetings. Even the ‘real’ science meeting I like to go to, the SRBR meeting, is very relaxed and informal – shorts-and-Hawaiian-shirt-clad scientists giving funny and entertaining talks about their new findings in my own field, with internal jokes, calling out friends in the audience and occasional hackling joke from the room (OK, OK, I overstate – folks are mostly nice and polite, especially when the talk is given by someone younger, e.g, a properly dressed graduate student, waiting in attentive silence until the end and then asking proper questions afterwards, but still, the general atmosphere is friendly and relaxed).
I realize of course that different conferences require different setup and different levels of formality. Not everything is a Bar Camp. While I was personally uncomfortable wearing my suit-and-tie costume at the IASP meeting, I understood that this was a business meeting in a business venue with businessmen (and a handful of businesswomen) in business attire talking about business.
But this one, I think, was a mismatch. All (or almost all) speakers were scientists talking about science. Almost everyone in the audience were scientists. For this kind of meeting, the organization was far too formal. And not just in pomp and ceremony and dress-code. For example, if you look at the abstracts, they don’t really say anything about the topic of the talk – they go in great detail about the speaker, including all the past and present appointments, awards and honorary degrees. This indicates that the organizers were more interested in the power hierarchy (i.e., ‘look at VIPs we managed to get here to talk’) instead of the substance of what they are saying. It felt more like a big corporate show-off than a conference meant for an exchange of ideas.
Then, there was no time designated for Question & Answer periods after the talks. I wanted to ask questions, but there was just no mechanism for doing so. I understand there were panels afterwards, but even those were built strangely – with panelists, after each gave a separate talk, sitting at a table on a podium above the audience, physically looking down at the audience, thus psychologically inhibiting all but the bravest from actually speaking up. I do not know how it went, but I doubt it was a free-wheeling discussion.
Then, the talks. Two speakers actually read their talks. Arrrgh! Yawn (and I was FULL of caffeine).
Others were much better. Howard McLeod gave a good, clear introduction into personal genomics and personal medicine, its pros and cons. Robert Jackson from Duke provided a good summary of the current state of science of climate change.
Ronald Dahl talked about adolescent brain development (something I am very interested in, both professionally and as a father of two adolescents), especially the lengthening of the period between onset of puberty which arrives earlier and earlier (the timing of which is not matched by an earlier development of other brain functions, including self-control) and the delay of societally approved age for onset of sexual activity (including marriage). Thus the duration of the period during which adolescents are sexually mature (but not entirely emotionally mature) but discouraged from sexual activity is getting longer and longer – which is an obvious problem. Couple that with the tendency of adolescents to be unable to resist, despite personal fear, engaging in risky behaviors, problems like teen alcoholism and traffic accidents are on the rise.
Lunch Keynote Speaker, Ralph Tarter, was the biggest dissapointment. His talk about bridging the Two Cultures and lessons from Hollywood was surprising for its naivete easily detectable by anyone who’s been reading science blogs for more than a year or so (including Framing Wars, response to Sizzle and response to Unscientific America, along with bloggers who routinely write about history of science). It was infused with nostalgia for good old days when scientists and poets drank wine and talked together (ehm, scientists and poets at the time were the one and the same people – that was Victorian era when gentlemen of means could afford to indulge themselves in such pastimes as philosophy, natural history and poetry and meeting their like-minded buddies at the pub). Science today is a very different business, specialized, expensive, profesionalized and rightly so. That’s progress.
The worst part was the lunch talk was the last point – a very erroneous analogy between peer-review of grants and movie reviews. First error: grants are reviewed before they are funded – movies are reviewed after they are funded. Second, as much as the grant review is prone to error, it is still done by well-meaning teams of scientists who are at least trying to evaluate the proposals according to their merits. Yes, outlandish proposals have a harder time than bandwagon stuff or conservative approaches, but it is at least attempted to be done fairly. Which movie gets funded is totally up to whims of movie moguls and producers. I bet even smaller percentage of submitted movie scripts gets actually made into movies than a proportion of grant proposals that gets funded. And while grant reviewers may look at the past publishing records of the grant submitters, the movie magnates are not in any way swayed by the statistics of positive or negative views of particular actors by movie critics in the media.
The highlight of the day was the talk by James Evans. I know Jim well, but I have never seen him speak before. And he blew me away. He knew that all the other speakers on the Personalized Medicine topics will be over-optimistic, so he took it on himself to provide a counter-view, a summary of cautionary notes backed up by data and a nice dose of humor. It was a very energetic and fun talk that explained very clearly what claims by personal genomics companies really mean, why they are so seductive if you don’t stop to think about them, and how they stack up against reality.
NESCent panel on intersection of public policy, economics, & evolution
NESCent Catalysis Meeting, coorganized by the Evolution Institute was on November 13-15, 2009 and several of the participants remained another day and came to NESCent on the 16th to report on the meeting in a form of a panel. The meeting and the panel were organized by David Sloan Wilson, professor of evolution at Binghamton University and one of my newest SciBlings. The other panelists were Dennis Embry, John Gowdy, Douglas Kenrick, Joel Peck, Harvey Whitehouse and Peter Turchin.
