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ScienceOnline09 – an interview with…me!

One of the education sessions at ScienceOnline09 will be the middle/high school perspective (or: “how the Facebook generation does it”?) session that will be led by Miss Baker and eight of her high-school biology class students.
One of these students – Brandon – recently interviewed me via e-mail and the interview is now available online – you can choose the full text or you can opt for excerpts in a video form. I understand that other students interviewed other conference participants and I can’t wait to see their interviews as well.
I see that Peter Suber already liked it π
US attacks … Syria?
Obviously a careful anti-insurgent action, not likely an invasion of Syria.
People online think of it as a possible October Surprise. But I think that that at this point, no matter what the GOP tries to do will be only seen as a gimmick to help McCain. Any attempt at an October Surprise by them will be seen as such and will backfire. And I think they realize this.
Thus, I don’t think this has anything to do with the election, but the military identified with 100% certainty a post, just inside the Syria-Iraq border, from where insurgents organized their attacks, targeted them precisely, probably with immediate communication with the Syrian government.
This does not mean that the blood-thirsty Right will not try to spin it for their side, but it will not work on the electorate. Too little, too late and too obvious.
Posted in Politics
The currently most popular independent political websites
The latest press release from ComScore – Huffington Post and Politico Lead Wave of Explosive Growth at Independent Political Blogs and News Sites this Election Season – has all sorts of interesting statistics about relative traffic, etc., of the top independent (i.e., unaffiliated with MSM) websites and blogs. One tidbit I found particularly interesting:
Looking at the demographic profiles for the top three sites, HuffingtonPost.com, Politico.com and DrudgeReport.com, one can conclude that visitors to these sites tend to be older, wealthier, and more likely to be male than the average U.S. Internet user.
Of the three sites, Politico.com skewed the oldest with 23 percent of its visitors age 55 and older, while DrudgeReport.com skewed wealthiest, with 40 percent of its visitors earning at least $100,000 a year, and had the highest concentration of males at 57 percent. HuffingtonPost.com, the site with the largest audience, was the most similar of the three when compared to the overall U.S. Internet audience.
Politico.com has the most old-timey look, DrudgeReport.com is read by the DC circle-jerk including the MSM pundits who were duped into thinking that Drudge is trustworthy (and I am glad to see it slipping down), and Huffington Post is a mix of some of the best opinion with some of the worst that one can find on the Left – blatant sexism (especially towards Palin), anti-vaccination woo, animal rights crap, New Age medical quackery and such – not a place I visit often as it represents the worst of the Left (and exposes that not everyone who is liberal is actually a member of the Reality Community).
Glad to see that Talkingpointsmemo.com, Crooksandliars.com and Fivethirtyeight.com are high and rising – that is some of the best New Journalism out there.
UNC scientists comment in support of fruit fly research for understanding autism
As a follow-up to the yesterday’s press release, Dr. Manzoor Bhat and Joseph Piven, M.D., researchers at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill who use the Drosophila model system to study neurexin and its implications in the development of autism, have now released the video response – well worth watching:
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Posted in Genetics, Medicine, North Carolina, Politics
My picks from ScienceDaily
Protein Compass Guides Amoebas Toward Their Prey:
Amoebas glide toward their prey with the help of a protein switch that controls a molecular compass, biologists at the University of California, San Diego have discovered. Their finding, recently detailed in the journal Current Biology, is important because the same molecular switch is shared by humans and other vertebrates to help immune cells locate the sites of infections.
Alternative Medicine And Heavy Metal Poisoning:
Many Ayurvedic medicines can contain dangerous quantities of heavy metals, including lead, mercury, thallium and arsenic, according to clinical toxicology specialists in London writing in the International Journal of Environment and Health.
Spirituality Protects Against Depression Better Than Church Attendance:
Those who worship a higher power often do so in different ways. Whether they are active in their religious community, or prefer to simply pray or meditate, new research out of Temple University suggests that a person’s religiousness – also called religiosity – can offer insight into their risk for depression. Lead researcher Joanna Maselko, Sc.D., characterized the religiosity of 918 study participants in terms of three domains of religiosity: religious service attendance, which refers to being involved with a church; religious well-being, which refers to the quality of a person’s relationship with a higher power; and existential well-being, which refers to a person’s sense of meaning and their purpose in life.
