vielmetti + science   73

Inventions and Ideas from Science Fiction Books and Movies at Technovelgy.com
Explore the inventions, technology and ideas of science fiction writers at Technovelgy (that's tech-novel-gee!) - over 2,045 are available. Use the Timeline of Science Fiction Invention or the alphabetic Glossary of Science Fiction Technology to see them all, look for the category that interests you, or browse by favorite author / book. Browse more than 3,300 Science Fiction in the News articles.
reference  research  science  scifi  technology 
september 2011 by vielmetti
Special Online Collection: Dealing with Data
In the 11 February 2011 issue, Science joins with colleagues from Science Signaling, Science Translational Medicine, and Science Careers to provide a broad look at the issues surrounding the increasingly huge influx of research data. This collection of articles highlights both the challenges posed by the data deluge and the opportunities that can be realized if we can better organize and access the data.
data  science 
march 2011 by vielmetti
Daily Weather Maps Home Page - NOAA Central Library
This site provides access to historical daily weather maps from 1871 thru 2002. To see weather maps for 2003-present go to: http://www.hpc.ncep.noaa.gov/dailywxmap/index.html
wx  history  maps  research  science  weather 
february 2011 by vielmetti
Bad Press Officer. Bad! - MediaJobsDaily
"Bad Press Officer. Bad!" is @mediajobsdaily's take on @edyong209 v Haworth
science  pr  pio 
february 2011 by vielmetti
The decline effect and the scientific method : The New Yorker
The funnel graph visually captures the distortions of selective reporting. For instance, after Palmer plotted every study of fluctuating asymmetry, he noticed that the distribution of results with smaller sample sizes wasn’t random at all but instead skewed heavily toward positive results. Palmer has since documented a similar problem in several other contested subject areas. “Once I realized that selective reporting is everywhere in science, I got quite depressed,” Palmer told me. “As a researcher, you’re always aware that there might be some nonrandom patterns, but I had no idea how widespread it is.” In a recent review article, Palmer summarized the impact of selective reporting on his field: “We cannot escape the troubling conclusion that some—perhaps many—cherished generalities are at best exaggerated in their biological significance and at worst a collective illusion nurtured by strong a-priori beliefs often repeated.”
funnel-graph  philosophy  psychology  research  science  statistics 
january 2011 by vielmetti
From dusty punch cards, new insights into link between cholesterol and heart disease
His Livermore cohort study collected dust until 1988, when Williams discovered the study’s punch cards at the University of California, Berkeley’s Donner Hall. Realizing he had found an epidemiological goldmine, Williams verified the cards’ authenticity by examining logbooks. He also found an old punch card machine to extract their data. Then, with the help of students and research assistants, he located and contacted 97 percent of the people in Gofman’s study over the next nine years.
research  punchcards  data  science 
january 2011 by vielmetti
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery has its own notions of transparency : Pharyngula
don't think journal editor L. Henry Edmunds is quite clear on how the scientific method should work: we're supposed to have the free exchange of information. His journal recently retracted a paper (from other sources, it was apparently because the authors, um, "recycled" data from another study), and when asked why, his answer was "It's none of your damned business", ranted a bit against "journalists and bloggists", and then made an interesting comparison: "If you get divorced from your wife, the public doesn't need to know the details.".
retraction  bloggist  science 
january 2011 by vielmetti
Why I Hate Mechanical Turk Research « cond = false
Ok, it’s not that I actually hate it, but in reviewing a number of Turk papers, reading many more, and listening to many, many, many more planned Turk projects I find myself increasingly frustrated.  Don’t get me wrong: we use it all the time in my group for evaluation purposes (or labeling training/test data).  It allows us to cheaply–an interesting debate in itself–evaluate a number of new ideas in front of a large population.
mturk  crowdsourcing  research  science 
january 2011 by vielmetti
Nigel Hawkes: Peer-reviewed journals aren't worth the paper they're written on - Commentators, Opinion - The Independent
The truth is that peer review is largely hokum. What happens if a peer-reviewed journal rejects a paper? It gets sent to another peer-reviewed journal a bit further down the pecking order, which is happy to publish it. Peer review seldom detects fraud, or even mistakes. It is biased against women and against less famous institutions. Its benefits are statistically insignificant and its risks – academic log-rolling, suppression of unfashionable ideas, and the irresistible opportunity to put a spoke in a rival's wheel – are seldom examined.
via:Vaguery  peer-review  science 
december 2010 by vielmetti
How to stop blogging : Article : Nature
But some of the most valuable scientific meetings are more focused and deliberative, and are by invitation only. These intellectually intimate gatherings are valuable precisely because the researchers who attend feel free to speculate and to stimulate their colleagues, and to try to establish new research agendas. Whether an attendee is a blogger or a reporter or a practising researcher is immaterial. The meeting is 'off the record', and all have to sign up to that.