The main idea of the meeting is that evolutionary theory has something to offer in the realm of understanding human societies and thus shaping policies governing aspects of human activity. In the domain of economics, for example, it appears that the classical economics (i.e., the Chicago School) is unbeatable in the corridors of power. Yet, it is essentially faulty and this has been shown many times, including by numerous Nobel Prize winners in Economics. The idea that humans are rational (and perfectly informed) economic players is just plain wrong. Yet our economic policy is built upon that error. Perhaps developing and using models from evolutionary theory can finally bring the well-past-due overturn of the faulty economics and become the basis for smart, modern economic policies. The work is just beginning.
Perhaps the insights from the study of social and eusocial animals, mainly insects, can inform the discussion about social behavior of humans. How do simple rules for simple brains result in complex behaviors of, for example, bee swarms? Perhaps if we used such simple rules, instead of relying on every individual human being highly intelligent, impartial and rational, we can devise policies that will actually work, in various domains of human activity.
Taking into account multi-level selection models of evolution one can start understanding the differences between small-group societies (e.g, in rural areas) and large-group societies (e.g., in large cities), why those result in diefferent behaviors of individual humans living there, and why the differences between the two types of groups often lead to civil wars (often wars we usually do not see or describe as civil wars due to our own myopia, not realizing that a war between two adjacent regions may, in fact, be a war between the city and the country “mentality” – something quite obviously applicable to the US red vs. blue states, really small-town conservatism vs. big-city liberalism). Why imposing large-group organization (i.e., a President and a Parliament, i.e., a ‘centralized government’ of a unified country) may not work in a country like Afghanistan in which the society was always organized via local kin-and-friend networks – evolutionary theory can open our eyes on such questions.
This group of people, coming from a variety of backgrounds including history, anthropology, ecology, economics, psychology, political science, ethology and evolutionary biology, will try to tackle these and similar questions over the years to come.
Interestingly, the meeting was apparently an Unconference (though they have never heard of the term before), with discussions starting some months before the event (I presume online), leading to the choices of topics actually discussed in sessions which were free-style discussions, not speeches. One of the panelists noted that interdisciplinary meetings are usually excercises in misunderstanding, as each participant brings in different language and different axioms, but not this meeting – people actually made an effort, in advance, to study and learn other people’s perspectives before encountering them in the sessions in real life. This made the meeting, judging from the enthusiasm of all panelists, a resounding success.
This was the first time I ever visited NESCent (though I was excited when I first heard about its founding five years ago) and it was really nice to see Craig McClain and Robin Ann Smith again, as well as to meet, for the first time in real life, John Logsdon who blogs on Sex, Genes and Evolution and has come to NESCent for a nine-year sabbatical.
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Solid Waste Management Vendor Fair at the RTP Headquarters
I got to see this almost by accident. I was going to the RTP headquarters to talk to them about their new blog and, for the price of free pizza, wondered around the exhibit and saw a brief talk about the ways North Carolina is doing recycling solid waste, why that is a good thing, and what are the prospect for the future. But I will let Cara Rousseau give you more details, in a post on the new RTP blog.
SCONC celebration of the Origin of Species 150-year anniversary at NESCent
Just a couple of days after my first ever visit to NESCent, I found myself there again. The occasion, the anniversary of the publication of the Origin Of Species (though officially today), was a good excuse for SCONC to have its monthly meeting at NESCent.
Robin Smith welcomed us all with a piece of great news – the funding for NESCent was extended for another five years! Then, while we were enjoying some delicious food, we were treated to three interesting presentations by current NESCent post-docs: Julie Meachen-Samuels talking about Smilodon, how it hunted differently than modern Big Cats and what it means for our understanding of palaeo-ecology and evolution, Trina Roberts about the diversity and biogeography of tree shrews (and how to get DNA from museum skeletal specimens!), and Eric Schuettpelz about the way ferns radiated into many species with the appearance of forests of (flowering) trees by occupying a new niche – living on the tree trunks as epiphytes, in the shade.
I found myself thinking about parallels between the Smilodon presentation and the one on projectile weapons I heard a couple of weeks before. Neanderthals uses stabbing close-contact weapons (and are now extinct) while modern humans used projectile weapons, thus being able to hunt different kinds of prey (and are now extant). Similarly, most Big Cats today hunt by giving chase to their prey and then killing it with their long canine teeth, often having to hold the teeth clenched in the trachea for several minutes until the victim dies. But Smilodons (the saber-tooth cats) had to hunt differently – from an ambush, presumably in thick forests and not out in the open country. They overpowered their prey using the weight and strength of their forelimbs and only at the end finished the completely immobilized victim with a quick slice with their canines. If they tried to keep their teeth inside still struggling large animals for more than a moment, their long but thin canines would break. In some ways, the Smilodon hunting technique is analogous to using close-quarters weapons, while the techniques of modern Big Cats is more analogous to hunting with projectile weapons (with themselves being “projectiles”). With such a massive body, with hindquarters so much smaller than the front half of the animal, and with no tail they could use for balance, saber-tooth cats could not run fast enough and long enough to be “projectiles”. Perhaps that’s why they, like Neanderthals, are now all dead.
And yes, we had a Darwin birthday cake – Russ Campbell has the pictures.