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Posted in Science News
Clock Quotes
America is the country where you buy a lifetime supply of aspirin for one dollar, and use it up in two weeks.
– John Barrymore
Posted in Clock Quotes
Information vs. Knowledge vs. Expertise
There is an interesting post (and comment thread) on Kevin Kelly’s blog about the exponential growth of available information. It is quite thought-provoking, but there are a couple of issues I have with it.
First issue is that Kevin took the old adage that “every answer leads to at least two new questions”, perhaps tongue-in-cheek (I hope), as if it was true:
Yet the paradox of science is that every answer breeds at least two new questions. More answers, more questions. Telescopes and microscopes expanded not only what we knew, but what we didn’t know. They allowed us to spy into our ignorance. New and better tools permit us new and better questions. All our knowledge about subatomic particles derived from the new questions generated after we invented an atom smasher.
This was probably necessary for the point he was trying to make, but it is of course not true – just a quip that scientists like to say to each other every now and then. Most scientific papers, for instance, do not attempt to answer questions, just like many scientific questions do not test hypotheses. Some are making observations, some are tabulating surveys, some are sequencing genomes, some are following hunches. There is much more to the scientific method than just question-answering or hypothesis-testing. This does not stop people from, in their grant proposals, shoehorning everything into the hypothesis-testing mode, e.g., silly stuff like “we will shoot all our heavy artillery into this dark void of the Unknown and we hypothesize that we will discover something useful” – which is not hypothesis-testing, but a brute force approach that comes before hypothesis-testing, a method to provide enormous amounts of information that can then be looked at in order to formulate hypotheses or, yes, ask questions.
And even when a scientific paper answers a question, sometimes it just closes the book on it without generating any new questions. Sometimes it generates one or two or more. But there is no mathematical or empirical proof of the saying as it stands.
My second issue with Kevin’s essay is the blurring between the concepts of information, knowledge and expertise despite his effort to differentiate them:
The fastest growing entity today is information. Information is expanding ten times faster than the growth of any other manufactured or natural product on this planet.
———————
We see the expansion of information everywhere. Less visible, harder to track, but exploding the same is the expansion of knowledge. The number of scientific articles published each year has been increasing in a steady rise for more than 50 years. Over the last 150 years the number of patent applications has increased. By this rough metric, knowledge is growing exponentially.
Perhaps I’m wrong, but for me information is something that just sits there, in computers or on the Web or in scientific papers, pretty useless on its own. It is when humans take a look at that information, filter it in an organized manner, and make sense out of it, that the information becomes organized and useful – which I think of as knowledge.
Furthermore, even this definition of knowledge is fuzzy, as it describes our collective knowledge. Collective – as in ‘collection of individual knowledges’. But some knowledge resided in individuals who make that knowledge widely available, while others do not. Thus some knowledge is more strongly integrated into the fuzzy global knowledge, and some is more or less hidden from most of us. Not to mention that not all knowledge is correct, either, or useful for anything for that matter (e.g., theological treateses come under both of those headings).
But, is individual knowledge the same as ‘expertise’? What does expertise mean?
Is it possessing knowledge or having the abilities and skills to apply it? Knowing where in the brain the pineal gland resides, or being able to surgically remove it?
Is it having a PhD (or equivalent) in the subject, or is it being recognized by others as an expert?
Is it knowing everything there is to know about a subject? Or is it knowing more than most other people about it?
Are we all experts on breathing, eating and sleeping? What is so expert about that kind of expertise if it is shared by everyone?
If it is knowing something that most other people don’t where is the cutoff point – what percentile are we talking about? I can say that I am an expert on circadian rhythms in quail – something I share with about a dozen other people in the world – as I have read the entire literature on the subject, did my own experiments and published papers on the topic. I guess I am still an expert when it comes to my field as a whole – a couple of thousand chronobiologists – although I could not possibly read all the papers or pay attention to all the sub-field research directions.
