Friday, September 28, 2012

It's time to turn up the girl power in science

European Commission

The European Commission's "Science: It's a Girl Thing!" campaign has been retooled.

By Alan Boyle

It's not exactly surprising that males are perceived as more competent in science than females ? but researchers at Yale University were surprised to find that even professional scientists showed evidence of such bias. Now the big question is what to do about it.

"Whenever I give a talk that mentions past findings of implicit gender bias in hiring, inevitably a scientist will say that can?t happen in our labs because we are trained to be objective," microbiologist Jo Handelsman, lead author of a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, said in a Yale news release. "I had hoped that they were right."

Nope.


Handelsman and her colleagues asked 127 science faculty members from six institutions to review an application from a senior undergraduate student looking for a job as a lab manager. The faculty members were asked to judge how competent the applicant was, how much the student should be paid, and whether they'd be willing to mentor the student.

Each researcher looked at the same application ??but in some cases the applicant was given a male name (John), and in the other cases a female name was assigned (Jennifer), all on a random basis. When the results were analyzed, it turned out that the sight-unseen male applicant was rated more competent than the female. The mean starting salary offer was $30,238.10 for John as opposed to $26,507.94 for Jennifer. Faculty members were more willing to mentor John than Jennifer.

The data showed a disparity whether the demographic category in question was male or female, young or old, tenured or untenured. "The bias appears pervasive among faculty and is not limited to a certain demographic subgroup," Handelsman and her colleagues wrote.

The researchers emphasized that they weren't suggesting the biases were intentional or stemmed from a conscious desire to hold women back. In fact, they found that the faculty members tended to like Jennifer more than John. That sentiment was generally voiced by faculty women as well as faculty men. It's just that the warm feelings for Jennifer "did not translate into positive perceptions of her composite confidence or material outcomes," according to the PNAS paper.

So what is to be done? "Our results suggest that academic policies and mentoring interventions targeting undergraduate advisers could contribute to reducing the gender disparity," the researchers wrote.

The findings suggest that it's not enough to get young women interested in careers in science, technology, education and math, a.k.a. STEM. There needs to be a conscious follow-through by the folks who do the hiring and mentoring.?You can read through the whole study at the PNAS website.

Maybe it shouldn't be so surprising to find out that scientists can be vulnerable to subtle biases, just like other people. Even journalists. Last month, for example, Lund University researchers Daniel Conley and Johanna Stadmark found that far fewer women than men were being invited to write commentaries for the journals Science and Nature.

Conley and Stadmark acknowledged that men tend to outnumber women in scientific fields, particularly at the higher levels, so there's something of a selection effect at work. But they said it was "still fair to conclude that fewer women than men are offered the career boost of invitation-only authorship in each of the two leading science journals." They called on the editors to "extend gender parity for commissioned writers."

Over time, raising the visibility of women scientists (and raising their salaries) will help draw more girls into research and science education. At least that's the idea. Here are a few more efforts that put girl power to work on the science world's gender issues:

'Girl Thing' reloaded: Remember the European Commission program that stirred up a controversy by putting out a glammed-up video about STEM careers for women? Now the EC's "Science: It's a Girl Thing" program is sponsoring a contest for videographers who think they can do better. On the Scientific American website, "Science Goddess" Joanne Manaster explains how to enter. The winning videos will be shown in November at the European Gender Summit?at the European Parliament in Brussels. Three winners will each receive a cash prize of??1,500 ($1,930).

Think locally:?It's worth looking for organizations that are bringing girl power to STEM on the community level. The best example is Sally Ride Science, which thinks globally and acts locally when it comes to getting girls involved in scientific pursuits. The organization, founded by?the late space icon Sally Ride, presents?a series of science festivals for girls?in grades 5 through 8. The next one is coming up?Oct. 27 at Rice University in Houston, with astronaut Wendy Lawrence as the featured speaker. Other organizations involved in girl-power science include?Girlstart in Austin, Texas; and Science Club for Girls in the Boston area.