The Open Laboratory 2009 – the deadline is looming!

OpenLab logo.jpg
Reminder: Deadline is December 1st at midnight EST!
Here are the submissions for OpenLab 2009 to date (under the fold). You can buy the 2006, 2007 and 2008 editions at Lulu.com. Please use the submission form to add more of your and other people’s posts (remember that we are looking for original poems, art, cartoons and comics, as well as essays):
Make sure that the submitted posts are possible (and relatively easy) to convert into print. Posts that rely too much on video, audio, color photographs, copyrighted images, or multitudes of links just won’t do.

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ScienceOnline2010 – introducing the participants

scienceonline2010logoMedium.jpg
As you know you can see everyone who’s registered for the conference, but I highlight 4-6 participants every day as this may be an easier way for you to digest the list. You can also look at the Program so see who is doing what.
D.N.Lee is working on her PhD in Animal Behavior, Mammalogy, and Ecology at the University of Missouri – St. Louis. She writes for the St.Louis Examiner, blogs on Urban Science Adventures and tweets. At the conference, Danielle will co-moderate the session Casting a wider net: Promoting gender and ethnic diversity in STEM.
Jacqueline Floyd is a geophysicist, now involved in science outreach. She blogs on Element List and Jackie and she tweets. At the conference, Jackie will co-moderate the session on Earth Science, Web 2.0+, and Geospatial Applications.
Maryn McKenna is an independent journalist who blogs on Superbug and has a book on MRSA coming out soon. She is a contributing writer at the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy of the University of Minnesota, and she tweets, as herself and as her blog.
Dennis Meredith is a freelance writer and consultant, with a long career in science communication. He is the creator and developer of EurekAlert and blogs on Research Explainer
Mary Jane Gore is the Senior Science Writer for The Duke Medicine Office of News and Communications and she tweets.
Rahul Radhakrishnan is a physics graduate student at Rudtgers. He blogs on A Posteriori and tweets.

