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geekification: geekification:How time works in grad school. I’m reposting this because I crack up ev

geekification:

geekification:

How time works in grad school.

I’m reposting this because I crack up every single time I walk past it.

It makes me sad that the clock got fixed. But I’ll always have this gif!


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mozzu:

banana pose

Wholesome animal fact: seals banana pose when they feel content. These are 4 happy seals!

“More and more colleges are testing wastewater from dorms to monitor the spread of the coronavirus. It’s often cheaper — and can detect an infection days before respiratory symptoms show up, or even if they never do.”

Interesting work being done by colleges to prevent/control the spread of COVID-19!

Article Date: October 26th, 2020

To all my followers celebrating, I wish you a Happy Diwali!

mednerds:

Wearing a face mask takes some getting used to. To get the most benefit, you need to avoid these common mistakes.

Masks in a variety of colors, styles and materials have appeared on the faces of people around us. While it’s good news that many people are doing their part to slow the spread of coronavirus, the bad news is that many people are wearing their masks wrong.

“Wearing a mask takes some getting used to, for sure,” said Dr. Scott Segal, chairman of anesthesiology at Wake Forest Baptist Health. “You are probably wearing it exactly right if it’s a little stuffy.”

One of the biggest mistakes people make is that they fidget with their masks, and pull them under their noses or completely off their faces to rest under their chins. “You should absolutely not be pulling up and putting down your mask while you’re out,” said Shan Soe-Lin, a lecturer at the Yale Jackson Institute for Global Affairs. “If you’re going to go to the trouble of using a mask, leave it on.”

Here are the dos and don’ts of wearing a mask.

And once you’ve figured out the correct position for wearing your mask, follow these tips to stay safe:

  • Always wash your hands before and after wearing a mask.
  • Use the ties or loops to put your mask on and pull it off.
  • Don’t touch the front of the mask when you take it off.
  • For apartment dwellers, put the mask on and remove it while inside your home. Elevators and stairwells can be high-contamination areas.
  • Wash and dry your cloth mask daily and keep it in a clean, dry place.
  • Don’t have a false sense of security.

Masks offer limited protection, and work better when combined with hand washing and social distancing. “It’s not that one excludes the other,” said Dr. Siddhartha Mukherjee, assistant professor of medicine at Columbia University. “They compound the effects of the other.”

ByTara Parker-Pope (The New York Times). Illustrations by Eleni Kalorkoti.

Won’t lie, I’m terrible about fidgeting with my mask! This is definitely a good reminder of how to properly wear this type of PPE.

Just when you think you might have this science thing down, a pissed off black lab mouse humbles you by trying to take a chunk out of your middle finger….

celebratingamazingwomen:Joan A. Steitz (b. 1941) is a biologist whose research focused on RNA and it

celebratingamazingwomen:

Joan A. Steitz (b. 1941) is a biologist whose research focused on RNA and its interaction with ribosomes, for which she won the Lasker-Koshland Award for Special Achievement in Medical Science.

She obtained her PhD from Harvard and conducted postdoctoral research at the University of Cambridge. Her research offered groundbreaking insight into autoimmune diseases, their causes and treatments. She is a Professor of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry at Yale University.


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theladybiologist:

To all my followers in the United States, this is a reminder to get out and VOTE FOR SCIENCE!

Use this link to find your polling place and see who is on your ballot: https://www.vote.org/polling-place-locator/

Election Day is next Tuesday, November 3rd! ‍❤️

Pins:https://geniuslabgear.com/products/im-voting-for-science-in-2020-pin-demand-science-based-policies (not sponsored, just thought they were cool!)

pixellated-sparks:Listen everyone just cause your in a scientific field doesn’t make you smart enougpixellated-sparks:Listen everyone just cause your in a scientific field doesn’t make you smart enougpixellated-sparks:Listen everyone just cause your in a scientific field doesn’t make you smart enougpixellated-sparks:Listen everyone just cause your in a scientific field doesn’t make you smart enougpixellated-sparks:Listen everyone just cause your in a scientific field doesn’t make you smart enougpixellated-sparks:Listen everyone just cause your in a scientific field doesn’t make you smart enougpixellated-sparks:Listen everyone just cause your in a scientific field doesn’t make you smart enougpixellated-sparks:Listen everyone just cause your in a scientific field doesn’t make you smart enougpixellated-sparks:Listen everyone just cause your in a scientific field doesn’t make you smart enougpixellated-sparks:Listen everyone just cause your in a scientific field doesn’t make you smart enoug

pixellated-sparks:

Listen everyone just cause your in a scientific field doesn’t make you smart enough to not make mistakes in the field


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To all my followers in the United States, this is a reminder to get out and VOTE FOR SCIENCE!

Use this link to find your polling place and see who is on your ballot: https://www.vote.org/polling-place-locator/

Election Day is next Tuesday, November 3rd! ‍❤️

Pins:https://geniuslabgear.com/products/im-voting-for-science-in-2020-pin-demand-science-based-policies (not sponsored, just thought they were cool!)

A follow up to my previous post on Vibrio prevalence in North and South Carolina! A great example of how climate change won’t just affect wildlife and natural places, but also human health! And this is just the tip of the melting iceberg of climate change and human health interactions…..

Did y’all have flesh eating bacteria on your 2020 bingo card? Vibrio bacteria has been wreaking havoc long before 2020, and will only become more prevalent with the effects of climate change. Unfortunately, this has to be treated as an emerging threat to human health. Currently, severe vibrio infection (“flesh-eating”) is rare, but lesser forms of infection often go undiagnosed. This could lead to cases going unreported, and the threat underestimated.

scienceprofessorquotes:

““When we challenge dogma we no longer get burned at the stake, which is helpful.””

— Immunology lecturer

anatomicdeadspace:Dissection of the back of the fore-arm and hand. Lithograph by G.H. Ford, 1863.

anatomicdeadspace:

Dissection of the back of the fore-arm and hand. Lithograph by G.H. Ford, 1863.


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scienceprofessorquotes:

““A shit ton is a scientific term meaning roughly 10^18””

— Physics Professor

An appreciation post for one of my favorite birds, the Anhinga! These birds are good divers and will completely submerge to catch their prey. Since they have no oils on their wings to repel water, anhingas have to stretch out their wings to let them dry before they can fly!

Pictures taken at Huntington Beach State Park, Murrels Inlet, SC

thequeenofsunflowers:

every movie villain scientist: begin human trials

me: what a joke, you have no data. you fraud, no journal will publish you. you aren’t ready for human trials. you are a joke on the scientific method

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