Women chemists in the spotlight: The Chemical Heritage Foundation's video series pays tribute to seven women who have made their mark in chemistry?? including Stephanie Kwolek, the inventor of bulletproof Kevlar fiber; Paula Hammond, a pioneer in nanotechnology for drug delivery; and Nancy Chang, a successful biotech entrepreneur.?

Celebrating girl power: Today The Mary Sue?is highlighting a series of posters that pay tribute to women scientists such as Marie Curie, Rosalind Franklin and Jane Goodall. And next month, the Royal Society is planning a Wikipedia "Edit-a-thon" to improve the online encyclopedia's articles about women in science. "Female editors are particularly encouraged to attend," the society says. The event in planned in conjunction with Ada Lovelace Day on Oct. 16.

More about women in science:


In addition to Handelsman, the authors of "Science Faculty's Subtle Gender Biases Favor Male Students" include Corinne A. Moss-Racusin, John F. Dovidio, Victoria L. Brescoli and Mark J. Graham.

Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's?Facebook page, following?@b0yle on Twitter?and adding the?Cosmic Log page?to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out?"The Case for Pluto,"?my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

Source: http://cosmiclog.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/09/26/14115377-turn-up-the-girl-power-in-science?lite

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Controlling the spread of diseases among humans, other animals and the environment

Controlling the spread of diseases among humans, other animals and the environment [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Sep-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Cheryl Dybas
cdybas@nsf.gov
703-292-7734
National Science Foundation

New NSF-NIH-USDA-BBSRC grants fund research on how infectious diseases are transmitted

West Nile virus, Lyme disease and hantavirus are all infectious diseases spreading in animals and in people. Is human interaction with the environment somehow responsible for the increase in incidence of these diseases?

A joint National Science Foundation (NSF) and National Institutes of Health (NIH) Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Diseases (EEID) program is providing answers.

It supports efforts to understand the underlying ecological and biological mechanisms behind human-induced environmental changes and the emergence and transmission of infectious diseases.

NSF and NIH--in collaboration with the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) National Institute of Food and Agriculture and the United Kingdom's Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC)--recently awarded $20.7 million in 11 new EEID grants.

"Threats to human health, food security and ecosystem services are growing, in part due to increases in the spread of diseases," says Sam Scheiner, NSF EEID program director. "These research projects will provide a new understanding of the causes of that spread and help us control these growing and myriad threats."

At NSF, the EEID program is supported by the Directorates for Biological Sciences and Geosciences.

"The interdisciplinary collaborations fostered by the EEID program promote a deeper understanding of how infectious diseases emerge and spread," says Irene Eckstrand of the National Institutes of Health's National Institute of General Medical Sciences.

"This knowledge is enormously helpful in developing effective strategies for suppressing the transmission of infectious agents in animal populations and reducing the burden of disease in humans."

Projects funded through the EEID program allow scientists to study how large-scale environmental events--such as habitat destruction, invasions of non-native species and pollution--alter the risks of emergence of viral, parasitic and bacterial diseases in humans and animals.

"With the growing global population expected to reach nine billion by 2050, we face many challenges related to food security and health," says Douglas Kell, BBSRC chief executive.

"Infectious diseases have a major effect on these issues, threatening the health of humans and livestock. These new EEID projects offer international expertise to help us find solutions to this threat."

Researchers supported by the EEID program are advancing basic theory related to infectious diseases and applying that knowledge to improve our understanding of how pathogens spread through populations at a time of increasing environmental change.

The benefits of research on the ecology and evolution of infectious diseases include development of theories of how diseases are transmitted, improved understanding of unintended health effects of development projects, increased capacity to forecast disease outbreaks, and knowledge of how infectious diseases emerge and reemerge.

"Animal and plant diseases cause significant losses in food production around the globe, with some pathogens also causing food-borne illnesses in humans," says Sonny Ramaswamy, director of USDA's National Institute of Food and Agriculture.

"Agriculturally-relevant research supported by the EEID program is helping us understand how best to prevent, predict and respond to both native and non-native diseases that threaten U.S. food security."

This year's award recipients will conduct research on such topics as: the spillover dynamics of avian influenza in endemic countries; the effects of a changing ocean on the management and ecology of infectious marine disease; and how mutualistic interactions among tick-borne pathogens drive the emergence of human babesiosis in the northeastern United States.

