I've finally achieved consistency in my life. Any person of average or above intelligence can predict what I will say next with unerring accuracy. And what I say will always be wrong.

Wednesday, March 09, 2011

[ItsAllAboutMeMan] Fwd: Big brains and spineless penises

 

Hey, look, Wimps got written up in The Scientist!

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: F1000-The Scientist <support@strongmail.the-scientist.com>
Date: Wed, Mar 9, 2011 at 3:07 PM
Subject: Big brains and spineless penises
To: matt.mattlove1@gmail.com


F1000: The Scientist Daily - Magazine of Life Sciences

To view this email in your browser: www.the-scientist.com/daily1/2011/03/09/

09 March 2011

News and Features
The latest in biology and medicine

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Big brains and spineless penises

How DNA deletions may have produced uniquely human traits
By Megan Scudellari

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Q&A: Improving preclinical trials

Measures are needed to increase the chance of success for drugs entering clinical trials
By Hannah Waters

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Video: Plant predators

The fastest known carnivorous plant is caught on tape
By Jef Akst

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You want it, you pay for it

If for-profit publishers disappear, who is going to pay for everything and who is going to administer peer review in a clear, open and accountable way?
By Richard P. Grant

What kills cows, saves birds

Mad cow disease outbreaks in Europe may be favorable to bird populations across the pond
By Cristina Luiggi

The 2011 Salary Survey is here

Take our survey to help us determine the most current salary data for life scientists
By Jef Akst

Top 7 in immunology

A snapshot of the most highly ranked articles in immunology and related areas, from Faculty of 1000
By Edyta Zielinska

Testing pluripotency

A new open-access bioinformatics tool allows researchers to determine the pluripotency of newly derived cell lines by inputting microarray data
By Jef Akst

News in a nutshell

Some fraud updates; escape from Libya; virus traps
By Cristina Luiggi

Another revolution needed?

Counting the many plagues that threaten research in the Middle East and North Africa region
By Fahd Al-Mulla

Preserving potatoes and culture

Peruvian farmers prepare to send seeds of more than 1,500 potato varieties to the safety of an Arctic vault
By Jef Akst

Character flaws?

Two lizard taxonomists examine the branching patterns of phylogenetic trees to settle taxonomic debates
By Vanessa Schipani

Speaking of science

Our monthly roundup of notable quotes from around the scientific community
By The Scientist Staff

Naturally Selected - Blog The blog
Audio: Imprinting and Diversity
video link

Listen to F1000 member Joachim Messing explain how genomic imprinting may drive diversity.

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--
I want to play in your town for you and 2 of your friends. 
http://eventful.com/performers/matt-love-/P0-001-000156481-4/demands

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