Closed or open? Meeting organizers need to be clear in their minds which of these two approaches is appropriate, and be explicit about it from start to finish. The consequence that, in competitive fields, presentations at open meetings will become even more protective and boring is an inevitable consequence of the Internet.
conferences  bloggers  ethics  twitter  science  in:nature 
july 2009 by vielmetti
The Case of M. S. El Naschie | The n-Category Café
El Naschie is editor in chief of the journal Chaos, Solitons and Fractals. This journal is published by Elsevier, one of the biggest players in the science publishing business.

But here’s where things get interesting: this journal also lists 322 papers with El Naschie as an author!
elsevier  fun  physics  academia  numerology  el-naschie  mohamed  science 
december 2008 by vielmetti
Generalizability coefficient for Mechanical Turk annotations « Research Remix
In case you aren’t familiar, a generalizability coefficient is a measure of reliability for annotations. A rule of thumb is that a gen coef of 0.7 is good if you are going to use the annotations to evaluate a system, but >0.9 is necessary if you are going to use the annotations to refine the system on a case-by-case basis. Hripsek et al. wrote a nice paper about this. I’ve refined their approach a bit to account for the fact that when using Mech Turk you don’t have a fixed set of annotators across all the questions, based on the excellent tutorial by Michael Brannick here on the Shrout and Fleiss approach.
mturk  science  methodology  reliability  peer-review 
december 2008 by vielmetti
Peter Cariani's Home Page
I firmly believe that if we are to successfully understand how the brain works as an informational system, we need to understand the precise nature of the pulse-coded signals it uses. The neurosciences desperately need to address problems of neural coding head-on, and we need to contemplate neurocomputational alternatives to rate-codes and traditional connectionist networks. One can glimpse the power of temporal pulse codes and computations that could permit neural signals to be liberated from dedicated transmission lines, much in the same way that radio and internet have transcended telegraph networks. The high dimensionality of temporal pattern codes affords more flexible means of implementing type-based logics in neural networks. I am interested in seeing these new kinds of temporal processing networks become a reality; please contact me if you know of persons or organizations interested in funding such paradigm-shifting work.
science  people  philosophy  mit  neuroscience  emergence  hearing  epistemology  cariani  peter 
november 2008 by vielmetti
The Science Creative Quarterly » HOW TO GET YOUR OWN SCIENTIFIC EPONYM, AND, INTRODUCING THE ARBESMAN LIMIT
But first, a cautionary note: do not be greedy, for there is a threshold. This upper barrier, which I term the Arbesman Limit, is the maximum number of concepts or ideas that can be named after a single person. This boundary is unknown, but I imagine it to hover in the neighborhood of twenty. Johann Dirichlet, a French mathematician from the nineteenth century, is probably somewhere near it, with about fifteen formulas and theorems named after him. Einstein also did well for himself, with probably around ten concepts associated with his name.
law  science  humor  naming  arbesman  samuel  dirichlet  johann  arbesman-measure 
october 2008 by vielmetti
Environment Canada: Canadian Hurricane Centre
Welcome to the Canadian Hurricane Centre web site. Located in downtown Dartmouth, Nova Scotia; the hurricane centre specializes in providing information to Canadians on storms of tropical origin that affect Canada or its territorial waters. On this web site you will find the latest hurricane forecasts, hurricane storm summaries, along with a wide range of information related to the science of hurricanes. Learn More...
science  weather  canada  hurricane  disaster  hurricanes  hurricane-kyle 
september 2008 by vielmetti
Whatever
scalzi's blog; home of schadenfreude pie
blog  books  sci-fi  science  sciencefiction 
september 2008 by vielmetti
Patient Power® - Medical Information and Resources
Patient Power®, founded by America's leading patient-advocate, Andrew Schorr, is dedicated to helping you and your loved ones connect with leading medical experts. Gain the knowledge needed to make smart choices about your health through our extensive library of programs available as downloads and podcasts. Keep up-to-date with webcasts on the latest progress in medicine, advocate for yourself and be on the road to a cure or living better with a chronic condition.
