David Osterbur spent a decade pursuing an academic science career before tiring of the “never-ending cycle” of unfunded grant applications, he says. When his wife, like him a developmental biologist, accepted a job offer in Massachusetts, he took advantage of the change in location to weigh a change in career. He was considering a career in public health so he could continue using his science background, when his wife suggested he become a science librarian. “I had always enjoyed being in the library. In graduate school, people would always come to me when they couldn’t find something,” he says.
Category Archives: Outlets
A Memorable Device
It was over drinks at a local pub in the spring of 2006 that cognitive psychologist Martin Conway of the University of Leeds in the United Kingdom first told his colleague Chris Moulin about using a wearable camera for memory research. But it took more than a few pints of beer to convince Moulin that SenseCam, a camera that periodically takes still photos while worn on the user’s chest, might be a game-changer in the study of what psychologists call autobiographical memory. Although skeptical of the small device’s usefulness, Moulin did finally agree to take one for a test drive.
Lights, camera … action! Telling institutional stories through video
First, use a tripod. That was Melissa Lutz Blouin’s take-home message about making video, which she delivered during a session on the topic at ScienceWriters 2008 in October in Palo Alto. “Your production values shoot up!” she exclaimed. The cost barriers for video have dropped from the days of $60,000 shoulder-mounted film cameras, but as anyone who has shot with today’s $2,000 cameras knows, there is more to getting a professional result than just using professional equipment.
The rest of my article on the workshop is available to members of the National Association of Science Writers on their website: [html] or here [pdf]
Horseshoes, Hand Grenades–and Slot Machines?
Before the reels on a slot machine stop spinning, a gambler’s brain is already anticipating the potential rewards. And although two bananas on the pay line with a third just barely visible won’t pay a gambler any more than three random fruits, such near misses have the well-documented, if irrational, effect of enticing gamblers to try again. The reason, according to a new study, is that these near misses activate the same reward signals in the brain as a win.
Read the original on Science’s online daily news website, ScienceNOW: [html] or [pdf]