Blog Carnival Available

The second installment of Ask a Science Blogger has been published. Surprisingly, this week's question seems to have generated a fair amount of discussion, even though I had thought the response was a foregone conclusion.

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Note: This post was originally published on 1 July 2007 at my old site. I am reposting it here and nominating it for inclusion in the Open Laboratory anthology. There is still time to submit your favorite posts from this blog, your own, or other blogs you read. Here's how. Sometimes I get depressed…
Here's this week's Ask a Scienceblogger question: How is it that all the PIs (Tara, PZ, Orac et al.), various grad students, post-docs, etc. find time to fulfill their primary objectives (day jobs) and blog so prolifically?... Funny you asked. It's actually rather a long story. You see, about a…
Many of my readers will already have seen the Nature special issue on data, data curation, and data sharing. If you haven't, go now and read; it's impossible to overestimate the importance of this issue turning up in such a widely-read venue. I read the opening of "Data sharing: Empty archives"…
Last week, an antivaxer "challenged" me to look over a paper purporting to show that aluminum adjuvants in vaccines cause inflammation of the brain and therefore contribute to autism, a paper that she would be "citing frequently." Being someone who lives by the motto, "be careful what you wish for…