In the urban slums of Brazil, other grantees will study the influence on human health of leptospirosis--a common disease transmitted to people from animals. Still other grantees will study the ecological drivers of infectious disease evolution in an emerging avian pathogen, while others will link models and policy using adaptive management for optimal control of disease outbreaks.

EEID 2012 awardees, their institutions and projects are:

Peter Daszak, Ecohealth Alliance, Inc.
Comparative Spillover Dynamics of Avian Influenza in Endemic Countries

Eileen Hoffman, Old Dominion University Research Foundation:
Development of a Theoretical Basis for Modeling Disease Processes in Marine Invertebrates

Douglas Call, Washington State University:
US-UK Collab: Ecological and Socio-Economic Factors Impacting Maintenance and Dissemination of Antibiotic Resistance in the Greater Serengeti Ecosystem

Peter Hudson, Pennsylvania State University, University Park:
EID: Collaborative Research: Invasion and Infection: Translocation and Transmission: An Experimental Study with Mycoplasma in Desert Tortoises

Donna Rizzo, University of Vermont & State Agricultural College:
Modeling Disease Transmission Using Spatial Mapping of Vector-Parasite Genetics and Vector Feeding Patterns

C. Drew Harvell, Cornell University:
RCN: Evaluating the Impacts of a Changing Ocean on Management and Ecology of Infectious Marine Disease

Andrew Read, Pennsylvania State University, University Park:
US-UK Collab: Vaccines as Drivers of Disease Emergence: Transmission Ecology and Virulence Evolution in Marek's Disease

Dana Hawley, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University:
Ecological Drivers of Virulence Evolution in an Emerging Avian Pathogen

Maria Diuk-Wasser, Yale University:
Babesiosis Emergence in the United States

Matthew Ferrari, Pennsylvania State University, University Park:
US-UK Collab: Linking Models and Policy: Using Active Adaptive Management for Optimal Control of Disease Outbreaks

Albert Ko, Yale University:
Ecoepidemiology of Leptospirosis in the Urban Slums of Brazil

Kerry-Ann Naish, University of Washington:
Ecological Drivers of Transmission, Emergence, and Displacement of an Aquatic Virus in Fish Hosts

###


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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Controlling the spread of diseases among humans, other animals and the environment [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Sep-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Cheryl Dybas
cdybas@nsf.gov
703-292-7734
National Science Foundation

New NSF-NIH-USDA-BBSRC grants fund research on how infectious diseases are transmitted

West Nile virus, Lyme disease and hantavirus are all infectious diseases spreading in animals and in people. Is human interaction with the environment somehow responsible for the increase in incidence of these diseases?

A joint National Science Foundation (NSF) and National Institutes of Health (NIH) Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Diseases (EEID) program is providing answers.

It supports efforts to understand the underlying ecological and biological mechanisms behind human-induced environmental changes and the emergence and transmission of infectious diseases.

NSF and NIH--in collaboration with the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) National Institute of Food and Agriculture and the United Kingdom's Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC)--recently awarded $20.7 million in 11 new EEID grants.

"Threats to human health, food security and ecosystem services are growing, in part due to increases in the spread of diseases," says Sam Scheiner, NSF EEID program director. "These research projects will provide a new understanding of the causes of that spread and help us control these growing and myriad threats."

At NSF, the EEID program is supported by the Directorates for Biological Sciences and Geosciences.

"The interdisciplinary collaborations fostered by the EEID program promote a deeper understanding of how infectious diseases emerge and spread," says Irene Eckstrand of the National Institutes of Health's National Institute of General Medical Sciences.

"This knowledge is enormously helpful in developing effective strategies for suppressing the transmission of infectious agents in animal populations and reducing the burden of disease in humans."

Projects funded through the EEID program allow scientists to study how large-scale environmental events--such as habitat destruction, invasions of non-native species and pollution--alter the risks of emergence of viral, parasitic and bacterial diseases in humans and animals.

"With the growing global population expected to reach nine billion by 2050, we face many challenges related to food security and health," says Douglas Kell, BBSRC chief executive.

