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'Munch was a different musician under studio conditions than he was live, Holoman writes, and he controlled his most explosive tendencies in the hope of making records that would last. Even his two incendiary Boston readings of Berlioz’s “Symphonie Fantastique,” his trademark piece, come nowhere close to the maelstrom he inflamed onstage.'

nytimes.com/2023/02/02/arts/mu

RT @s_tavazoie
Prognostic cancer modules are superior to single-gene predictors of disease progression. From the brilliant team of Balaji Santhanam and Panos Oikonomou. @Columbia, @Columbia_Bio
cell.com/cell-genomics/fulltex

NEW ARTICLE: Twenty Screenplays by Women to Download for Free and Study

After my friend writer-director Liz Garcia challenged a fellow filmmaker's list of great screenplays for lacking any by women, I culled the internet and assembled this list of twenty brilliant scripts by women you can download for free and study.

Read: medium.com/@cole.haddon/on-scr

#screenwriting #screenwriter #writing #storyteller #film #movies #cinema #cinephile #writerscommunity #writinglife #amwriting #CreativeWriting

The 1st results for the @BharatBiotech nasal vaccine (BBV154, approved in India) randomized trial vs shots now posted, superior antibody and cellular immune response (vs ancestral and Omicron); 4-fold less side effects papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cf

Competence in #Streptococcus controls genetic transformation, biofilm formation & virulence. @JWVeening &co show that it's also crucial for host #adherence, involving the fratricin CbpD, which exposes #virulence factors to the cell surface #PLOSBiology plos.io/3DtTwmJ

By the time they're done with it, is it still your manuscript?

"To characterize cell-type-specific transcriptional heterogeneity in active Crohn’s disease, we profiled 720,633 cells from the terminal ileum and colon of 71 donors with varying inflammation status."

cell.com/immunity/fulltext/S10

"There’s only so much funding you can ask individual faculty to obtain given scarce federal support."

My latest story for @sciencemagazine—about the postdoc salary situation. #academicchatter #ScienceMastodon #postdoc
science.org/content/article/po

"We have no one to blame but ourselves if we don’t give people credit for collaborating - when we hire them, when we promote them, when we give them our respect and recognition as scientists."
@CoriBargmann on the

embo.org/podcasts/our-special-

"Here, among seemingly unending geological strata, we can gaze into what the natural philosopher John Playfair called ‘the abyss of time’, a description he made after he, James Hall and James Hutton in 1788 observed layered geological aeons in the rocky outcrops of Scotland’s Siccar Point – a revelation that would eventually lead Hutton to become the founder of modern geology. In the Rift Valley, this vertical, tilted way of seeing is all the more powerful because the story of the Rift is the story of all of us, our past, our present, and our future."

aeon.co/essays/the-rift-valley

"The current model for GVHD holds that disease is maintained through the continued recruitment of alloreactive effectors from blood into affected tissues. Here, we show, using multiple approaches including parabiosis of mice with GVHD, that GVHD is instead primarily maintained locally within diseased tissues."

Sacirbegovic et al @ImmunityCP cell.com/immunity/fulltext/S10

A well-preserved #Neolithic knife, the blade was made of flint and fastened with birch tar in a wooden handle.
From the pile dwelling settlement at Wangen-Hinterhorn, Lake Constance, dating 3800-3500 BC.

On display at Archäologisches Landesmuseum Baden-Württemberg, Konstanz

#archaeology

Looking for feedback on some new thoughts about Big Ideas in brain/mind research.

I've spent quite a long time researching and thinking about the history of brain/mind research in terms of the Big Ideas that have emerged. Pre-1960, it's pretty easy to list the big ideas that researchers had reached consensus around. Since 1960, that's harder to do. There's plenty of consensus around new facts (like umami is supported by receptor X on the tongue), but it's difficult to regard the things that brain researchers agree on as new, big ideas. At first, I (mis)interpreted this as a paucity of new ideas, but I no longer think that's correct - I've found a ton. Instead, I now believe that they are there but we haven't arrived at consensus around them.

I'm wondering: Why might have researchers arrived at more consensus around Big ideas introduced 1900-1960 vs 1960-2020? Obviously there's the filter of history and the fact that it takes time to work things out. But is there more to it than that? For example, have the biggest principles already been discovered? And so we are left with more of a patchwork quilt?

A sample of big ideas pre-1960ish with general consensus
*) Nerve cells exist (it's not a reticulum)
*) Neurons propagate info electrically and then chemically between them
*) DNA > RNA > Protein is a universal genetic code or all living things
*) Explaining behavior needs intermediaries between stimuli and responses (cognitive maps/minds)

A sample of big ideas with no general consensus introduced post-1960ish:
*) Cortical function emerges from repetitions of a canonical element
*) The brain is optimized for goal-directed interactions with the environment in a feedback loop (prediction/embodiment/free energy)
*) The brain is a complex system with emergent properties that cannot be understood via reductionist approaches
*) Fine structural detail in the brain (the connectome) matters for brain function

I'd love to hear your thoughts.

Out today in Nature Human Behaviour: "A systematic review and meta-analysis of the evidence on learning during the COVID-19 pandemic" with @betthaeuser and Anders Bach-Mortensen nature.com/articles/s41562-022

Reading in (online) journal club:

Jansson and Wu @NatureRevMicro@twitter.com

Soil viral diversity, ecology and climate change

#soil #SoilHealth #virus #biodiversity #ClimateChange #ecology
nature.com/articles/s41579-022

@DarrenObbard

"Approximately a quarter of eukaryotes are infected with the bacterium Wolbachia." !!!!!

"we show that Wolbachia infection supports fly development and buffers against nutritional stress. Wolbachia infection across several fly genotypes and a range of nutrient conditions resulted in reduced pupal mortality, increased adult emergence, and larger size."

Lindsey et al. 2023 biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/20

Wow. #Drosophila #Wolbachia

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