Of the game, explained here, in The Economist. They may need to be slightly adjusted for the 21st century to handle big-team science.
The power of the corpus callosum…
For Albert Einstein that is, story here. I’ll note that the Director of the National Museum of Health and Medicine mentioned in the story (where Einstein’s brain currently resides) is none other than our Advisory Board Chair, Dr. Adrianne Noe.
Canine fMRI…
From Emory’s Gregory Berns here. Another argument for dog rights.
Private innovation….from the Economist
http://c.brightcove.com/services/viewer/federated_f9?isVid=1
I’m an ethusiast of what Elon Musk is trying to do in Space and with Tesla. On a week when all the news seems grim here in Washington, here’s my version of good news…
Catch 22 on the debt ceiling….
Women in science–endangered species?
Eileen Pollack’s fine piece in today’s NYT magazine is here. I thank Avrama Blackwell for the link.
Ersatz peer review in fly-by-night journals….
John Bohannon’s science paper is here. This is a huge deal for science and for academic scholarship. As a journal editor myself (and my journal is over a century old), the value proposition that we offer is the quality of our peer review.
The government shutdown….
I haven’t written yet about this partly because, as a scientist, I’m so frustrated with the quite real effect on research, particularly at the NIH. But science has become truly global and, as a result, if its not done here in the States, it will get done elsewhere–although the results may then not accrue to advantage of the US.
I’m even more concerned about the debt ceiling issue. I’ve written about that issue before in the context of sequestration. I’ll simply reiterate that the brinksmanship is a very bad thing for the global economy.
Ultimately what I’m most worried about is the political dysfunction in governance at the federal level. This has manifested throughout the Obama Presidency in one form or another. Many others have written how the dysfunction we are seeing now is reminiscent of that seen before the American Civil War. That’s not a good precedent.
Family portrait-Krasnow Institute for Advanced Study
Two Cultures redux…
That’s CP Snow’s book, Two Cultures and its analysis of science versus the humanities. The lecture from which the book emerged took place in 1959. The battle still rages and the latest round can be found here. In the modern version its Steven Pinker versus Leon Wieseltier–enjoy!
