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8 votes
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Study says cover crops and no-till aren't just good for soil — they also make farmers more money
10 votes -
How to get the best sleep of your life: Six secrets from research
39 votes -
Harassment and abuse perceived to harm poor women less − new research finds a ‘thicker skin’ bias
16 votes -
Europe’s rightward drift is not set in stone: our new research should give hope to the left
12 votes -
Women less likely than men to be given CPR in public places, research finds
27 votes -
Medieval pet names
43 votes -
Women used to be more likely to vote Conservative than men but that all changed in 2017—UK research wants to find out why
17 votes -
This is the first crash test dummy modelled on the female body. Will it make cars safer for women?
42 votes -
Sweden is leading in a battle to be the first European space base outside Russia to launch a satellite into orbit
12 votes -
Recent neuroscience research suggests that popular strategies to control dopamine are based on an overly narrow view of how it functions
17 votes -
Archaeologists discover world’s oldest wooden structure: dating back half a million years and predating the evolution of our own species, Homo sapiens
33 votes -
Menopause as a case in point; funding for research on women’s health is still a fraction of that available for men’s health
20 votes -
For the first time in the United States, research with cephalopods might require approval by an ethics committee
21 votes -
Plan for £100m UK underwater living research facility move forward
12 votes -
Thirty criticisms that hold women leaders back, according to new research
25 votes -
Effects of thermal environment on sleep and circadian rhythm (2012)
20 votes -
New research debunks the gender pay gap myth that 'women don't ask'
33 votes -
Why do so many people hate EU bureaucracy?
8 votes -
Beneath the Earth, ancient ocean floor likely surrounds the core
15 votes -
A British Columbia study gave fifty homeless people $7,500 each. Here's what they spent it on.
42 votes -
A University of British Columbia study gave fifty homeless people $7,500 each and debunks stereotypes about homeless people’s spending habits
34 votes -
Who is likely to believe in conspiracy theories?
35 votes -
Ten open challenges/research directions in LLM research
7 votes -
What does any of this have to do with physics?
41 votes -
Evidence undermines "Rapid Onset Gender Dysphoria" claims
41 votes -
Learning how to garden a forest - discussion of methods to prevent wildfire
12 votes -
Closing down an icon: Although Arecibo Observatory is slated to become an education center, astronomers hope research might one day return to the site
13 votes -
Transgender and nonbinary patients have no regrets about top surgery, small study finds
61 votes -
Estimating the association between Facebook adoption and well-being in seventy-two countries
5 votes -
Scripps Institution of Oceanography’s FLIP vessel decommissioned after sixty years
10 votes -
What are your favourite research papers?
I've been diving into Derek Parfit's thought-provoking "Why Anything? Why This?" and exploring Weber's fascinating "Sociology of Religion." It's ignited my curiosity about which research papers or...
I've been diving into Derek Parfit's thought-provoking "Why Anything? Why This?" and exploring Weber's fascinating "Sociology of Religion." It's ignited my curiosity about which research papers or articles have really resonated with you? I'm excited to broaden my reading horizons and discover some impactful reads!
14 votes -
Researchers, how do you take notes on the papers which you read?
I've been struggling with finding a good workflow for taking notes on the journal articles which I read. I collate articles using Zotero, yet its in-built notetaking features (and comment scraping...
I've been struggling with finding a good workflow for taking notes on the journal articles which I read. I collate articles using Zotero, yet its in-built notetaking features (and comment scraping from PDFs) is quite poor. So, my alternative so far has been to write up notes by hand, but this is pretty cumbersome and makes it take some time to refer to my notes. My approach is clearly not effective!
How do you take notes on the papers which you read? Do you prefer to use written notes, or do you type your notes? In any case, what is your preferred means of storing and categorising your notes? And are there particular software which you use, if you opt for typed notes? (At present, I use an A5 notebook. Yet, this is not alphabetised or organised by topic, which compounds my struggles.)
25 votes -
We need more research on how CO2 affects cognition
8 votes -
Twitter threatens legal action against US nonprofit that tracks hate speech
113 votes -
Five tips for using PubPeer to investigate scientific research errors and misconduct
8 votes -
Pay dirt for ice core scientists in East Greenland as they reach bedrock
24 votes -
That essential morning coffee may be a placebo
42 votes -
IAMA 3rd year Ph.D. student researching the cell biology of the Rice Blast fungus, Magnaporthe oryzae, and preparing for my candidacy qualifying exam. AMA.
Hi Tilders! I am new here, but my experience with the community thus far has encouraged me to post an AMA. I've specifically decided to post this AMA in ~talk rather than ~science for more...
Hi Tilders! I am new here, but my experience with the community thus far has encouraged me to post an AMA. I've specifically decided to post this AMA in ~talk rather than ~science for more exposure, and because I am hoping to field questions ranging from scientifically well-read to less-read, technical to curious, why care to who cares, and everything in between.
I won't be posting "verifying proof", because like many of you, I love my anonymity here. However, I will include peer-reviewed citations to question answers when I feel it necessary. I will do my best to share free-access articles, but this won't always be possible. If I link an article of interest to you that is paid-access, message me; maybe, I may be able to get a copy to you. Also, please be patient for my replies. Even though it is summer where I am, I am still busy in the lab and thoughtful responses take time.
Here is a brief background on the Rice Blast fungus to help get the conversation started:
Rice is an important staple food consumed by nearly half of the global population Khush. 2005. From 10 - 30% of the annual rice harvest is lost to disease caused by Magnaporthe oryzae, which is enough rice to feed greater than 60 million people Skamnioti and Gurr. 2009. To cause infection, a three-celled asexual spore called a conidium attaches to the rice plant's leaves, stems, and even roots. Once attached, a germ tube emerges from one of the three cells and grows along the surface of the plant. Hydrophobic molecules on the plant surface, called hydrophobins, induce a developmental change in the growing germ tube. The growing germ tube tip begins to form a dome-shaped structure called the appressorium. This specialized structure swells and generates up to 80 Mpa of pressure, enough to penetrate kevlar. A penetration peg penetrates the plant cell tissue, and bulbous invasive hyphae colonize the plant cell tissue. The fungus keeps the invaded plant cell alive, while it consumes its nutrients, with the plant cell dying only when the invading growth moves to an adjacent cell Cruz-Mireles et al. 2021. Schematic.
The Rice Blast research community focuses on all stages of its development. My work is focused on nuclear division during different developmental stages, and I am specifically working on understanding which and how motor proteins are involved in nuclear division in this fungus. Understanding the nuclear dynamics and the involved machinery will hopefully open avenues for controlling the plant infection and reducing the global crop loss.
I hope you all find Rice Blast interesting, and I hope I will be able to answer many interesting questions!
40 votes -
Medical researchers report that the workers who make quartz countertops are dying of lung disease at a young age
31 votes -
Cochrane UK closes because funding has ended
11 votes -
Researchers are trying to unravel the mystery of snow that falls but never shows up in the Colorado river
13 votes -
Computer chip with built-in human brain tissue gets military funding
39 votes -
ChatGPT can be broken by entering these strange words, and nobody is sure why
56 votes -
Stanford University president resigns over manipulated research, will retract at least three papers
47 votes -
New study finds Covid can infect the liver
13 votes -
Hustle culture kills happiness. Here’s how to escape it. | Laurie Santos
9 votes -
Parrots taught to video call each other become less lonely, finds research
10 votes -
Total recall: A brilliant memory helps chickadees survive
9 votes -
A one-of-a-kind bat research facility coming to Fort Collins has CSU scientists fighting misinformation
8 votes