2011 Canada Gairdner Award

Please join us in congratulating two F1000 Members who have been awarded a 2011 Canada Gairdner Award. This award recognizes and rewards “the achievements of medical researchers whose work contributes significantly to improving the quality of human life.” Both were recognized for ground breaking discoveries and definition of the family of Toll like receptors and…

News in a nutshell

This week’s news includes an asthma drug that shows promise for Alzheimer’s, alarming diversity among breast cancers, the possibility of stem cell transplants for Japan’s nuclear plant workers, shocking estimates of bats’ economic worth, a genetic test for organ rejection, and a disputed rise in the number of wild tigers in India.

Sexual Healing

Few would dispute that good communication is essential to a happy and successful relationship. Even arguments might not necessarily be a bad thing–an air-clearing argument need not be destructive, and is probably more healthy than sullen silences. But recent work reported in the Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy now suggests that what partners discuss,…

Music is the best medicine

My overriding memories of music lessons in school are of a teacher making us hold our breath and ‘deflate like a popped balloon’ every time we were about to sing. Needless to say, it wasn’t my favorite lesson of the day, but then I have never been very musically adept. Thankfully, the use of music…

Failomics

Why is science so darned difficult? It’s not simply that it takes a lot of hard work and concentrated brain power to really understand even basic scientific principles, but–for experimental scientists, at least–experiments have a tendency to fail in a way that doesn’t provide any useful information.

Yale Passamaneck and eye evolution

What can a clam-like creature tell us about eye evolution? Quite a bit, as it turns out. We ran a news article at the beginning of the month, on the finding that brachiopod, or lamp shell, embryos have eyes that are more closely related to those of vertebrates, than of their spineless cousins. I caught…

Drooling cockroaches

Pavlov’s cockroach: classical conditioning of salivation in an insect is a paper from 2007, in PLoS ONE10.1371/journal.pone.0000529. And, yes: it describes the classical Pavlovian response, but not with dogs (or cats), but in everybody’s favourite Blattidae, Periplaneta americana. The authors conditioned cockroaches to salivate in response to an odour associated with a reward. This, they…

What kind of scientist are you?

The student was at the board, hands covered in chalk, mixed with a bit of sweat. He was in the middle of his oral prelim exam, and being grilled about his hypothesis. How would he design his experiments to test it? Did he have the proper controls in place? Would his measurements be within the…

News in a nutshell

This week’s news include another libel case against cardiologist Peter Wilmshurst, the death of an honored chemical ecologist, a call for preventive breast cancer meds, a link between short telomeres and diabetes, good news for fish lovers, a potential clue for a new tuberculosis vaccine, and a very presidential beetle. Whistle-blower sued…again

Breast cancer at the beach.

The last thing I’d want to do when visiting the rather lovely looking Lorne (Victoria, Australia) is spend my time talking about cancer (beach please!). Nonetheless, some good folks with more willpower than me managed to do just that at February’s Lorne Cancer Conference–and what a good job they did.