"Infectious diseases have a major effect on these issues, threatening the health of humans and livestock. These new EEID projects offer international expertise to help us find solutions to this threat."

Researchers supported by the EEID program are advancing basic theory related to infectious diseases and applying that knowledge to improve our understanding of how pathogens spread through populations at a time of increasing environmental change.

The benefits of research on the ecology and evolution of infectious diseases include development of theories of how diseases are transmitted, improved understanding of unintended health effects of development projects, increased capacity to forecast disease outbreaks, and knowledge of how infectious diseases emerge and reemerge.

"Animal and plant diseases cause significant losses in food production around the globe, with some pathogens also causing food-borne illnesses in humans," says Sonny Ramaswamy, director of USDA's National Institute of Food and Agriculture.

"Agriculturally-relevant research supported by the EEID program is helping us understand how best to prevent, predict and respond to both native and non-native diseases that threaten U.S. food security."

This year's award recipients will conduct research on such topics as: the spillover dynamics of avian influenza in endemic countries; the effects of a changing ocean on the management and ecology of infectious marine disease; and how mutualistic interactions among tick-borne pathogens drive the emergence of human babesiosis in the northeastern United States.

In the urban slums of Brazil, other grantees will study the influence on human health of leptospirosis--a common disease transmitted to people from animals. Still other grantees will study the ecological drivers of infectious disease evolution in an emerging avian pathogen, while others will link models and policy using adaptive management for optimal control of disease outbreaks.

EEID 2012 awardees, their institutions and projects are:

Peter Daszak, Ecohealth Alliance, Inc.
Comparative Spillover Dynamics of Avian Influenza in Endemic Countries

Eileen Hoffman, Old Dominion University Research Foundation:
Development of a Theoretical Basis for Modeling Disease Processes in Marine Invertebrates

Douglas Call, Washington State University:
US-UK Collab: Ecological and Socio-Economic Factors Impacting Maintenance and Dissemination of Antibiotic Resistance in the Greater Serengeti Ecosystem

Peter Hudson, Pennsylvania State University, University Park:
EID: Collaborative Research: Invasion and Infection: Translocation and Transmission: An Experimental Study with Mycoplasma in Desert Tortoises

Donna Rizzo, University of Vermont & State Agricultural College:
Modeling Disease Transmission Using Spatial Mapping of Vector-Parasite Genetics and Vector Feeding Patterns

C. Drew Harvell, Cornell University:
RCN: Evaluating the Impacts of a Changing Ocean on Management and Ecology of Infectious Marine Disease

Andrew Read, Pennsylvania State University, University Park:
US-UK Collab: Vaccines as Drivers of Disease Emergence: Transmission Ecology and Virulence Evolution in Marek's Disease

Dana Hawley, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University:
Ecological Drivers of Virulence Evolution in an Emerging Avian Pathogen

Maria Diuk-Wasser, Yale University:
Babesiosis Emergence in the United States

Matthew Ferrari, Pennsylvania State University, University Park:
US-UK Collab: Linking Models and Policy: Using Active Adaptive Management for Optimal Control of Disease Outbreaks

Albert Ko, Yale University:
Ecoepidemiology of Leptospirosis in the Urban Slums of Brazil

Kerry-Ann Naish, University of Washington:
Ecological Drivers of Transmission, Emergence, and Displacement of an Aquatic Virus in Fish Hosts

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-09/nsf-cts092712.php

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

EXCLUSIVE FIRST LOOK: President Obama's September Scrapbook

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Source: http://directorblue.blogspot.com/2012/09/exclusive-first-look-president-obamas.html

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Sunday, September 23, 2012

Obama: It takes more than 1 term to fix economy

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Coming together: Race Against Breast Cancer attracts 2,500 ...

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Source: http://cjonline.com/news/2012-09-22/coming-together-race-against-breast-cancer-attracts-2500

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Sunday, September 16, 2012

Japan Plans Weak Goodbye to Nuclear Power

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Don't think negatively about money | Personal Growth and Self ...

You need a 7 Day BrainwashWhat?s your relationship with money like? Practically everyone has some kind of blocks around this topic, because we?re almost all fed such garbage as kids.

