I’ve got your missing links right here (4 August 2012)
Top picks
Fascinating profile of a transgender scientist on his experience and the science gap
Great piece on tough topic: Is Childhood Pertussis Vaccine Less Effective Than We Thought, by Maryn Mckenna
Deborah Blum’s on fire in this great post on a student death in a UCLA lab
Cool! In the Peruvian Amazon, there are folks who shrug off rabies. (They get bitten a lot by vampires though)
Evgeny Morozov’s hilarious, scathing, completely spot-on review of two TED books and the entire TED monolith is so wonderfully caustic, I needed to lie down afterwards. Sample: “TED is no longer [about] ideas “worth spreading.” [It is] an insatiable kingpin of international meme laundering.”
Cancer stem cells have been tracked. This is nothing less than watching tumours being born. I wonder what the cancer stem cell skeptics will think.
The sad downfall of Jonah Lehrer deepens, beginning with the revelation that he fabricated Bob Dylan quotes for his new book, leading to his resignation from the New Yorker, the pulling of his book, and more. I’ve promoted much of Jonah’s work on this blog, but this clearly violates the “don’t make stuff up” and the “make your thesis fit the evidence, not the other way round” rules of science writing. Amid the burst of shallow, reactionary, almost-gleeful pieces (summed up here), there were also gems. This piece by Bradley Voytek on “the deception ratchet”, this interview with Michael Moynihan who started things off, Alexis Madrigal’s short, punchy meta-take on the ideas culture (“When everyone makes media, everything is a news peg.”), Mark Liberman’s take on fabrication in the media, and Daniel Bor’s neuroscientist perspective on what this means for pop science writing, are all worth reading. That last piece is notable for relating how Jonah covered up an error by shunting the blame to his editor, before wilfully re-making that error. It’s awful to see someone being publicly pilloried, but that marks a point where my sympathy starts evaporating.
Science of history? “Cliodynamics” claims cyclical patterns in world history but some doubt whether it’s good science. Good Nature feature exploring the debate.
Virginia Hughes on how most coverage on the brain’s critical period is wrong, and missed its own critical period.
A new type of flu leapt from birds to seals. Carl Zimmer covers it with typical excellence. This guy, however, is really worried.
“It’s 1879, and psychology is just about to be born.” – great historical post by Maria Konnikova
The secrets behind national anthems. This is a fascinating topic – the author, Alex Marshall, is an old friend.
India’s power cuts affected 10% of all humans on Earth. And here’s everything you need to know on the energy side of the story in 7 paragraphs by David Biello.
This is really useful: how to talk to people in wheelchairs
Ah, the good old days, when kids’ chemistry kits contained cyanide and uranium dust.
HA! What the ending of Dark Knight Rises would’ve really been like, given actual physics. Spoilers, obviously. And let’s all welcome Geoff Brumfiel to the world of blogging.
Wow. Net-casting spider hunt filmed in wild
The fallacy that brain-based explanations of behavior mean less responsibility. Good neuroscience piece in the NYT.
An ant that protects herself with butt foam. Yeah, hur-hur, but also those photos are amazing.
Why do men collect dinosaur eggs? “1. collecting is a dude thing 2. the dude thing must be sexual 3. DINOSAUR EGGS 4. ? 5. …PROFIT.”
Why climate change does not spark moral outrage & how it could, by David Roberts
Nice round-up on the race to get rid of HIV completely
Superb piece on journalism’s failure to expose its own flaws. “Those who get it wrong spend a few days in the spanking machine and then it is back to business as usual…. Journalists assign a nobility to the profession that obscures the flaws within it…. The public isn’t buying.”
News/science/writing
Why, at 40 feet and 20 tons, are whale sharks so darn small? Craig McClain is going to find out
“It shouldn’t have come to this.” – Neuroskeptic blames reviewers for not spotting the psych fraud that Simonsohn did
The killer whale is an apex predator that ****s up other apex predators. Maybe don’t treat it like a pet? By Barbara King
Aussie billionaire wants to chuck his money down the drain and waste everyone’s time by trying to create Jurassic Park.
You can practically feel the frustration radiating off David Biello in this piece on melting glaciers and continuing climate contrarianism.
Best headline ever: Even Deadly Snakes and Monkey Sh*t Couldn’t Stop Me From Excavating Maya Ruins in the Jungle. A tale of adventure from Charles Choi.