New and Exciting in PLoS ONE

There are 39 new articles in PLoS ONE today. As always, you should rate the articles, post notes and comments and send trackbacks when you blog about the papers. You can now also easily place articles on various social services (CiteULike, Mendeley, Connotea, Stumbleupon, Facebook and Digg) with just one click. Here are my own picks for the week – you go and look for your own favourites:
Alien Invasive Slider Turtle in Unpredicted Habitat: A Matter of Niche Shift or of Predictors Studied?:

Species Distribution Models (SDMs) aim on the characterization of a species’ ecological niche and project it into geographic space. The result is a map of the species’ potential distribution, which is, for instance, helpful to predict the capability of alien invasive species. With regard to alien invasive species, recently several authors observed a mismatch between potential distributions of native and invasive ranges derived from SDMs and, as an explanation, ecological niche shift during biological invasion has been suggested. We studied the physiologically well known Slider turtle from North America which today is widely distributed over the globe and address the issue of ecological niche shift versus choice of ecological predictors used for model building, i.e., by deriving SDMs using multiple sets of climatic predictor. In one SDM, predictors were used aiming to mirror the physiological limits of the Slider turtle. It was compared to numerous other models based on various sets of ecological predictors or predictors aiming at comprehensiveness. The SDM focusing on the study species’ physiological limits depicts the target species’ worldwide potential distribution better than any of the other approaches. These results suggest that a natural history-driven understanding is crucial in developing statistical models of ecological niches (as SDMs) while “comprehensive” or “standard” sets of ecological predictors may be of limited use.

Behavior of Buff-Breasted Sandpipers (Tryngites subruficollis) during Migratory Stopover in Agricultural Fields:

Understanding the behavior of birds in agricultural habitats can be the first step in evaluating the conservation implications of birds’ use of landscapes shaped by modern agriculture. The existence and magnitude of risk from agricultural practices and the quality of resources agricultural lands provide will be determined largely by how birds use these habitats. Buff-breasted Sandpipers (Tryngites subruficollis) are a species of conservation concern. During spring migration large numbers of Buff-breasted Sandpipers stopover in row crop fields in the Rainwater Basin region of Nebraska. We used behavioral observations as a first step in evaluating how Buff-breasted Sandpipers use crop fields during migratory stopover. We measured behavior during migratory stopover using scan and focal individual sampling to determine how birds were using crop fields. Foraging was the most frequent behavior observed, but the intensity of foraging changed over the course of the day with a distinct mid-day low point. Relative to other migrating shorebirds, Buff-breasted Sandpipers spent a significant proportion of their time in social interactions including courtship displays. Our results show that the primary use of upland agricultural fields by migrating Buff-breasted Sandpipers is foraging while wetlands are used for maintenance and resting. The importance of foraging in row crop fields suggests that both the quality of food resources available in fields and the possible risks from dietary exposure to agricultural chemicals will be important to consider when developing conservation plans for Buff-breasted Sandpipers migrating through the Great Plains.