Were you told, for example, that money doesn?t grow on trees? Well, maybe not literally, but considering that we need almost twenty times what my dad used to get paid when I was a kid, (and that wasn?t that long ago, thank you), all that dosh has to come from somewhere.

Imagine what would happen if we all kept hold of it and never spent any. No-one would get any richer.

Do you realize the word currency and the word affluence are both to do with liquidity? Money has to recycle or it?s useless.

Make friends with money today. Remember times that were tough when somehow something turned up, even if it was just a hot meal. (You can?t eat money anyway!). Think of times when you had plenty, and maybe you were able to give some pleasure by helping out someone else. Do you recall the pleasure you got from that?

See how many references you can come up with that have good feelings associated with money for you. And realize, with a grin, the big truth ? money?s only a feeling.

Source: http://makeyourdreamsreality.com/dont-think-negatively-about-money/

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Thursday, September 13, 2012

Kanye West Raps to Mitt Romney: Pay Your Taxes!


Poor Mitt Romney.

First, it comes out that Nicki Minaj is actually not voting for him in November. Now, in the track "To the World" (off the compilation album "Cruel Summer"), Kanye West takes a shot at the Republican nominee for President by hitting him where it counts:

In Romney's tax returns.

“Mitt Romney don’t pay no tax,” West decrees in a line from the single, following that quip with: “Mitt Romney don’t pay no tax.”

Yes, again. We think he has a point he wants to make. Listen for yourself:

This isn't the only time West has been critical of someone running for office or already in the highest office in the land. He said George W. Bush doesn't care about black people during the Hurricane Katrina disaster.

We wonder what Kim Kardashian thinks of this whole thing. Oh... right: Whatever her mother tells her to think.

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/09/kanye-west-raps-to-mitt-romney-pay-your-taxes/

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PFT: Sundberg heard arm click, kept snapping

snapper12s-2-webAP

Some day, I will grow weary of stories about Redskins long snapper Nick Sundberg playing an entire half with a broken arm.

Today is not that day.

Sundberg is obviously the Baddest Long Snapper in All the Land, and frankly is turning into Chuck Norris right in front of our eyes (Nick Sundberg doesn?t snap the ball backward. His strength reverses the Earth?s gravity until the punter is pulled forward to where he once was). Ronnie Lott cutting off a finger was kind of a pansy move compared to Nick Sundberg.

During an interview with Run TMC Sports (via Dan Steinberg of the Washington Post), Sundberg explained how he broke his left arm.

?They brought 10, so it was a heavy rush, I guess you could say,? Sundberg said. ?It was an overload right, so there were six guys on the right side, four on the left. One of the six guys, the closest to me, looped to the left to make it a balanced look. The guy next to him kind of hit me right in the face, and when he did, I threw my arm out there to kind of get a piece of the guy that was looping, who was [Reed Doughty?s] guy.

?When I did, I guess my arm got in front of his helmet, and he was still going. So as Reed was stepping up, I threw my hand out, got in between his helmet and Reed?s helmet. Somehow the momentum of his helmet hitting my arm backwards and Reed stepping up and my arm hitting Reed?s facemask broke my arm.?

GAAAAHHHHHHHH.

Sundberg said the Redskins medical staff wasn?t sure at first it was broken, but he cleared that up for them.

?I told them it was broken,? Sundberg said. ?They were like, ?Oh, I don?t know, it might not be broken.? And I was like, ?All right, listen, I can feel it clicking. I?ve done it before. When I move my hand this way, the bone?s moving. It?s broken.? ?

GAAAAHHHHHHHH.

Long snappers are tweeners by nature, not really linemen, but not really kickers either. So Sundberg?s move earned him a measure of respect in the huddle many don?t ordinarily receive.

?After it happened, I was walking to the net and a couple of [linemen] grabbed me and they were like, ?hey, is it really broken??? Sundberg said. ?I was like ?yeah.? They were like ?Wowww.? No big deal or anything, is what I said. I kind of flexed real quick.?

Let us all stand in awe and admiration of the Great and Mighty Sundberg.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/09/13/nick-sundberg-man-among-men-heard-arm-click-kept-snapping/related/

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