Best advice. Read the pipettor manual they are actually amazing resources.
Eg:
'To attain maximum accuracy, set volume must be approached from a higher value. If the desired value is lower than the previous volume, adjust the value to 1/3 turn above the required setting..."
Also these two pages:
Absolutely! One thing I do now with everyone who joins my lab (even postdocs) is to do a how-to pipette session.
I think many of my early grad school failures were due to problems with pipetting.
I've started adding in, make sure to wear your glasses if you need them. Until I started needing reading glasses, I did not realize how much being able to see well is part of good pipetting. Now I realize that some ppl's struggles come from vision issues.
I strongly recommend this scholarly analysis of arguments over the status of the Neutral Theory
The sourcing is excellent, the logic is clear, and the analysis has a practical focus on facilitating science by achieving clarity (rather than adopting a partisan slant)
A minor disagreement: "The phrase ‘non-Darwinian evolution’ is a misnomer" (conclusion #6) is not justified in the text and is IMHO plainly wrong
Curious about the status on #qoto of the new opt-in full-text #search option to allow full-text search of posts. I've heard people chattering about it on other servers, but perhaps this Is this already enabled by default on qoto? Or will it be coming in the future?
I've been very impressed with the functionality of the instance and moderation decisions so far, so I'm sure the mods are on it (or already did it), but I couldn't find definitive info either way through some searching and the info page. Thanks! @freemo
Want to know what my research is about? Follow this thread 🧵 based on a 10min talk I've drawn for a meeting.
The talk was aimed at non-specialist space science colleagues (not the general public!). The slides were built up step by step, but I'm omitting this here & showing only the final graphs, less this becomes a 34-part thread. 11 is plenty enough!
So: "Understanding Winds of Massive Stars Using High Mass X-ray Binaries"
#astrodon #XraysAreTheBestRays #SciArt #scicomm #VicisAstro
1/11
This is an excellent point.
Two related points:
Ergonomics with benchwork. Mostly addressed only after an injury and it's too late. My second rotation was PI was obsessive about people's posture using the microscope because her first student slipped a disc due to bad microscope posture.
I encourage mise en place style of benchwork, by which I mean everything has a specific location that makes sense for the workflow.
It reduces errors and allows some gracefulness.
With the start of the academic year, I want to repost my expert learning article. Soon, graduate students will start their first lab rotations. A lucky few will walk in, and things will work seemingly magically on day one. For most, this marks the start of a sometimes arduous journey of learning to be an expert experimentalist. As a PI, have you ever wondered how to make this journey less arduous? 1/🧵
https://www.molbiolcell.org/doi/10.1091/mbc.E22-11-0517
#Mentoring #AcademicLife #LabLife #GraduateSchool #GradSchool #PhD
@RickiTarr @AirlockDoc Oooh! Storytime!
When I was a little Lana The Musician, one of my heroes was Yo-yo Ma. Growing up in a tiny little backwater town in Kansas, though, my only real contact with him were his albums. I would listen to them on rotation literally all day long in my pocket DiscMan. (That'll tell you how old I am!)
Well, one day I found out he was actually coming into town to play as the featured soloist with the Wichita Symphony Orchestra. I was over the moon with excitement! I had been volunteering at WSO for the last couple of years, because they allowed you to sit in and listen to the symphony when you were done taking tickets and opening/closing doors. So I was determined to go usher for his performance.
The day came, and the house was packed. I could barely contain myself. Yo-yo was actually here! In the same building! Then disaster struck! Try as I might, I could not find an empty seat anywhere in the theatre!
🧵/1 for the rest of the story
Happy (or not?) #MicroscopyMonday!
I made a chart out of all the amoeba faces I've found to put on the lab fridge. Unfortunately, happy faces are not an observable phenotype for Naegleria.
Happy Monday again, #ScienceMastodon! The first Research Highlight from JCS Issue 16 features a paper from Toshiyuki Oda and colleagues at the Universities of Yamanashi and Tokyo, using the unicellular algae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii to break down roles of tubulin modifications in ciliary/flagellar motility. #CellBiology #microtubules #flagellates
Roles of ciliary tubulin PTMs in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii
https://journals.biologists.com/jcs/article/136/16/e136_e1601/325932/Roles-of-ciliary-tubulin-PTMs-in-Chlamydomonas
Looking around for something to better teach the Linux command line.
I found bashcrawl, a dungeon-crawler that works on the command line! Every room is a directory, scrolls are textfiles, and your inventory is kept in environment variables. Such a cool idea!
Golden Gate Audubon Society, having ditched name over racism, settles on new one
California’s largest bird society, the Golden Gate Audubon Society, was renamed the Golden Gate Bird Alliance last night in an effort to sever its ties to John James Audubon, a 19th-century ornithologist who also has a documented history of racial discrimination and slaveholding. “I think this is a great step forward for us and a new chapter in our organizational history,” said Glenn Phillips, executive director of the newly christened Golden Gate Bird Alliance.
I've not been here much lately, but here's a bit more about our paper just out in the Journal of Cell Biology, “Presynapses contain distinct actin nanostructures” (Twitter trained me to come up with short titles 🤏 and long threads 🧵, which are also doable in Mastodon I hope) 1/23
https://rupress.org/jcb/article-abstract/222/10/e202208110/276185/Presynapses-contain-distinct-actin 1/23
Hey academic friends --- are you paying attention to what's going down at WVU? Here's some useful info:
Some very interesting facts about credit card debt and debt collectors, from Cory Doctorow. https://pluralistic.net/2023/08/12/do-not-pay/
1) When you default on credit card debt, it's sold to debt collectors -- who probably buy it for 5 cents on the dollar.
2) You are legally entitled to see the documentation of your debt before you pay it.
3) The collection agency doesn't have the documentation, it would be extremely difficult for the lender to find it because it could be in any of dozens of hard drives from the companies they've bought over the years, and they have no interest in doing so after they sell the debt.
4) Their profit model depends entirely on harassing people who don't know the law, and getting maybe 8% of the debts they paid 5% for.
5) If you know your legal rights, and demand written documentation as required by the law, they will write your debt off and write you off as someone it's not worth the bother of collecting from.
Hi Mastodon community! I am a MRC Investigator and group leader at the MRC Human Genetics Unit at the University of Edinburgh. Very glad to be here...
A certified '#cellbiology on an organismal scale' fanatic- we believe seeing is believing! We ❤️ hacking ways to 'see' biology happen in real time across scales in health and disease!
Imaging addict. Genome wrangler. Developmental biologist at heart.
#cilia #centrioles #genetics #Science #genomesurgery #raredisease
From @MCDuncanLab
---
Here I propose that rather than possessing “good hands,” an innate and unlearnable aptitude for science, such scientists possess expert learning skills that can be effectively mastered. I share a straightforward approach to gaining and teaching expert learning skills in the research lab environment. I also discuss ongoing efforts by others to develop curricula that teach expert learning skills in laboratory courses.
---
Cell biologist and biophysicist studying evolutionary cell biology.
I'm interested in how amoebae divide, especially relatives of the "brain-eating amoeba"
I study this with microscopy, image analysis, and comparative genomics.
Postdoc at UMass Amherst Biology, PhD in Biophysics from Stanford.
I also love jazz and nature photography!
searchable