“‘Look mom, they’re wrestling!’ he would say. She would stop & look at me. I would slowly shake my head.” Eric Vance on dolphin sex
Drug-resistant gonorrhoea spreading around Europe. A slow clap for us. Also, that story led me onto Wikpedia’s entry on gonorrhoea, and this image. Beware the alluring clap-ridden femme, o brave tiny men of the military!
New ‘spray-on skin’ treatment developed for venous leg ulcers
Some good news: deforestation levels fall in the Brazilian Amazon for 4th year running
Veronique Greenwood: “How did you mount an elephant larynx on a tube?” Scientist: “There was a certain amount of duct tape involved.”
Try the chimpanzee diet
What your brain does when it picks out a voice from the crowd?
Sturzstrom: when dirt flows like lava
How long would it take to tweet a human genome? At 1 tweet/minute… 38 years.
This is a rare misstep for Robert Krulwich: a piece about a theory that, while seductive, is a load of tosh. Someone should send an advisory notice to science writers to just fervently ignore Donald Williamson’s metamorphosis stuff. Krulwich has since added an update, but it doesn’t quite convey how nonsensical and thoroughly disproved the idea actually is.
“Roughly 1% of published papers are fraudulent“: now is the time to confront scientific misconduct.
“Probably the overall biggest risk is our lack of imagination.” –Eric Hand on Curiosity’s “7 minutes of terror”
The record-breaking chilli that fights your nervous system, rioters, and poverty
Humpback songs are so mainstream. I like bowhead whale song. You’ve probably never heard of it.
AAAAARRGGGHH Visceral larva: why you shouldn’t ingest living earthworms and geckos
Dibs on the soundproof room!! 400 lots of neuroscience lab equipment on auction
“The” human genome does not exist. A piece on the limits of the standard reference sequence.
Bob Ward goes for the jugular with this damning take on Matt Ridley, viscount, sometimes science journalist, climate change “skeptic” and failed bank head.
Sloths have rubbish balance – probably because they barely move
DNA hints at African cousins to humans
Buddhist ceremonial releases of captive birds & other animals harms wildlife, may introduce disease
Uncanny valley gets new pit: you can store loved one’s ashes in a 3D-printed urn in the shape of their head
His recent troubles aside, here’s a great exchange between Jonah Lehrer and Chris Chabris on how to write about psychology and uncertain evidence.
Congrats to the Guardian’s newest bloggers: Dean Burnett with Brain Flapping, and Rebekah Heggett and Vanessa Heggie with their history of science blog, the H Word.
10,000 volt 3D electric sprayer which fires streams of heart cells could patch up damaged heart tissue
BP oil spill dispersants “knocked the middle” out of Gulf food chain
How Karma Plays Out in the Real World
NIAID director urges continuation of H5N1 research moratorium. Yeah, H5N1’s not going to honour it too, is it?
A salesman fighting the anti-aging telomere-meddling company he used to work for
Sperm whales like to sleep standing up. We’re a giant hammer away from Whack-a-Whale
The evolutionary adaptations that Aquaman would need to not immediately die or go insane
A continuation of Neuroskeptic’s thoughts on language use in the social sciences, with great comments.
The Sanna retractions begin w/ a paper at Psych Sci.
First approved “digital pill” can be swallowed & tells if you’ve taken your medicine
Oh bloody hell. First firing of a 3D-printed gun
Moral molecule, eh? Oxytocin decreases the adherence to fairness norms (paper).
Hitchhiking jellyfish, gonad-loving parasites and the skeleton shrimp
Russian avatar email is new Nigerian banking email: Russian Mogul Wants to Upload Your Brains
Airborne lasers are uncovering ancient structures, redefining archaeology
Michelle Nijhuis and Jason Goldman discuss the men who stare at (and then kill) goats
SciCurious has a great post on mimetic desire and now I want one too
11 Everyday Things That Are Terrifying Under a Microscope
2 dolphin communities join forces, begin scheming. Probably.
NHS among developed world’s most efficient health systems, says study. Or perhaps, “was”.
Electronic sensor rivals sensitivity of human skin; Inspired by beetles
A somber reflection on the dark side of photojournalism: photographers who didn’t help
Climate “skeptics” all too credulous about paranoid conspiracy theories
LMFLO: Death from laughter
Animal activists’ terror tactics drive staff out of laboratories
The human body: a caustic, abrasive environment in which artificial joints sometimes struggle to thrive
Heh/wow/huh
A map of London’s most common names, by area. Or, multiculturalism visualised.