But am I an expert on blogging just because I am one of the 20 million bloggers out there? It is still a pretty small proportion of the planet’s population, after all. Am I an expert on Serbia just because I am one of 10 million or so people who was born there?
I surely write on this blog about many things, not too atrociously, I hope: politics, religion, science, technology, food, etc. I do not think of myself as an expert in any of this, but some people may think of me as one: because they know less than me about some of these topics, or because I have a blog on scienceblogs.com, or because I appear to be a nice guy.
The question is, once we agree on a definition of expertise, does it matter? Is my expertise in avian chronobiology useful to me? To the rest of the world? Or is my thinking (and then writing) about various other subjects better?
Victorian scholars knew everything about everything. With the growth of knowledge, we swung in the opposite direction, rewarding very narrow expertise. Are we now seeing the pendulum swing back? There is too much knowledge available for anyone to be able to know everything, so we cannot all become Victorian scholars. But perhaps we can all choose a range of subjects in which to become semi-experts – knowing a lot about it but not worrying about how many other people know LESS about it than we do.
The Stupid Blogger says it nicely:
Unfortunately, there’s a very simple fact in life, and it’s the knowledge that not everyone is going to be an expert.
———————
What so many people fail to realize is that being an expert is in many ways overrated.
——————–
The other option, of course, is a breadth of knowledge rather than depth of knowledge. Obviously, breadth of knowledge is knowing a little bit about a lot of things, and it’s more useful than you might think.
——————–
Having a breadth of knowledge can make living in the real world easier, not to mention more enjoyable, but it is only useful so long as you’re aware of the limitations of your knowledge and you know where to turn for more information.
Thoughts?
Posted in Society, Technology
Small Town Fear Itself – the Zombie Attack!
Zombies pose no threat at Palin event:
ASHEVILLE – Supporters of vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin will have plenty to see outside the Civic Center if they are unable to get inside for her Sunday appearance.
As many as 700 zombies are expected to amble up Flint Street past the Civic Center about 5 p.m., just after doors open for the Palin event.
But a Republican who is afraid of Obama even more than of zombies already made this advertisement:
Posted in Politics
Lawrence Lessig for Copyright Czar!
Peter Suber, James Love and Glyn Moody have already blogged about this, but we need to make sure this spreads far and wide:
The AAP and Copyright Alliance want to prod the next President of the US to tilt the unbalanced US copyright law further toward publishers. According to a letter the AAP sent to its members (thanks to James Love and Glyn Moody), the two organizations are trying to identify the positions “that will influence intellectual property policy”, and will then “offer suggestions regarding appropriate candidates for these positions to both presidential campaigns.”
But first they want to blackball one potential nominee:
…AAP is concerned, for example, that based on their past academic relationship, Senator Obama might choose among his appointments a divisive figure such as Larry Lessig – a law professor and leading proponent of diminished copyright rights….
Yup, those are the PRISM arguments – black is white, up is down, and Lessig is anti-copyright!@#$%^&*
So, how can we help push Lessig to get appointed Copyright Czar in the Obama administration? After all, nobody in the world knows more about it than him and he would be a perfect person for the job.
Posted in Open Science, Politics, Society, Technology
Palin, autism and fruitflies – it does not add up
You have probably heard that Governor Palin, in a recent speech contradicted herself within a span of a couple of sentences. So, she said that “Early identification of a cognitive or other disorder, especially autism, can make a life-changing difference.”, then in the next breath dissed that same research: “You’ve heard about some of these pet projects they really don’t make a whole lot of sense and sometimes these dollars go to projects that have little or nothing to do with the public good. Things like fruit fly research in Paris, France. I kid you not.” You can see that part here:
This is obviously not making Drosophila researchers happy, especially those who actually use this model animal to study the underlying causes of diseases such as autism. And they are firing back – see this response by UNC researchers: In defense of fruit flies and basic medical research:
Vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin made reference to fruit fly research in a broad statement about wasteful earmark funding that has “little or nothing to do with the public good.” She specifically mentioned work in Paris, France. (Just Google it.)
MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann reported this, and mentioned, specifically, (Drosophila) fruit fly research at the University of North Carolina (“which is not in Paris,” Olbermann noted) that has led to advanced understanding in autism research. (We think you’ll be able to find this easily, too.)
That work, led by neuroscientist Manzoor Bhat, Ph.D., and autism researcher and clinician Joseph Piven, M.D., director of UNC’s Neurodevelopmental Disorders Research Center.
Their work was published in Neuron in September 2007.
Dr. Bhat and Dr. Piven will have more to say tomorrow (Sunday, Oct. 26, 2008).
For now, here’s a passage from a UNC press release:
“Neurons, or nerve cells, communicate with each other through contact points called synapses. When these connections are damaged, communication breaks down, causing the messages that would normally help our feet push our bike pedals or our mind locate our car keys to fall short.
Now scientists at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine have shown that a protein called neurexin is required for these nerve cell connections to form and function correctly.
The discovery, made in Drosophila fruit flies may lead to advances in understanding autism spectrum disorders, as recently, human neurexins have been identified as a genetic risk factor for autism.
“This finding now gives us the opportunity to see what job neurexin performs within the cell, so that we can gain a better insight into what can go wrong in the nervous system when neurexin function is lost,” said Dr. Manzoor Bhat, associate professor of cell and molecular physiology in the UNC School of Medicine and senior author of the study.
The study, published online Sept. 6, 2007, in the journal Neuron, is the first to successfully demonstrate in a Drosophila model the consequences that mutating this important protein may have on synapses.
The research was supported in part by grants from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and the National Institute of Mental Health and funds from the state of North Carolina.”
This study has been highlighted on Keith Olbermann’s show the other day:
More at UNC, a response by a fruitfly researcher, and a criticism of the way Olbermann handled it….
Update: Dr. Manzoor Bhat and Joseph Piven, M.D. have now released the video response – well worth watching:
Update 2: More responses:
Mike the Mad Biologist
Evolgen
Napa Valley Register
Island Of Doubt
Pharyngula
Pandagon
The Tree of Life
Washington Post
Myrmecos Blog
KSJ Tracker
Hyllaballoo
Radula
Uncontrolled Experiment
Greta Christina’s Blog
Bjoern Brembs
Salon.com
Life v. 3.0
Flags and Lollipops – Network Edition
Posted in Politics
My picks from ScienceDaily
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Posted in Science News
Clock Quotes
I keep a conscience uncorrupted by religion, a judgment undimmed by politics and patriotism, a heart untainted by friendships, and sentiments unsoured by animosities.
– Ambrose Bierce
Posted in Clock Quotes
Epic FAIL Response Curve (EFRC)
What is the mathematical description of the treshold point at which any old generic FAIL suddenly becomes Epic FAIL? Is there a similar curve (EWRC) for WIN?
Posted in Fun
New and Exciting in PLoS this week
So, let’s see what’s new in PLoS Genetics, PLoS Computational Biology, PLoS Pathogens, PLoS ONE and PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases this week. As always, you should rate the articles, post notes and comments and send trackbacks when you blog about the papers. Here are my own picks for the week – you go and look for your own favourites:
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Posted in Science News
ScienceOnline09 – show-and-tell

While most of the sessions at ScienceOnline09 will be highly interactive, we have also planned for a Sunday morning series of demos, or “show-and-tell” sessions. This will be a series of short (12-15 minutes) demos of various websites, blogs, applications, programs, etc. We will try to record and post screencasts of these demos on the wiki as well.
The line-up is quite impressive:
* Corie Lok: Nature Network
* Erin Jonson: Scienceblogs.com
* Dave Munger – ResearchBlogging.org
* Apryl Bailey: SciVee.tv
* Moshe Pritsker: JoVE
* Victor Henning: Mendeley
* Antony Williams: ChemSpider
* Kevin Emamy: CiteULike
* Neeru Paharia: AcaWiki – a wiki of open-access long abstracts of peer-reviewed research
* Jean-Claude Bradley: Doing chemistry in Second Life
* Vedran Vucic: Blog aggregators for public health information in Serbia
* Sol Lederman – US Dept of Energy Office of Scientific and Technical Information – Powerful Resources for Scientists and Researchers. Discuss here.