health  science  medical  patients  medicine 
august 2008 by vielmetti
Of Exactitude in Science - Borges
...In that Empire, the craft of Cartography attained such Perfection that the Map of a Single province covered the space of an entire City, and the Map of the Empire itself an entire Province. In the course of Time, these Extensive maps were found somehow wanting, and so the College of Cartographers evolved a Map of the Empire that was of the same Scale as the Empire and that coincided with it point for point. Less attentive to the Study of Cartography, succeeding Generations came to judge a map of such Magnitude cumbersome, and, not without Irreverence, they abandoned it to the Rigours of sun and Rain. In the western Deserts, tattered Fragments of the Map are still to be found, Sheltering an occasional Beast or beggar; in the whole Nation, no other relic is left of the Discipline of Geography.
borges  science  cartography  fiction  maps  georaphy  map  mapping 
august 2008 by vielmetti
Scientists Find Blueberries Reverse Age Related Memory Deficits
“Impaired or failing memory as we get older is one of life’s major inconveniences. Scientists have known of the potential health benefits of diets rich in fresh fruits for a long time. Our previous work had suggested that flavonoid compounds had some kind of effect on memory, but until now we had not known the potential mechanisms to account for this,” stated Dr. Jeremy Spencer, a lecturer in Molecular Nutrition at the University of Reading, who headed the study.
lifehacks  foods  nutrition  alzheimers  news  health  science  memory  blueberry  blueberries  i-has-a-flavinoid  spencer  jeremy  university-of-reading 
august 2008 by vielmetti
The Geometry of Musical Chords -- Tymoczko 313 (5783): 72 -- Science
A musical chord can be represented as a point in a geometrical space called an orbifold. Line segments represent mappings from the notes of one chord to those of another. Composers in a wide range of styles have exploited the non-Euclidean geometry of these spaces, typically by using short line segments between structurally similar chords. Such line segments exist only when chords are nearly symmetrical under translation, reflection, or permutation. Paradigmatically consonant and dissonant chords possess different near-symmetries and suggest different musical uses.

Department of Music, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA, and Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, 34 Concord Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
music  science  math  chords  musictheory  tymoczko  dmitri  orbifolds  geometry 
august 2008 by vielmetti
OneGeology - Making Geological Map Data for the Earth Accessible
OneGeology is an international initiative of the geological surveys of the world and a flagship project of the 'International Year of Planet Earth'. Its aim is to create dynamic geological map data of the world available via the web.
maps  research  reference  visualization  map  mapping  science  education  geography  neogeography  database  online  data  geology  gis  geospatial  rocks 
july 2008 by vielmetti
Database of Uncertainties about the Effects of Treatments (DUETs)
The Database of Uncertainties about the Effects of Treatments (DUETs) has been established in the UK to publish uncertainties that cannot currently be answered by referring to reliable up-to-date systematic reviews of existing research evidence
drugs  health  healthcare  knowledge  km  medical  medicine  questions  reference  reviews  science  uncertainty  uk  known-unknowns 
july 2008 by vielmetti
Michael Nielsen » The Future of Science
when Robert Hooke discovered his law in 1676, he published it as an anagram, “ceiiinossssttuv”, which he revealed two years later as the Latin “ut tensio, sic vis”, meaning “as the extension, so the force”.
ceiiinossssttuv  party-like-its-1676  essay  future  science  social  hooke  robert  anagram 
july 2008 by vielmetti
1957 atomic revolution comic book
Particularly though, I think this comic is just really beautifully done - and reading through it, it is difficult to believe that it's gone ignored for almost half a century
party-like-its-1957  atomic  nuclear  propaganda  science  technology 
july 2008 by vielmetti
Stephen Wolfram, A New Kind of Science
"A Rare Blend of Monster Raving Egomania and Utter Batshit Insanity". cosma holds no punches
automata  math  mathematics  review  science  wolfram  stephen 
july 2008 by vielmetti
Darwin | American Museum of Natural History
Only a month or so elapsed between the time he opened the first full transmutation notebook, in about July 1837, and the time he drew a crude—but unmistakable—evolutionary tree.
biology  evolution  science  notebook  sketch  drawing  party-like-its-1837 
july 2008 by vielmetti
Economist.com - John Maeda debate on technology
"Having choice is good, especially when the available choices are all excellent ones." don't agree with this; cf Barry Schwartz "Paradox of Choice".
