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This makes me physically sick. It’s a toxic brew of the artificial scarcity of ‘elite’ institutions, the cheapening of research, and the runaway professionalization of being a kid.

propublica.org/article/college

I wrote this little program to visualise biological tracking data from #microscopy. We used it a lot for sense checking and verifying a lot of our data, but sadly it won't make it into our next paper. Anyway, today I tidied it up a bit and will make it available with all the rest of the code for others to use.

#reproducibility #CellBiology #ScienceMastodon

I respect screaming babies on airplanes because they're the only ones providing honest feedback about the overall air travel experience

Six year ago, I returned to NIH in Bethesda, where I started my career as a science writer, to be a patient in an ambitious study to understand the patho-biology of post-infectious myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS).

The study included 30+ researchers & many substudies, and was essentially a fishing expedition to understand what goes wrong to make us so sick (like bedbound-for-years sick). 1/

(photo by @Bether )

#MEcfs #ChronicIllness #medicine #nih

Democrats being sunk on judicial appointments (one of the few areas where the party can take tangible, meaningful action) because an aged member of the party can't physically make it to any of the votes but also refuses to simply treat her situation with grace and resign is such an apropos thing for where the country is right now. The arguments against Feinstein's resignation are so dumb as to verge on bad faith.

sfgate.com/politics/article/di

please enough video tutorials give me a webpage with text and pictures

Amazing how many brilliant scientists will look at an LLM "passing" a standardized test and think, "wow, this computer is very smart" and not "standardized tests are very bad at measuring intelligence"

Getting a lot of new follower requests from folks with zero bios. Please fill out bios or do a short intro. It helps a lot. Thanks ✌

@erolakcay @ryneches maybe a succinct way of reconciling the two points is that the elife model can be called peer review without gatekeeping, but not publishing without gatekeeping.

I also really like @ryneches 's point that an editor could choose to send a paper for review precisely to generate highly critical reviews, so the signal from the editor's decision is not as clear-cut as "gatekeeping" naively suggests.

Beware of anti-myths!

Spinach *does* have a higher concentration of iron than a steak.

The problem is that it's not absorbed nearly as much when digested.

Nice read.

What next? Edge (23,34) is not really ambiguous in the Karate Club?

Crosspost from @DanLarremore@twitter.com:

New one on my list of favorite papers.

"Academic Urban Legends"

It explores the ironic follies of how we cite literature by tracing a myth: that we think spinach has a lot of iron only because of a decimal point error in the early 1900s. h/t @jugander@twitter.com

journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.11

🐦🔗: twitter.com/DanLarremore/statu

It was so cool to see this story come together. @KatrinaVelle has done a masterful job synthesizing old literature and new comparative physiology to push forward our understanding of the contractile vacuole!

Katrina Velle  
(1/13) We (Rikki Garner, Tati Beckford, Makaela Weeda, Chunzi Liu, @askennard, Marc Edwards, Lil Fritz-Laylin, and I) have a new preprint about osm...

Tell me all the reasons why it would be a bad idea to use a #kickstarter model for #research #funding (especially to top-up existing projects)

(7/13) We then took this project to Woods Hole during the 2022 MBL Science Physiology Course, where Manny Richter, Nick Martin, and Chunzi Liu took amazing videos! Chunzi also started modeling CV filling, which made a great addition to our manuscript!

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(1/13) We (Rikki Garner, Tati Beckford, Makaela Weeda, Chunzi Liu, @askennard, Marc Edwards, Lil Fritz-Laylin, and I) have a new preprint about osmoregulation!
biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/20
Here’s the tootorial & backstory:

I'm happy to share our new preprint on osmoregulation!
biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/20

tootorial coming soon

I hope you all enjoy it more than the amoebae did!

RT @FritzLaylin
New preprint from the lab. Love this project. Went in thinking we were studying an actin phenotype, but it turned it WASN’T ACTIN! twitter.com/biorxivpreprint/st

Like cell biology AND free pizza?
Join Dr. Marc Edwards, Dr. Arif Ashraf, and me for a panel on cell biology at the Amherst Women's Club (35 Triangle St., Amherst), tonight at 6!

Happy #MicroscopyMonday!
Here’s a collage I made a while back highlighting Naegleria’s actin (cyan) and microtubule (orange) cytoskeletons. Naegleria only use microtubules to build a mitotic spindle, and when they transiently transform into a flagellated cell type.

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