* Roger Harris: how to put your story on a dozen networks, sites and services in 15 minutes or less.
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Posted in SO'09
Today’s carnivals
Fourth Stone Hearth #52 is up on Greg Laden’s blog
Friday Ark #214 is up on Modulator
And announcing MetaCarnival: A Carnival of Blog Carnivals.
Double your impact!
Less than a week to go in our DonorsChoose drive! Good news from the Seed Overlords:
Though we’re already well into the campaign, ScienceBlogs has finally gotten a Double Your Impact donation set up with DonorsChoose for the Blogger Challenge; this means that $15,000 of Seed money will be distributed between our 21 participating bloggers (about $715 each) to benefit their projects as they see fit. Because there is such a limited time remaining in the challenge, DonorsChoose is working to credit each blogger’s account with this money as soon as possible–it will likely be set up by tomorrow (Friday) morning.
Seed Overlords are also pitching in some cool prizes for people who donate to any of the SciBlings DonorsChoose challenges, including mine.
And don’t forget that you can win one of my prizes as well. Just click here….
Posted in Science Education
My picks from ScienceDaily
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Posted in Science News
Clock Quotes
Family values are a little like family vacations – subject to changeable weather and remembered more fondly with the passage of time. Though it rained all week at the beach, it’s often the momentary rainbows that we remember.
– Leslie Dreyfous
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Posted in Clock Quotes
The Science Word (video)
A couple of minutes of quick science news every week:
Posted in Science News
Publishing and Communicating Science
The W. M. Keck Center for Behavioral Biology at North Carolina State University (which includes students, faculty and staff from Departments of Biology (formerly Zoology, my own Department), Genetics and Entomology) is a group I called home for a large chunk of my own graduate experience. Every year, on top of monthly discussion meetings for members, they organize other interesting events, including this one, coming up in two weeks:
The W. M. Keck Center for Behavioral Biology at North Carolina State University announces its 2008 Professional Development Workshop:
Publishing and Communicating Science
Orli Bahcall, Senior Editor of Nature Genetics: The Nature of Scientific Publishing
Peter Binfield, Managing Editor of PLoS ONE: PLoS ONE-Leading a Transformation in Academic Publishing?
John Rennie, Editor-in-Chief of Scientific American: How and Why Scientists Should Talk to the Public
Joe Palca, Science Correspondent for National Public Radio: How Much Can You Say in Three Minutes?
Saturday, November 8, 2008
8:30 am – 3:00 pm
Sigma Xi Conference Center, RTP
****registration required****
A registration fee of $20 is required. Registration after the deadline is $40. Payment by check only, made out to “NC Agricultural Foundation”.
The registration fee includes breakfast, served at 8:30 am, and a box lunch, and is non-refundable.
For more information, check the flyer. I’ll be there….
Posted in Academia, North Carolina, Open Science, Science Practice, Science Reporting
ScienceOnline09 – On Reputation

If you check out the Program of the ScienceOnline09 conference, you will notice that there will be three sessions that address, each from a different angle, the question of building and maintaining scientific authority and reputation online: in scientific papers, in comments on scientific papers, and on science blogs:
Reputation, authority and incentives. Or: How to get rid of the Impact Factor
This session is moderated by Peter Binfield and Bjoern Brembs:
Historically, there has been much use and misuse of Thomson Scientific’s (Thomson Reuters) Impact Factor (IF). Originally devised to rank journals according to the citations its articles draw, it has subsequently been misused to rank the authors publishing in these journals.
In this respect, the first question to be addressed would be as to whether we will need to rank journals in the future. In other words, should where something is published matter at all? If this question is answered with ‘YES’, what could be better criteria for objective journal rank?
Irrespective of how the initial question is answered, the next question is whether or not we need a per-publication assessment tool (which could then be aggregated for each scientist). In this discussion, the main message to be kept in mind is that there is no replacement for actually reading a scientist’s contributions. Should this be practically impossible or other important reasons preclude reading all relevant contributions, what new criteria would make the most sense for evaluating research and researchers?
