Sharing, sperm and stereotypes in STEMM
12 September, 2014 | Claire Scott |
|
|
Share and share alike: parasitic plants and their hosts engage in large scale RNA exchanges. https://t.co/mpI3kOlnik
— F1000Prime (@F1000) September 8, 2014
Educational strategies to mitigate gender stereotypes serve to increase leadership self-efficacy of women in STEMM. https://t.co/jjSBeCX1Lr
— F1000Prime (@F1000) September 9, 2014
The race for life is a team effort: ant sperm bundles swim faster than solitary sperm, enhancing male fitness. https://t.co/Y19XvLksXi
— F1000Prime (@F1000) September 9, 2014
And elsewhere on Twitter…
Ever wondered why you twitch as you drift off to sleep? https://t.co/h6bkPkuqgr Today's #LunchtimeReading
— Science Museum (@sciencemuseum) September 12, 2014
Holy brain! This woman lived to 24 without knowing she was missing her entire cerebellum https://t.co/puGXSa3uIV pic.twitter.com/EVmdXbFC5L
— New Scientist (@newscientist) September 11, 2014
World’s first known swimming dinosaur — 15m-long behemoth with a crocodile-like face https://t.co/PtPni3f43d pic.twitter.com/MTjISB2tVK
— Nature News&Comment (@NatureNews) September 12, 2014
|