Scatter plots, statin dosage, and how to win a Nobel Prize
19 June, 2015 | Adie Chan |
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The trending article recommendations on the @F1000 feed this week, as well as interesting picks from the science Twittersphere.
Eyes on the Prize: what to do to nail that Nobel you always wanted https://t.co/IYq8pYqaRR
— F1000 (@F1000) June 16, 2015
Statins, not sorcery: greater education of physicians needed to ensure high-risk patients receive high-dose statins. https://t.co/rrzBHvlPcn
— F1000 (@F1000) June 18, 2015
Scatter-brained: why simple scatter plots have the advantage over line and bar graphs. https://t.co/pgQGRN3mij
— F1000 (@F1000) June 16, 2015
And elsewhere on Twitter…
“There’s increasing evidence that scientists who do more engagement get better results” Dr Daniel Glaser #SciComm15 pic.twitter.com/EJGvJEYECg
— Dr Emily Grossman (@DrEmilyGrossman) June 19, 2015
Zookeepers are recreating the Jurassic World raptor scene with real animals #JurassicZoo https://t.co/aeSj6IQQ8I pic.twitter.com/78jAQSfWow
— The Guardian (@guardian) June 18, 2015
Here’s my @nytimes story on the Kennewick Man/Ancient One genome: https://t.co/g6xSfMIjp7 & a little embargo rant: https://t.co/FI9xFykdsu
— carlzimmer (@carlzimmer) June 18, 2015
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