Once we know what we want to replace the IF with, how would we go about replacing the de facto stranglehold the IF has on the major decision-making bodies in science? In other words, if we can agree on technically feasible, meaningful alternatives, what is the best way to popularize these methods and push the IF out of the marketplace?
Transitions – changing your online persona as your real life changes
This session is moderated by ScienceWoman and Propterdoc:
As you move from high school to college, then to grad school and postdoc, and finally get a job in academia or elsewhere, you leave your name (and thoughts and pictures) all over the Web. When you are blogging as a student or postdoc, your style and choice of topics probably reflects your position in the Academia. How do you change your blog once you get hired (without alienating your regular readers) so it works for you in your new position? How do you manage your online persona so what is out there on the Web about you reflects what you do at the moment and not the ‘shady’ past?
Anonymity, Pseudonymity – building reputation online
This session is moderated by PalMD and Abel. Pseudonymous women-in-science bloggers are also being tapped for leadership and input (please add to the wiki!):
There are good reasons for people in science and medicine, and especially women, to remain pseudonymous online. How does one build a reputation online, how does the process differ from the formal process of the academic world, and how the two worlds interract?
Discuss:
Ideas:
1) Types of identity: real name, pseudonymity, anonymity
2) Reasons
3) Particular issues of women-in-STEM bloggers
4) Pitfalls
5) Being outed: an inevitability
6) Are there responsibilities in writing with a pseudonym?
This last one has already provoked a vigorous discussion on various blogs. Check them out:
Terra Sigillata: The Pseudonymity Laboratory: Do you trust me?
Denialism blog: Why should I trust you?
DrugMonkey: Abel’s Excellent Pseudonymity Inquiry
Terra Sigillata: The Pseudonymity Laboratory: Up from the Comments
DrugMonkey: Pseudonymous Blogging Panel
Comrade PhysioProf: Not This Fucking Shit Again
Terra Sigillata: The Pseudonymity Laboratory: PhysioProf Provides Slide Number One
Pro-science: Blogging anonymously
Terra Sigillata: The Pseudonymity Laboratory: Does Formal Certification Increase Credibility?
DrugMonkey: On a Blogger’s Responsibility to Anonymous Commenters
Denialism blog: The ethics of blog anonymity
Adventures in Ethics and Science: Why would anybody want to blog under a pseudonym?
Terra Sigillata: The Pseudonymity Laboratory: On Threatened or Actual Outing
Sciencewomen: Pseudonymity doesn’t matter in the women in STEM blog community?
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Posted in SO'09
My picks from ScienceDaily
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Posted in Science News
Today’s carnivals
The 10th Edition of the Cabinet of Curiosities is up on Destination: Austin Family
The 97th Skeptic’s Circle is up on The Uncredible Hulk
Grand Rounds Vol. 5 No. 5 are up on Pallimed
Carnival of the Green #150 is up on The Good Human
Carnival of Education – the Mole Day Edition – is up on TheInfamousJ
The 147th Carnival of Homeschooling is up on Melissa’s Idea Garden
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Posted in Carnivals
Ships and Spaceships
Yes, this has been in the works for a long time, and a few hints have been planted here and there over the past months, but now it is official – NASA and The Beagle Project have signed a Space Act Agreement and will work together on a host of projects including scientific research and education. You can read the details on The Beagle Project Blog – space, oceans, biology, science education, history of science, exploration and adventure: all at once. How exciting!
The text of the agreement is under the fold:
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Posted in Earth, History of Science, Science Education, Science Practice
Time Lapse Of The Embryonic Development Of Drosophila Melanogaster (video)
Time Lapse Of The Embryonic Development Of Drosophila Melanogast – Watch the top videos of the week here
Posted in Basic Biology
Clock Quotes
Sometimes the first duty of intelligent men is the restatement of the obvious.
– George Orwell
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Posted in Clock Quotes
The End Of The World Is Over!