Mitochondrial DNA Indicates Late Pleistocene Divergence of Populations of Heteronympha merope, an Emerging Model in Environmental Change Biology:

Knowledge of historical changes in species range distribution provides context for investigating adaptive potential and dispersal ability. This is valuable for predicting the potential impact of environmental change on species of interest. Butterflies are one of the most important taxa for studying such impacts, and Heteronympha merope has the potential to provide a particularly valuable model, in part due to the existence of historical data on morphological traits and glycolytic enzyme variation. This study investigates the population genetic structure and phylogeography of H. merope, comparing the relative resolution achieved through partial DNA sequences of two mitochondrial loci, COI and ND5. These data are used to define the relationship between subspecies, showing that the subspecies are reciprocally monophyletic. On this basis, the Western Australian subspecies H. m. duboulayi is genetically distinct from the two eastern subspecies. Throughout the eastern part of the range, levels of migration and the timing of key population splits of potential relevance to climatic adaptation are estimated and indicate Late Pleistocene divergence both of the Tasmanian subspecies and of an isolated northern population from the eastern mainland subspecies H. m. merope. This information is then used to revisit historical data and provides support for the importance of clinal variation in wing characters, as well as evidence for selective pressure acting on allozyme loci phosphoglucose isomerase and phosphoglucomutase in H. merope. The study has thus confirmed the value of H. merope as a model organism for measuring responses to environmental change, offering the opportunity to focus on isolated populations, as well as a latitudinal gradient, and to use historical changes to test the accuracy of predictions for the future.

Detection of Sub-Clinical CWD Infection in Conventional Test-Negative Deer Long after Oral Exposure to Urine and Feces from CWD+ Deer:

Chronic wasting disease (CWD) of cervids is a prion disease distinguished by high levels of transmissibility, wherein bodily fluids and excretions are thought to play an important role. Using cervid bioassay and established CWD detection methods, we have previously identified infectious prions in saliva and blood but not urine or feces of CWD+ donors. More recently, we identified very low concentrations of CWD prions in urine of deer by cervid PrP transgenic (Tg[CerPrP]) mouse bioassay and serial protein misfolding cyclic amplification (sPMCA). This finding led us to examine further our initial cervid bioassay experiments using sPMCA. We sought to investigate whether conventional test-negative deer, previously exposed orally to urine and feces from CWD+ sources, may be harboring low level CWD infection not evident in the 19 month observation period. We further attempted to determine the peripheral PrPCWD distribution in these animals. Various neural and lymphoid tissues from conventional test-negative deer were reanalyzed for CWD prions by sPMCA and cervid transgenic mouse bioassay in parallel with appropriate tissue-matched positive and negative controls. PrPCWD was detected in the tissues of orally exposed deer by both sPMCA and Tg[CerPrP] mouse bioassay; each assay revealed very low levels of CWD prions previously undetectable by western blot, ELISA, or IHC. Serial PMCA analysis of individual tissues identified that obex alone was positive in 4 of 5 urine/feces exposed deer. PrPCWD was amplified from both lymphoid and neural tissues of positive control deer but not from identical tissues of negative control deer. Detection of subclinical infection in deer orally exposed to urine and feces (1) suggests that a prolonged subclinical state can exist, necessitating observation periods in excess of two years to detect CWD infection, and (2) illustrates the sensitive and specific application of sPMCA in the diagnosis of low-level prion infection. Based on these results, it is possible that low doses of prions, e.g. following oral exposure to urine and saliva of CWD-infected deer, bypass significant amplification in the LRS, perhaps utilizing a neural conduit between the alimentary tract and CNS, as has been demonstrated in some other prion diseases.

Transposition and Intermingling of Gαi2 and Gαo Afferences into Single Vomeronasal Glomeruli in the Madagascan Lesser Tenrec Echinops telfairi:

The vomeronasal system (VNS) mediates pheromonal communication in mammals. From the vomeronasal organ, two populations of sensory neurons, expressing either Gαi2 or Gαo proteins, send projections that end in glomeruli distributed either at the rostral or caudal half of the accessory olfactory bulb (AOB), respectively. Neurons at the AOB contact glomeruli of a single subpopulation. The dichotomic segregation of AOB glomeruli has been described in opossums, rodents and rabbits, while Primates and Laurasiatheres present the Gαi2-pathway only, or none at all (such as apes, some bats and aquatic species). We studied the AOB of the Madagascan lesser tenrec Echinops telfairi (Afrotheria: Afrosoricida) and found that Gαi2 and Gαo proteins are expressed in rostral and caudal glomeruli, respectively. However, the segregation of vomeronasal glomeruli at the AOB is not exclusive, as both pathways contained some glomeruli transposed into the adjoining subdomain. Moreover, some glomeruli seem to contain intermingled afferences from both pathways. Both the transposition and heterogeneity of vomeronasal afferences are features, to our knowledge, never reported before. The organization of AOB glomeruli suggests that synaptic integration might occur at the glomerular layer. Whether intrinsic AOB neurons may make synaptic contact with axon terminals of both subpopulations is an interesting possibility that would expand our understanding about the integration of vomeronasal pathways.

