David Schoppik

@schoppik
1.3K Followers
853 Following
1.5K Posts
We're studying how balance develops, functions, and breaks at NYU Grossman School of Medicine. Everything (esp dad jokes) mine, not NYULH's. He/him. Posting pretty much exclusively here now. #fedi22
Lab websitehttps://www.schoppiklab.com/people
@tdverstynen @grimalkina structural integrity is not a joke, Jim!

Multiphoton imaging through 20 mm of air with the new Cousa objective.

This is a new type of objective: ultra long working distance, huge field-of-view, optimized for two-photon imaging.

And it fits on standard microscopes neuroscientists use for in vivo imaging (e.g., from Bruker, Thorlabs, Neurolabware, INSS, CoSys, etc.)!

The Cousa provides excellent data and even three-photon imaging over a huge field-of-view!

The paper has data from marmosets, tree shrews, both young and adult ferrets, intact pig eye, the first in vivo calcium imaging from mouse cochlear hair cells (!), beautiful input mapping / dendritic spine imaging, and more!

The paper was published just now: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41592-023-02098-1 It's open access. The Cousa objective can be purchased from a company that is being spun out of the lab: https://pacificoptica.com

@ct_bergstrom oh I think they know exactly how most academics feel about social interactions.

We've all been there: it's puzzle time, but once you dump out the pieces and start laying them flat, you realize you don't have enough space on your table. Join me as we use physics to find out ✨HOW BIG A TABLE YOU NEED FOR YOUR JIGSAW PUZZLE ✨

https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2312.04588
#SciComm

How big a table do you need for your jigsaw puzzle?

Jigsaw puzzles are typically labeled with their finished area and number of pieces. With this information, is it possible to estimate the area required to lay each piece flat before assembly? We derive a simple formula based on two-dimensional circular packing and show that the unassembled puzzle area is $\sqrt{3}$ times the assembled puzzle area, independent of the number of pieces. We perform measurements on 9 puzzles ranging from 333 cm$^2$ (9 pieces) to 6798 cm$^2$ (2000 pieces) and show that the formula accurately predicts realistic assembly scenarios.

arXiv.org
How long-read sequencing will transform neuroscience

New technology that delivers much more than a simple DNA sequence could have a major impact on brain research, enabling researchers to study transcript…

The Transmitter: Neuroscience News and Perspectives

If you're seeing dire news about the water & alfalfa lately in the US, I have good news for you.

The US's water problems have solutions!

One of the most powerful solutions: give serious attention & investment to agriculture in the southeastern US.

Let's talk about just one way to do that.

Scott Barolo (@sbarolo) on X

#WomeninSTEM get a lot of “Reply Guys” who repeat the same unhelpful comments. @shrewshrew and I (a woman & a man in science) have attempted to catalog those replies, to save us all the trouble of writing new responses every time. presenting THE NINE TYPES OF REPLY GUYS (1/n)

X (formerly Twitter)

We have a couple of peer reviewer training resources available on our website: https://plos.org/resource/peer-review-training-resources/

Happy to answer questions about this.

I also regularly ask postdocs and senior lab members to review manuscripts but can do that only if I find can find information about your research area and expertise online. If you are interested in reviewing neuroscience manuscripts for PLOS Biology, let me know. Happy to work with you if the right manuscripts for your expertise comes along.

Peer Review Training Resources - PLOS

Are you thinking about being a peer reviewer but aren’t sure where to start? Are you concerned that you don’t have enough experience to review a manuscript for a journal?

PLOS
Spam e-mails out here just targeting my inner supervillain now.