How many moles of Guacamole did Bishop Ussher consume on this day? How about Samuel S. Snow on the same day some years later? Not that this Epic FAIL is going to deter the True Believers – dealing with them is a “a repetitious and futile task” and they’ll keep coming up with fresh dates. I bet many expect this November 4th to be one of those dates….
Yet another political roundup
Under the fold, as it is a LOT of links….
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Posted in Politics
Natalie Portman for Early Vote (video)
…and Natalie Portman Wants You to Have “The Talk”:
Posted in Politics
New and Exciting in PLoS ONE
There are 26 new articles published last night and 12 new articles published today in PLoS ONE. As always, you should rate the articles, post notes and comments and send trackbacks when you blog about the papers. Here are my own picks for the week – you go and look for your own favourites:
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Posted in Science News
ScienceOnline09 – very, very international!

Hmmm, let’s see who is coming from really far away, crossing borders and such…..
Richard Grant is coming from Sydney, Australia.
Chris Rowan is coming from Johannesburg, South Africa.
Paula Signorini is coming from Sao Paulo, Brasil.
Carlos Takeshi Hotta is coming from Sao Paulo, Brasil.
Vedran Vucic is coming from Belgrade, Serbia.
Danica Radovanovic is coming from Belgrade, Serbia.
Bjoern Brembs is coming from Berlin, Germany.
Diana Pauly is coming from Berlin, Germany.
Martin Fenner is coming from Hannover, Germany.
Bob O’Hara is coming from Helsinki, Finland.
Enrico Maria Balli is coming from Trieste, Italy.
Kevin Emamy is coming from London, UK.
Victor Henning is coming from London, UK.
Jennifer Rohn is coming from London, UK.
Katherine Haxton is coming from Stoke-on-Trent, UK.
Moheb Costandi is coming from London, UK.
Graham Steel is coming from Glasgow, Scotland, UK.
Karen James is coming from London, UK.
David Bradley is coming from Cambridge, UK.
Henry Gee is coming from Cromer, UK.
Daniel Cressey is coming from London, UK.
Glendon Mellow is coming from Toronto, Canada.
John Dupuis is coming from Toronto, Canada.
Sam Dupuis is coming from Toronto, Canada.
Eva Amsen is coming from Toronto, Canada.
The ScienceOnline09 is looking even more international than the previous two years!
Posted in SO'09
Married With Children (video)
Al Bundy is back! And after figuring out how much he earns selling shoes, and how much tax-break he would get with each candidate, he made a choice:
Posted in Politics
My picks from ScienceDaily
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Posted in Science News
Clock Quotes
Beware of sentimental alliances where the consciousness of good deeds is the only compensation for noble sacrifices.
– Otto von Bismarck
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Posted in Clock Quotes
ScienceOnline09 – Alternative Careers

If you look at the Program carefully, you will see there are three sessions specifically addressing the question of alternative careers at the ScienceOnline09. Here they are:
How to become a (paid) science journalist: advice for bloggers – This session is moderated by Rebecca Skloot and Tom Levenson:
Bloggers are bloggers because they like to write. But writing a blog is not the same as writing for a newspaper or magazine (or radio or TV). Most science bloggers have a background in science, not journalism. So, how does one become a science journalist? We’ll ask some journalists for advice.
Alternative careers: how to become a journal editor – This session is moderated by Henry Gee (senior editor at Nature) and Peter Binfield (managing editor of PLoS ONE):
The leaky pipeline is a problem: many more people earn PhDs in science than there are tenure-track faculty positions. Alternative careers include government or corporate research, teaching, writing/journalism, etc. One attractive job for a young scientist is that of an editor of a scientific journal. But how do you become one? We’ll ask some editors for useful tips.
Blog-To-Book: You are a science blogger but you want to publish a pop-sci book? – This session is moderated by Tom Levenson and Dave Munger:
A number of bloggers have signed book deals recently. But how does one get such a deal? How should one adjust one’s blogging in order to become attractive to agents? Who to contact? How to write a proposal? How to write the book? And once it’s published, how to promote it online? We’ll ask some writers who are also bloggers, and some bloggers who snagged book deals, to share the secrets of getting a book published. Share your experiences as well.