The Extract of Ginkgo biloba EGb 761 Reactivates a Juvenile Profile in the Skeletal Muscle of Sarcopenic Rats by Transcriptional Reprogramming:

Sarcopenia is a major public health problem in industrialized nations, placing an increasing burden on public healthcare systems because the loss of skeletal muscle mass and strength that characterizes this affection increases the dependence and the risk of injury caused by sudden falls in elderly people. Albeit exercise and caloric restriction improve sarcopenia-associated decline of the muscular performances, a more suitable and focused pharmacological treatment is still lacking. In order to evaluate such a possible treatment, we investigated the effects of EGb 761, a Ginkgo biloba extract used in chronic age-dependent neurological disorders, on the function of the soleus muscle in aged rats. EGb 761 induced a gain in muscular mass that was associated with an improvement of the muscular performances as assessed by biochemical and electrophysiological tests. DNA microarray analysis shows that these modifications are accompanied by the transcriptional reprogramming of genes related to myogenesis through the TGFβ signaling pathway and to energy production via fatty acids and glucose oxidation. EGb 761 restored a more juvenile gene expression pattern by regenerating the aged muscle and reversing the age-related metabolic shift from lipids to glucose utilization. Thus, EGb 761 may represent a novel treatment for sarcopenia both more manageable and less cumbersome than exercise and caloric restriction.

Clock Quotes

Sometimes I think we’re alone in the universe, and sometimes I think we’re not. In either case the idea is quite staggering.
– Arthur C. Clarke

Peer-review – nothing has changed since 1945 (video)

ScienceOnline2010 – introducing the participants

scienceonline2010logoMedium.jpg
As you know you can see everyone who’s registered for the conference, but I highlight 4-6 participants every day as this may be an easier way for you to digest the list. You can also look at the Program so see who is doing what.
Victoria Stodden is a Postdoctoral Associate in Law and Kauffman Fellow in Law and Innovation at Yale Law School, a fellow with the Internet and Democracy Project at the Berkman Center at Harvard Law School and a Fellow at Science Commons. She blogs and tweets. At the Conference, Victoria will lead the session on Legal Aspects of publishing, sharing and blogging science.
Anthony Townsend is the Research Director at The Institute for the Future and the author of an influential booklet Future Knowledge Ecosystems (pdf). He blogs both at Future Now and his own site and tweets. At the conference, Anthony will co-moderate the session The Importance of Meatspace: Science Motels, science freelancing and science coworking.
Tina Valdecanas is the Chief Strategy & Branding Officer at the Research Triangle Foundation of North Carolina which runs the Research Triangle Park, one of our hosts and sponsors this year. She blogs and tweets. At the conference, Tina will do a demo of Research Triangle Park – how online and offline work together.
Christian Rapp runs Communications and Organisation for the annual Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings and tweets. At the conference, Christian will co-moderate the session Science online talks between generations.
Pamela Reynolds is a Graduate Student in Biology in the Bruno lab and the Institute of Marine Science at UNC. And a return attendee of the conference.
Mauricio Borgen is the IT Administrator at Athenix Corp, a agricultural and chemical biotechnology company, and a veteran of all our conferences over the years.