science  technology  choice  fallacy  simplicity  complexity 
march 2008 by vielmetti
Study Finds Healthy River Ecosystems Vital to Removing Excess Nitrogen
The research, by a team of 31 aquatic scientists across the United States, was the first to document just how much nitrogen that rivers and streams can filter through tiny organisms or release into the atmosphere through a process called denitrification.
ecology  hydrology  pollution  landscape  science  via:pruned 
march 2008 by vielmetti
International Slide Rule Museum
I learned multiplication in 12th grade math on a slide rule and with log tables; we had an enormous slide rule mounted above the blackboard. awesome.
calculator  culture  education  engineering  history  math  mathematics  measurement  museum  science  sliderule  logarithm 
december 2007 by vielmetti
No tenure for Technorati: Science and the Social Web - john wilbanks' blog - john wilbanks' blog on Nature Network
scientific communication is a different beast than normal human communication. Scientists talk to their friends, but when talking to people they don’t know, it’s much more formal. They use communication to spec theories and to claim ground as theirs.
collaboration  network  open  closed  science  socialsoftware  social_networks  software  scholarly 
november 2007 by vielmetti
Modeling the Small-World Phenomenon with Local Network Flow
We introduce an improved hybrid model that combines a global graph (a random power law graph) with a local graph (a graph with high local connectivity defined by network flow).
giant-global-graph  ggg  local-graph  hybrid-graph  model  small-world  science  science-is-hard 
november 2007 by vielmetti
Cafe Scientifique
Cafe Scientifique is a place where, for the price of a cup of coffee or a glass of wine, anyone can come to explore the latest ideas in science and technology.
barcamp  not-barcamp  science  events 
november 2007 by vielmetti
Math/Science Night | Burns Park Elementary PTO
This family event, typically held on an evening in March, provides opportunities for students and parents to explore activities related to a particular topic, such as biology, chemistry, earth science, or math.
math  science  math-science-night  annarbor  michigan  school  burnspark  pto 
october 2007 by vielmetti
chadzilla: making vodka pills in 24 hours
using a cornstarch base as a mold, make candies filled with flavored alcohol.
blog  booze  cooking  food  recipes  science  molecular-gastronomy  foodie 
october 2007 by vielmetti
Uncertain Science ... Uncertain World - Cambridge University Press
Here is a new book that should be just what you seek. It is Uncertain Science…Uncertain World by Henry N. Pollack (a geophysicist at the U. of Michigan). It deals, as the title reveals, with the uncertainty inherent in science and the fact that we live
henry-pollack  via:bob-dott  via:maitri  umich  michigan  annarbor  science  geophysics  uncertainty 
september 2007 by vielmetti
The Impoverishment of Imagination in Science - A Discussion : Maitri’s VatulBlog
An ongoing conversation on the future of science education based on an excerpt from Neil Postman’s book Technopoly: The Surrender of Culture to Technology. The main participant so far is Robert H. Dott, emeritus professor of geology at the University of
maitri  postman  neil  science  history  geohistory  philosophy-of-science  imagination  dott  bob 
september 2007 by vielmetti
The Nearctic Spider Database
Greenland, Canada, the United States, parts of Mexico, and Bermuda are collectively home to 70 families, 674 genera, and approximately 4,500 species of spiders. A continuous inventory of their identity and geographic location is critical to the management
bioinformatics  biology  cool  database  insects  science  spider  spiders  webdev  michigan-spiders  species  identification  common-spiders 
september 2007 by vielmetti
Storm Prediction Center
awesome weather map meta-information and predictions + storm reports + damage reports
center  noaa  i-has-a-bukkit-full-of-floodwater  environment  flood  forecast  forecasting  government  hurricane  maps  map  geo  prediction  reference  science  storm  weather  work 
august 2007 by vielmetti
Chronicle Careers: 9/24/2001: The Scientific Paper Mill
Surprisingly, the sheer volume of papers -- not the number of citations per paper -- was the best predictor of prestige. "Some people don't want to believe it," Feist says. "My caveat is that this was an elite sample. The trend probably wouldn't hold for
science  prestige  minimum-publishable-unit  quantity-over-quality  a-list 
august 2007 by vielmetti
Hands-On Museum - ArborWiki
It’s Science on Wheels! We roll up, roll in, and set up — taking the mystery out of science and presenting fun, inquiry-based programs directly to the students in your classroom, library, festival, or youth center! If you can’t bring your class or g
annarbor  museum  handson  science  kids  outreach  pto 
july 2007 by vielmetti
Pharyngula: Compact Fluorescent Lights are gonna kill you … NOT.
