The Art of Science: Emma McNally’s Cunning Plots

Carbon Sound Field, 2010
Carbon Sound Field, 2010

Emma McNally makes pencil drawings on paper that remind everyone of something – star maps, city grids, network diagrams, physics experiments. In fact, they are none of these things. Inspired by visualizations of complex systems but not based on actual data, they spring entirely from her imagination. And that’s cool too. Her page at the Trinity Contemporary Gallery site has more.

GeoGuessr

GEoGuessrCropI’ve traveled all over the world the past week, without leaving my house. Like many travel geeks I’ve been playing GeoGuessr – the game where you have to guess the location from a streetview image, and get as many points as possible in five rounds.

Everyone plays it differently, but my rules are as follows: you can move around in the area to look for clues, but you can’t use Google to find locations. So even if you find out the name of the town you’re in, you still have to find it on the map. Continue reading “GeoGuessr”

Science Caturday: I don’t get it, Chemistry Cat

extrapolate

I guess that makes me one of the other kind.

The Desert of Lost Shells

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Photo Credit: Josh Witten (CC BY-NC-SA)

With apologies to Howard Andrew Jones; but I am at the beach and could not resist.

Special NIH Fund for Cutting Edge Science

rally for researchFrom the outside, the NIH is a huge sprawling pit of bureaucracy that somehow manages to fund science across the entire spectrum of biomedical research. From the inside, I’ve discovered that there are branches and offices, of which most scientists are totally unaware. In addition to the 27 institutes and centers that make up the NIH, there is a special office dedicated to cutting edge science, risky ventures, and cross-disciplinary collaborations. The NIH Common Fund coordinates research that involves at least two institutes or centers and tries to help remove the roadblocks that keep basic scientific discoveries from moving to the clinic.

I had no idea this office existed and some of the projects they are funding are pretty exciting. There is a single cell analysis project focused on developing the necessary technology and creating workshops to train scientists to use these new techniques. There is also a project to systematically characterize genetic knock-out mice in order to have complete characterization of knock-outs of all genes in the mouse. The mice have all been generated and now the Common Fund is paying for characterization of all the mutant mice. This would be a huge resource for both labs using mice as a model system and those looking to follow their gene of interest into a vertebrate model organism.

The Common Fund puts out requests for applications for all sorts of interdisciplinary projects and the forefront of scientific research is visible in their current efforts.