How can neurodiversity impact creative access and expression? Join us November 29 for the second Dana Discovery Dialogue, to hear from and engage with our panel of experts. Register for this free and virtual event: https://on.dana.org/dana-discovery-dialogues-neurodiversity

The Dana Discovery Dialogues series is held in partnership with Boston University College of Communication, and this event will be moderated by Tyler Jones of SciCommers.

#DanaDiscoveryDialogues #neurodiversity #neurosociety #creativity #sciencejournalists

Welcome! You are invited to join a webinar: Dana Dialogue Series - Neurodiversity and accessing creativity. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email about joining the webinar.

Divergent minds lead to divergent thinking and problem solving. This "thinking outside the box" is a strength for many neurodivergent people, who often thrive in entrepreneurship, music, and other creative fields. Join us with our panel guest in conversation about how Neurodiversity often comes increased access to creativity. Speakers: Thomas Armstrong, Ph.D., Institute4Learning Michael Bakan, Ph.D., Florida State University Ronald Beghetto, Ph.D., Arizona State University Holly White, Ph.D., University of Michigan #DanaDiscoveryDialogues

Zoom

You can't stop evolution
#evolution #sciencejournalists #medicalwriters #stem

A paper published in Nature yesterday reports on how an engineered minimal cell contends with the forces of evolution.

Open access paper available here: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-06288-x

Dr Veera M. Rajagopal on Twitter has a good summary on the development of the minimal genome (the barest minimum of a bacterial genome required for life), which led to the engineering of the minimal cell.

If you're on Twitter, it's available here: https://twitter.com/doctorveera/status/1676734754995961858

According to the Nature paper: even when you reduce a bacterial genome to its absolute minimum where every nucleotide matters, the genome undergoes mutational events generation after generation as much as the non-minimal genome. One simply cannot stop the evolution.

Evolution of a minimal cell - Nature

An engineered minimal cell evolves to escape the negative consequences of genome streamlining.

Nature

As posted on the Nobel Prize profile on Twitter.
#sciencejournalists #medicalwriters #womeninstem

Today we remember one of the world's greatest scientists: Marie Skłodowska Curie, who died #OTD in 1934.

Curie was the first person to be awarded the #NobelPrize twice and is still the only person to receive the prize in two different scientific fields.

The link below gives a short overview of her achievements, as posted by the Nobel Prize on Twitter.

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/xJ9G_jFqk2U

Marie Curie was a Nobel Laureate of many firsts

YouTube

The myth that vaccines cause autism
#sciencejournalists #medicalwriters #womeninstem #vaccines #autism

Demystified by Dr Susan Oliver on Twitter. I am tooting her tweet here.

Thanks to Robert F. Kennedy Jr, the myth that vaccines cause autism is doing the rounds again. [Dr Susan Oliver says] Cindy and I explain why it is bollocks.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H_w7vocY4YM

Why we know that vaccine/autism claims are bollocks

YouTube

Five women scientists at the White House
#WomenInSTEM #womeninmedicine
#medicalwriters #sciencejournalists #medicaljournalists

An astronaut, an aquanaut, two astrophysicists and a molecular biologist.
Dr Sian Proctor, Sydney Hamilton, Dr Raven Baxter, Dr Jordan Foreman, and Amethyst Barnes.

@DrSianProctor
@SeeSydSoar
@ravenscimaven
@itsspacejordan
@Amethistaaa

This appeared to be an event to celebrate Blackspaceweek and the NASA Artemis Generation Roundtable (apologies if the information is incorrect)

New Nature article looks at how to end misogyny and inequalities in science
#WomenInSTEM #womeninmedicine
#medicalwriters #sciencejournalists #medicaljournalists

Don’t get mad, get equal: putting an end to misogyny in science
Subtle forms of misogyny attack female leadership and coerce women to conform to conventional gender norms. It’s time to call out these behaviours, say Alison Bentley and Rachael Garrett.
Article available at: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-02101-x

Don’t get mad, get equal: putting an end to misogyny in science

Subtle forms of misogyny attack female leadership and coerce women to conform to conventional gender norms. It’s time to call out these behaviours, say Alison Bentley and Rachael Garrett.

Meet 10 Women in Science Who Changed the World
#WomenInSTEM #womeninmedicine
#medicalwriters #sciencejournalists #medicaljournalists

Great article in the March Discover magazine. The 10 women mentioned in the article are:
1. Ada Lovelace, Mathematician
2. Marie Curie, Physicist and Chemist
3. Janaki Ammal, Botanist
4. Chien-Shiung Wu, Physicist
5. Katherine Johnson, Mathematician
6. Rosalind Franklin, Chemist
7. Vera Rubin, Astronomer
8. Gladys West, Mathematician
9. Flossie Wong-Staal, Virologist and Molecular Biologist
10. Jennifer Doudna, Biochemist

FREE Science journalism masterclasses
#sciencejournalists #free #medicalwriters #womeninstem

The Open Notebook’s Science Journalism Master Classes will help you sharpen your ability to find and vet story ideas, craft effective pitches, report and write impactful stories, spot scientific hype, collaborate with editors, and more. Find out more about the classes below.

https://www.theopennotebook.com/science-journalism-master-classes/

Science Journalism Master Classes - The Open Notebook

Master your craft with our free Science Journalism Master Classes. These short courses, delivered by email, are made possible by a grant from The Kavli Foundation.

The Open Notebook
I understand that 'theory' has a different meaning when used generally. But, please #ScienceJournalists when writing about #science use hypothesis and theory correctly. Image of the opening of an article from the #WashingtonPost.

The mental-health crisis in science
#STEM; #sciencejournalists; #medicaljournalists

[As seen on the blue bird thing]
Researchers are much more likely than the general population to experience depression and anxiety. And recent studies suggest that scientists’ mental-health struggles are a direct result of a toxic research culture

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-01708-4?utm_medium=Social&utm_campaign=nature&utm_source=Twitter#Echobox=1684847085

A mental-health crisis is gripping science — toxic research culture is to blame

With researchers reporting high rates of anxiety and depression, calls are growing to fundamentally change science before it’s too late.