awesome long intelligent discourse on compact fluorescents, including cleanup of broken ones and various entertaining mercury amalgams
cfl  lighting  environment  mercury  politics  science 
july 2007 by vielmetti
The Science Creative Quarterly » INCREASE THE N
there’s a trend but the error is big / increase the N
music  science  hefe  myspace  increase-the-n 
june 2007 by vielmetti
Paleo-Future
the old ways of thinking about the future; a history of the future. nice illustrated blog.
blog  future  predictions  science  retrofuturism  paleofuture  blogroll  futures  futurism  history  history-of-the-future  steampunk  retro  robot  liberty-robot 
may 2007 by vielmetti
High Country News -- April 9, 2007: Why would a federal agency trash its libraries?
EPA gave itself a black eye and enraged librarians throughout the country last year, when, without public notice or congressional consultation, it began the process of dismantling its network of 26 technical libraries.
library  science  epa  superpatron 
april 2007 by vielmetti
Peter Suber, Open Access News
n his perceptive position paper for the workshop, Don Waters cites a fascinating paper by Harley et al. entitled "The Influence of Academic Values on Scholarly Publication and Communication Practices". I'd like to focus on two aspects of the Harley et al
blog  science  trends  publishing  scholarly-skywriting 
april 2007 by vielmetti
IRIS Seismic Monitor
nice global real time earthquake overview; visualization shows both current activity and enough history that you can pick out the plates of the earth's crust.
地震  quake  earthquake  geography  map  mapping  maps  visualization  science  geology 
april 2007 by vielmetti
BBC - Radio 4 - Extra Senses
Graham Easton delves into the Extra Senses that we take for granted. He finds out how they work and meets some remarkable people who experience these senses in a unique way.
senses  pain  balance  bbc  science  via:jhritz  brain  health  via:northsidebreakfast 
april 2007 by vielmetti
BibliOdyssey's bookmarks on del.icio.us
annotated log of postings to the bibliodyssey collection of design, illustration, and antiquaria. wonderful.
art  books  delicious  design  history  illustration  images  literature  media  science  vintage  antiquaria  via:tozier  ***** 
april 2007 by vielmetti
The House bears down on Fish and Wildlife policy on climate change
With this week's revelation that U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service employees were instructed not to talk about climate change, sea ice and polar bears while on foreign visits, Democratic lawmakers are baring their authoritative teeth.
globalchange  climate  usfws  seaice  polarbears  science  censorship  politics 
march 2007 by vielmetti
The Museum of Scientifically Accurate Fabric Brain Art: Karen Norberg #1
The museum exhibits the world's largest collection of anatomically correct fabric brain art, inspired by research from neuroscience, dissection and neuroeconomics. Our current exhibition features three quilts with functional images from PET and fMRI scann
brains  knitting  neuroscience  via:zefrank  science  art 
march 2007 by vielmetti
SciTech Writing & Editing
We offer expert science and technology writing and editing services based on 24 years of advanced IT experience. Our fields of expertise range from electrical engineering and wide-area networking to remote collaboration technologies. (susan r. harris)
annarbor  writing  techwriting  science  editing  a2b3 
february 2007 by vielmetti
wesowizards.home: Events 2007
2d through 5th grade events. show this to saul for giving him ideas what he might want to do next year.
annarbor  bpe  science  olympiad  washetnaw  elementary 
february 2007 by vielmetti
Wacky World Web Library at Greg Laden
John Blyberg's library card generator hits the science blogs
library  science  via:jblyberg 
january 2007 by vielmetti
NASA - Strange Moonlight
on the peculiar qualities of human vision and the moon
astronomy  science  vision  moon  nasa 
october 2006 by vielmetti
ISI Web of Knowledge - Thomson Scientific
compare vs. citeseer and citeulike. i think there's a umich-wide license, but it doesn't let me connect from off campus.
database  paper  reference  research  science 
june 2006 by vielmetti
Program on Networked Governance - John F. Kennedy School of Government
Networked governance refers to a growing body of research on the interconnectedness of essentially sovereign units, which examines how those interconnections facilitate or inhibit the functioning of the overall system. The objective of this program is two
complexity  governance  government  politics  science  social  sociology  socnet  socialnetworks  social_informatics 
april 2006 by vielmetti
PLoS Computational Biology: “Antedisciplinary” Science
what to call science before it has neatly been carved up into fields
via:dcooney  via:radev  community  science 
august 2005 by vielmetti

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