Science Blogs
Blogs, magazines, and articles, mostly science and research related.
473 listings
Submitted Aug 13, 2007 to Science Blogs A mostly bioinformatics/computational biology blog from a bioinformatician in Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
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Submitted Aug 12, 2007 (Edited Aug 11, 2008) to Science Blogs This a blog about strange and wonderful medical science publications. It is not as boring as it sounds. Honestly.
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Submitted Aug 11, 2007 to Science Blogs This is my personal weblog, where I discuss things related to my interests in science (wildlife, marine biology, artificial neural systems, evolutionary computation, science education, fighting the anti-science movement), my avocations (falconry, photography), and my health, or lack of it.
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Submitted Aug 08, 2007 (Edited Jun 01, 2008) to Science Blogs A writer takes a bite out of life and science in the big city.
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Submitted Aug 08, 2007 to Science Blogs A medical student's journey inside genetics and medicine through web 2.0.
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Submitted Aug 08, 2007 (Edited Sep 25, 2007) to Science Blogs A palaeontology student living in West London funding my own part-time PhD because it's cheaper than going full-time.
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Submitted Aug 07, 2007 to Science Blogs Deconstructing the most sensationalistic recent findings in human brain imaging, cognitive neuroscience, and psychopharmacology.
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Submitted Aug 07, 2007 to Science Blogs Materials informatics, the web, design, graphics, music and the politics/culture of open access.
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Submitted Aug 07, 2007 to Science Blogs A place to check what I have been reading and thinking about bioinformatics science and technology.
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Submitted Aug 06, 2007 to Science Blogs "Citizen Scientists" are people who conduct volunteer scientific research without formal credentials. The data gathered and reported by citizen scientists is used by professional scientists and is typically available to the public. Anyone with an interest can be a citizen scientist; the complexity ranges from making and reporting simple observations with the naked eye to using very high tech equipment costing thousands of dollars. In this weblog, I'll try to point to interesting projects and bits of news related to the work being done by citizen scientists -- and the organizations that support them. I'll start off here by creating a post for each of the projects I've been reading about recently.
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Submitted Aug 06, 2007 (Edited Aug 06, 2007) to Science Blogs A tech blog by Pat Tufts: "I am an AI guy. I work at Metaweb, a spinoff of Applied Minds. In a previous life, I invented one of Amazon's two main product recommendation systems. Millions of people have used this software. I think that's pretty cool."
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Submitted Aug 05, 2007 to Science Blogs Healthy, organic food for my ego, so it can grow up big and strong by Chris DiBona. I am the Open Source Programs Manager for Google, the editor of Open Sources and Open Sources 2.0 and I help run the Floss Weekly Podcast.
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Submitted Aug 05, 2007 to Science Blogs This blog deals with chemblaics in the broader sense. Chemblaics (pronounced chem-bla-ics) is the science that uses computers to address and possibly solve problems in the area of chemistry, biochemistry and related fields. The big difference between chemblaics and areas as chem(o)?informatics, chemometrics, computational chemistry, etc, is that chemblaics only uses open source software, making experimental results reproducable and validatable. And this is a big difference!
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Submitted Aug 05, 2007 to Science Blogs Blogging about the science, engineering, and human factors of biomedical research data reuse.
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Submitted Aug 02, 2007 to Science Blogs Dr. Heidi Cullen, Climate Expert and host of Forecast Earth at The Weather Channel, blogs on climate change and the environment.
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Submitted May 11, 2007 to Science Blogs The world's oceans were the platform for the first great era of globalization over a century ago. While the 20th century was dominated by exploitation of the land and air, over the next few decades, a convergence of economic, climatological and technological forces will bring the oceans back to the forefront as a new frontier for human activity. From new sources of energy and nutritious food to limitless biodiversity and potential settlement sites the ocean is the last great unexploited frontier on earth. This blog is a window into that future, and seeks to encourage discussion about how humanity can create a future on and in the seas in ways that ensure economic and ecological sustainability.
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Submitted May 10, 2007 to Science Blogs A blog about meteorology, hurricanes, and more by Dr. Jeff Masters, publisher of Weather Underground.
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