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Posted in SO'09
Do you want to win a prize?
Only 10 days to go!
Seed Overlords are pitching in some cool prizes for people who donate to any of the SciBlings DonorsChoose challenges, including mine.
Janet has the goods:
First, make a donation (from $5 on up) to any of the challenges mounted by ScienceBlogs bloggers.
After donating, forward your email receipt to scienceblogs@gmail.com.
If you’ve already donated to DonorsChoose, you’re still eligible. Just send us a DonorsChoose receipt for a ScienceBloggers’ challenge dated from 2008 to enter.
Winners will be chosen at random every Friday from now through the end of the DonorsChoose Challenge (in other words, there will be drawings on October 17, October 24, and October 31).
Each week we’ll give away such prizes as :
* subscriptions to Seed
* collectible ScienceBlogs mugs
* USB drives
* sleek black laptop sleeves
There may be some books, too.
And, at the very end of the Blogger Challenge (which is to say, after the last moment of October 31st), all of you generous donors who have forwarded your e-mail receipt from DonorsChoose to scienceblogs@gmail.com will be entered in a drawing for the grand prize, a spiffy new iPod Touch.
And don’t forget that you can win one of my prizes as well. Just click here….
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Posted in Science Education
Clock Quotes
This is, I say, the time for all good men not to go to the aid of their party, but to come to the aid of their country.
– Eugene McCarthy
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Posted in Clock Quotes
Smoke Signals, Blogs, and the Future of Politics
This I first posted on June 24, 2004 on http://www.jregrassroots.org, then republished on August 23, 2004 on Science And Politics. I love re-posting this one every now and then, just to check how much the world has changed. What do you think? Was I too rosy-eyed? Prophetic?
If you are relatively new here….
…you may not know that you can also find me on:
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Posted in Blogging
New and Exciting in PLoS this week
There are new articles in PLoS Biology, PLoS Medicine and PLoS ONE today:
Gender Dimorphism in Skeletal Muscle Leptin Receptors, Serum Leptin and Insulin Sensitivity:
To determine if there is a gender dimorphism in the expression of leptin receptors (OB-R170, OB-R128 and OB-R98) and the protein suppressor of cytokine signaling 3 (SOCS3) in human skeletal muscle, the protein expression of OB-R, perilipin A, SOCS3 and alpha-tubulin was assessed by Western blot in muscle biopsies obtained from the m. vastus lateralis in thirty-four men (age = 27.1Β±6.8 yr) and thirty-three women (age = 26.7Β±6.7 yr). Basal serum insulin concentration and HOMA were similar in both genders. Serum leptin concentration was 3.4 times higher in women compared to men (P<0.05) and this difference remained significant after accounting for the differences in percentage of body fat or soluble leptin receptor. OB-R protein was 41% (OB-R170, P<0.05) and 163% (OB-R128, P<0.05) greater in women than men. There was no relationship between OB-R expression and the serum concentrations of leptin or 17Ξ²-estradiol. In men, muscle OB-R128 protein was inversely related to serum free testosterone. In women, OB-R98 and OB-R128 were inversely related to total serum testosterone concentration, and OB-R128 to serum free testosterone concentration. SOCS3 protein expression was similar in men and women and was not related to OB-R. In women, there was an inverse relationship between the logarithm of free testosterone and SCOS3 protein content in skeletal muscle (r = β0.46, P<0.05). In summary, there is a gender dimorphism in skeletal muscle leptin receptors expression, which can be partly explained by the influence of testosterone. SOCS3 expression in skeletal muscle is not up-regulated in women, despite very high serum leptin concentrations compared to men. The circulating form of the leptin receptor can not be used as a surrogate measure of the amount of leptin receptors expressed in skeletal muscles.
Global mercury emissions have stabilized over the past decade, yet levels in Arctic marine mammals have risen by an order of magnitude. Scientists struggle to explain why.
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Posted in Science News
My picks from ScienceDaily
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Posted in Science News