XKCD nails what happens when introverts socialise.
Onion: “300M W/out Electricity In India After Restoration Of Power”
Beautiful, naturalistic paper bird sculptures
Heh. Peter Jackson will film a 95-hour Silmarrillon adaptation. “That is just gonna be balls-to-the-wall f**king amazing – especially if its true Christopher Walken is playing Melkor.”
Faith in humanity restored! Someone broke into Steve Silberman’s car and someone else did this.
“Why do we fall, Bruce? Because we make terrible decisions when attempting to read simple climbing routes.”
WOW! Lord of the rings. Saturn as you’ve never seen it.
Best Twitter account yet? @KimKierkegaard the philosophy of Kierkegaard mashed with the tweets of Kim Kardashian.
This gymnastics photo makes me simultaneously wince and look awestruck. I look a bit silly now
The health benefits of facial hair. Forget that Factor 30 sunscreen.
Internet/journalism/society
The database of every bomb the US has dropped since WWI is called THOR.
The only way to cover gymnastics is through GIFs.
Jennifer Kahn tells the story behind her story on child psychopathy to The Open Notebook
‘Africa’s propaganda trail’ by Martin Robbins – a stirring read about the lies told to aid visitors in Africa.
BBC apologies for Paxman offending people who believe in literal truth of Genesis. Apparently, being biased against nonsense is a bad thing.
The Plural of E-Mail (It’s “pain”.)
Twitter pulled the account of a journalist who complained about NBC’s Olympics coverage. Laura Gluhanich asked why Twitter didn’t suspend “the account that posted my home address and threatened to dismember me.”
Wikileaks transforms into Wikimadeupsh*t
“I have a duty, and I execute the duty” – U.S. drone pilot. And by “duty”, he means “guy”.
New Yorker’s David Remnick on the art of the profile
“How to Blurb & Blurb & Blurb.”
Journalists forbid journalists from covering their meeting.
Go Further
Animals
- How can we protect grizzlies from their biggest threat—trains?How can we protect grizzlies from their biggest threat—trains?
- This ‘saber-toothed’ salmon wasn’t quite what we thoughtThis ‘saber-toothed’ salmon wasn’t quite what we thought
- Why this rhino-zebra friendship makes perfect senseWhy this rhino-zebra friendship makes perfect sense
- When did bioluminescence evolve? It’s older than we thought.When did bioluminescence evolve? It’s older than we thought.
- Soy, skim … spider. Are any of these technically milk?Soy, skim … spider. Are any of these technically milk?
Environment
- Are the Great Lakes the key to solving America’s emissions conundrum?Are the Great Lakes the key to solving America’s emissions conundrum?
- The world’s historic sites face climate change. Can Petra lead the way?The world’s historic sites face climate change. Can Petra lead the way?
- This pristine piece of the Amazon shows nature’s resilienceThis pristine piece of the Amazon shows nature’s resilience
- Listen to 30 years of climate change transformed into haunting musicListen to 30 years of climate change transformed into haunting music
History & Culture
- Meet the original members of the tortured poets departmentMeet the original members of the tortured poets department
- Séances at the White House? Why these first ladies turned to the occultSéances at the White House? Why these first ladies turned to the occult
- Gambling is everywhere now. When is that a problem?Gambling is everywhere now. When is that a problem?
- Beauty is pain—at least it was in 17th-century SpainBeauty is pain—at least it was in 17th-century Spain
Science
- Here's how astronomers found one of the rarest phenomenons in spaceHere's how astronomers found one of the rarest phenomenons in space
- Not an extrovert or introvert? There’s a word for that.Not an extrovert or introvert? There’s a word for that.
- NASA has a plan to clean up space junk—but is going green enough?NASA has a plan to clean up space junk—but is going green enough?
- Soy, skim … spider. Are any of these technically milk?Soy, skim … spider. Are any of these technically milk?
Travel
- Could Mexico's Chepe Express be the ultimate slow rail adventure?Could Mexico's Chepe Express be the ultimate slow rail adventure?
- What it's like to hike the Camino del Mayab in MexicoWhat it's like to hike the Camino del Mayab in Mexico