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Monthly Archives: September 2013
BEACON Researchers at Work: The Networked Brain
This week’s BEACON Researchers at Work blog post is by University of Texas at Austin graduate student Sean Maguire. The Networked Brain The brain has long been viewed as being composed of isolated regions controlling specific functions. Modern neuroscience has … Continue reading
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Teaching computing to biologists
This week at BEACON, two different computing workshops are being taught: Bootcamp for Biologists, covering the entry-level basics needed for people interested in taking BEACON’s Computational Science for Evolutionary Biologists Software Carpentry: Software Carpentry‘s aim is to teach researchers basic computing … Continue reading
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Tagged computing for biologists, Education, software carpentry, workshops
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BEACON Researchers at Work: Evolving Virtual Creatures
This week’s BEACON Researchers at Work post is by University of Texas graduate student Dan Lessin and Nicole Lessin. As an undergraduate in the 1990s, I was studying studio art, animation, and computer graphics at Harvard when I first came … Continue reading
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Tagged BEACON Researchers at Work, behavior, Digital Evolution
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BEACON's Kalyanmoy Deb receives honorary doctorate
Kalyanmoy Deb, a BEACON Researcher and the Koenig Endowed Chair of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Michigan State University, received an Honorary Doctoral Degree from the Faculty of Information Technology at the University of Jyvaskyla in Finland on August 24, … Continue reading
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Tagged Finland, honorary doctorate, international, multi-criterion optimization
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BEACON Researchers at Work: Survival of the Rarest
This week’s BEACON Researchers at Work blog post is by MSU postdoc Noah Ribeck. We are all taught the basic tenet of evolution by natural selection: occasionally an individual is born with a mutation that improves its chances of having … Continue reading
The sweet smell of (reproductive) success
BEACON Managing Director Danielle Whittaker has published a new study demonstrating that birds may use scent to determine the quality of potential mates. From the MSU press release: For most animals, scent is the instant messenger of choice for quickly … Continue reading
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BEACON Researchers at Work: Carving your academic niche via interdisciplinary research
This week’s BEACON Researchers at Work blog post is by MSU graduate student Amy Lark. What’s the best way to fit a square peg into a round hole? We can muscle that peg via brute force into a space that … Continue reading
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What's in a (mutation's) name?
Cross-posted from UT postdoc Art Covert’s blog, Covert Science(ish) Names are generally very arbitrary things. In the words of The Bard: “A rose by any other name would smell as sweet.” This may be true for roses, but for mutations, … Continue reading
BEACON Researchers at Work: Effective Science Outreach
This week’s BEACON Researchers at Work post is by University of Texas at Austin graduate student Eben Gering. What if, after years of work in the field or laboratory, every scientist had a chance to invite the public to dinner, … Continue reading