New and Exciting in PLoS ONE

There are 22 new articles in PLoS ONE today. As always, you should rate the articles, post notes and comments and send trackbacks when you blog about the papers. You can now also easily place articles on various social services (CiteULike, Mendeley, Connotea, Stumbleupon, Facebook and Digg) with just one click. Here are my own picks for the week – you go and look for your own favourites:
Limits of Principal Components Analysis for Producing a Common Trait Space: Implications for Inferring Selection, Contingency, and Chance in Evolution:

Comparing patterns of divergence among separate lineages or groups has posed an especially difficult challenge for biologists. Recently a new, conceptually simple methodology called the “ordered-axis plot” approach was introduced for the purpose of comparing patterns of diversity in a common morphospace. This technique involves a combination of principal components analysis (PCA) and linear regression. Given the common use of these statistics the potential for the widespread use of the ordered axis approach is high. However, there are a number of drawbacks to this approach, most notably that lineages with the greatest amount of variance will largely bias interpretations from analyses involving a common morphospace. Therefore, without meeting a set of a priori requirements regarding data structure the ordered-axis plot approach will likely produce misleading results. Morphological data sets from cichlid fishes endemic to Lakes Tanganyika, Malawi, and Victoria were used to statistically demonstrate how separate groups can have differing contributions to a common morphospace produced by a PCA. Through a matrix superimposition of eigenvectors (scale-free trajectories of variation identified by PCA) we show that some groups contribute more to the trajectories of variation identified in a common morphospace. Furthermore, through a set of randomization tests we show that a common morphospace model partitions variation differently than group-specific models. Finally, we demonstrate how these limitations may influence an ordered-axis plot approach by performing a comparison on data sets with known alterations in covariance structure. Using these results we provide a set of criteria that must be met before a common morphospace can be reliably used. Our results suggest that a common morphospace produced by PCA would not be useful for producing biologically meaningful results unless a restrictive set of criteria are met. We therefore suggest biologists be aware of the limitations of the ordered-axis plot approach before employing it on their own data, and possibly consider other, less restrictive methods for addressing the same question.

Whole Genome Distribution and Ethnic Differentiation of Copy Number Variation in Caucasian and Asian Populations:

Although copy number variation (CNV) has recently received much attention as a form of structure variation within the human genome, knowledge is still inadequate on fundamental CNV characteristics such as occurrence rate, genomic distribution and ethnic differentiation. In the present study, we used the Affymetrix GeneChip® Mapping 500K Array to discover and characterize CNVs in the human genome and to study ethnic differences of CNVs between Caucasians and Asians. Three thousand and nineteen CNVs, including 2381 CNVs in autosomes and 638 CNVs in X chromosome, from 985 Caucasian and 692 Asian individuals were identified, with a mean length of 296 kb. Among these CNVs, 190 had frequencies greater than 1% in at least one ethnic group, and 109 showed significant ethnic differences in frequencies (p<0.01). After merging overlapping CNVs, 1135 copy number variation regions (CNVRs), covering approximately 439 Mb (14.3%) of the human genome, were obtained. Our findings of ethnic differentiation of CNVs, along with the newly constructed CNV genomic map, extend our knowledge on the structural variation in the human genome and may furnish a basis for understanding the genomic differentiation of complex traits across ethnic groups.

Taipei’s Use of a Multi-Channel Mass Risk Communication Program to Rapidly Reverse an Epidemic of Highly Communicable Disease:

In September 2007, an outbreak of acute hemorrhagic conjunctivitis (AHC) occurred in Keelung City and spread to Taipei City. In response to the epidemic, a new crisis management program was implemented and tested in Taipei. Having noticed that transmission surged on weekends during the Keelung epidemic, Taipei City launched a multi-channel mass risk communications program that included short message service (SMS) messages sent directly to approximately 2.2 million Taipei residents on Friday, October 12th, 2007. The public was told to keep symptomatic students from schools and was provided guidelines for preventing the spread of the disease at home. Epidemiological characteristics of Taipei’s outbreak were analyzed from 461 sampled AHC cases. Median time from exposure to onset of the disease was 1 day. This was significantly shorter for cases occurring in family clusters than in class clusters (mean±SD: 2.6±3.2 vs. 4.39±4.82 days, p = 0.03), as well as for cases occurring in larger family clusters as opposed to smaller ones (1.2±1.7 days vs. 3.9±4.0 days, p<0.01). Taipei's program had a significant impact on patient compliance. Home confinement of symptomatic children increased from 10% to 60% (p<0.05) and helped curb the spread of AHC. Taipei experienced a rapid decrease in AHC cases between the Friday of the SMS announcement and the following Monday, October 15, (0.70% vs. 0.36%). By October 26, AHC cases reduced to 0.01%. The success of this risk communication program in Taipei (as compared to Keelung) is further reflected through rapid improvements in three epidemic indicators: (1) significantly lower crude attack rates (1.95% vs. 14.92%, p<0.001), (2) a short epidemic period of AHC (13 vs. 34 days), and (3) a quick drop in risk level (1~2 weeks) in Taipei districts that border Keelung (the original domestic epicenter). The timely launch of this systematic, communication-based intervention proved effective at preventing a dangerous spike in AHC and was able to bring this high-risk disease under control. We recommend that public health officials incorporate similar methods into existing guidelines for preventing pandemic influenza and other emerging infectious diseases.

Heterosexual and Homosexual Partners Practising Unprotected Sex May Develop Allogeneic Immunity and to a Lesser Extent Tolerance:

Epidemiological studies suggest that allogeneic immunity may inhibit HIV-1 transmission from mother to baby and is less frequent in multiparous than uniparous women. Alloimmune responses may also be elicited during unprotected heterosexual intercourse, which is associated ex vivo with resistance to HIV infection. The investigation was carried out in well-defined heterosexual and homosexual monogamous partners, practising unprotected sex and a heterosexual cohort practising protected sex. Allogeneic CD4+ and CD8+ T cell proliferative responses were elicited by stimulating PBMC with the partners’ irradiated monocytes and compared with 3rd party unrelated monocytes, using the CFSE method. Significant increase in allogeneic proliferative responses was found in the CD4+ and CD8+ T cells to the partners’ irradiated monocytes, as compared with 3rd party unrelated monocytes (p≤0.001). However, a significant decrease in proliferative responses, especially of CD8+ T cells to the partners’ compared with 3rd party monocytes was consistent with tolerization, in both the heterosexual and homosexual partners (p<0.01). Examination of CD4+CD25+FoxP3+ regulatory T cells by flow cytometry revealed a significantly greater proportion of these cells in the homosexual than heterosexual partners practising unprotected sex (p<0.05). Ex vivo studies of infectivity of PBMC with HIV-1 showed significantly greater inhibition of infectivity of PBMC from heterosexual subjects practising unprotected compared with those practising protected sex (p = 0.02). Both heterosexual and homosexual monogamous partners practising unprotected sex develop allogeneic CD4+ and CD8+ T cell proliferative responses to the partners' unmatched cells and a minority may be tolerized. However, a greater proportion of homosexual rather than heterosexual partners developed CD4+CD25FoxP3+ regulatory T cells. These results, in addition to finding greater inhibition of HIV-1 infectivity in PBMC ex vivo in heterosexual partners practising unprotected, compared with those practising protected sex, suggest that allogeneic immunity may play a significant role in the immuno-pathogenesis of HIV-1 infection.

Clock Quotes

Readjusting is a painful process, but most of us need it at one time or another.
– Arthur C. Benson

The Amazing Bouncing Pebble Toad (video)


Seen on DeLene’s Facebook wall….

Today’s carnivals

Diversity in Science Carnival #4 – Increasing Diversity among the college ranks – is up on Urban Science Adventures! ©. This carnival is a preparation for the ScienceOnline2010 session Casting a wider net: Promoting gender and ethnic diversity in STEM.

Clock Quotes

Whether it’s the best of times or the worst of times, it’s the only time we’ve got.
– Art Buchwald