Wednesday, July 01, 2009
Number one, baby!
Yeah!
1 comments:
Diane
said...
Congratulations Dr. Zen!
11:13 PM
Post a Comment
Newer Post
Older Post
Home
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
About Me
Zen Faulkes
I am an invertebrate neuroethologist at The University of Texas-Pan American.
View my complete profile
Comments and contact
Comments are moderated. Real names and pseudonyms are welcome; anonymous posts are not.
Email me at
DoctorZen@gmail.com
.
Submit to Open Lab!
If you like something you read here, click to submit it to the Open Lab anthology!
Latest (via Twitter)
You should follow me on Twitter here!
Links
Home page
Google Scholar profile
Marmorkrebs: Marbled crayfish news and views
Better Posters: A poster presentation resource
Newest research paper: Crayfish tailflipping modulation
New research paper: Parasites manipulate shrimp behaviour
Presentation: Brain scans and the magic lasso
Free presentation ebook
Presentation Tips
is a free 40 page ebook drawn from blog posts here. Reorganized into themes, typos fixed, and generally made prettier.
Open Lab 2010 winner
For post in Scientific American’s Guest Blog
Open Lab 2009 winner
The annual anthology of the best science writing on blogs
ResearchBlogging Nominee
Nominated for “Best Blog – Neuroscience” for 2010
Mendeley profile
Subscribe and share
Subscribe to NeuroDojo by Email
Subscribe (RSS feed)
ScienceSeeker
Labels
peer-reviewed research reporting
(218)
Tuesday Crustie
(151)
evolution
(144)
publication
(138)
Texas science standards
(124)
research
(122)
crustaceans
(119)
conferences
(117)
blogging
(115)
teaching
(111)
behaviour
(106)
nervous systems
(102)
skepticism
(87)
pictures
(82)
silliness
(76)
grants
(73)
presentations
(63)
science and politics
(60)
time management
(59)
careers
(58)
education
(57)
Zen of Presentations
(56)
funding
(56)
administration
(52)
art
(51)
tangents
(51)
comments on other blogs
(49)
ethics
(47)
grad school
(44)
writing
(44)
TEA and Comer
(43)
journals
(43)
aphorisms
(40)
bugbears
(39)
emergencies
(39)
THECB and ICR
(38)
graphics
(38)
awards
(37)
science and society
(37)
personality quizzes
(34)
#SciFund
(29)
tenure
(28)
blog carnivals
(25)
NSF
(24)
fossils
(24)
SF
(23)
journalism
(23)
science communication
(22)
cephalopods
(20)
climate change
(20)
fact checking
(20)
colleagues
(19)
Twitter
(18)
Canada
(17)
AFL
(16)
games
(16)
new species
(16)
nociception
(16)
textbooks
(15)
ascidians
(14)
expertise
(14)
stories behind the papers
(14)
Doctor Who
(13)
hurricane
(12)
societies
(12)
SETI
(9)
belief
(9)
equipment
(9)
mysteries
(9)
service
(9)
weather
(9)
REU program
(8)
brain scans
(8)
databases
(8)
posters
(8)
science and religions
(8)
neuromyths
(7)
open access
(7)
classic graphics
(5)
namesakes
(5)
accreditation
(4)
extrasolar planets
(4)
geology
(3)
hair
(3)
extinction
(2)
theft
(2)
DNA barcoding
(1)
Blog Archive
►
2012
(127)
►
May
(21)
Day at the beach
The journal ecosystem
Two for two!
Self-defeating prophecy
Little things
Tuesday Crustie: Helm’s deep
Science communicators need to lead by example
Remaking the transcript
Name that roar
Comments for first half of May, 2012
Tuesday Crustie: Calico
The Zen of Presentations, Part 54: Worse than read...
Fighty crab
Tuesday Crustie: Da Ba De
Crowdfunding, open access, and innovation: here we...
Abandoment issues
Why science crowdfunding is needed: a précis
Keeping up with Canopy Meg!
Tuesday Crustie: Colourless
This is the future of science: SciFund returns
Comments for second half of April, 2012
►
April
(24)
Quite a nice person
Turn on your shark light
Dear Americans for Medical Progress
The denial manual
Tuesday Crustie: Horned beast
Reviews for The Revisionaries movie
Canopy Meg visits
Standing Up To The Experts becomes The Revisionari...
Red returns: What women wear for wild times?
Tuesday Crustie: Obscure
Master of all trades
Comments for first half of April, 2012
Great moments in awkwardness
More than mice
Will you split or steal my Golden Balls?
Tuesday Crustie: Wheeeeeeeeeeee!
Red is sexy but not sexual
Brainbrawl round-up
Another reminder of what people think of professor...
Coming in May, 2012
Science careers: fair play or field of bullets?
Tuesday Crustie: Prefab
Brainbrawl! The Connectome review
Comments for second half of March, 2012
►
March
(26)
Whaddya wanna talk about?
Science portfolios
PACE Bioethics 2012
Prepare yourself
Tuesday Crustie: Smorgasbord
►
February
(27)
►
January
(29)
►
2011
(371)
►
December
(30)
►
November
(28)
►
October
(22)
►
September
(30)
►
August
(32)
►
July
(27)
►
June
(37)
►
May
(30)
►
April
(31)
►
March
(33)
►
February
(31)
►
January
(40)
►
2010
(453)
►
December
(31)
►
November
(37)
►
October
(29)
►
September
(34)
►
August
(40)
►
July
(49)
►
June
(45)
►
May
(39)
►
April
(34)
►
March
(41)
►
February
(32)
►
January
(42)
▼
2009
(426)
►
December
(38)
►
November
(44)
►
October
(34)
►
September
(34)
►
August
(29)
▼
July
(40)
Rearranging the chairs on the Titanic: Gen Bio cla...
Is the aquatic ape hypothesis fringe science?
Questioning everything
The biggest debate about science?
Long sperm are speedy sperm
Tuesday Crustie: Giving you the eye
Escaping flatland, or: How fish remember where the...
I’m too scared to dance: Bee dancing changed by co...
I don’t need no badges, but I like them anyway
A fellow traveller removing waste
How did bats get underfoot?
Science is my sword
Tuesday Crustie: Briney black
Truth for the hard of thinking
Quote of the moment, July 2009 edition
Indelible marks
How to deny anything
The Scincus that swims through sand like a snake
No spikes in this worm: Motor neurons without acti...
Interest and inferiority
Comments for first half of July
Do you know this man?
Taking STRIDES
Tuesday Crustie: Look up
Change in your pocket? Buy a lobster
Different topic, same problem
Bye Anita
It pays to advertise, even on coral reefs
Meet the new Chair
A quick visual indicator of my current mood
Tuesday Crustie: White and blue edges
From crusties to people
You’re not my species, but I’d still totally do yo...
Science communication by clothing
The synapses of Theseus
Why neurotransmitter genes probably aren’t involve...
Invert science keeps food on table
Dear Canada,
Predictability is a weakness: Snakes catch stereot...
Number one, baby!
►
June
(30)
►
May
(28)
►
April
(26)
►
March
(43)
►
February
(40)
►
January
(40)
►
2008
(300)
►
December
(25)
►
November
(22)
►
October
(24)
►
September
(21)
►
August
(26)
►
July
(27)
►
June
(14)
►
May
(18)
►
April
(29)
►
March
(24)
►
February
(24)
►
January
(46)
►
2007
(193)
►
December
(50)
►
November
(29)
►
October
(10)
►
September
(12)
►
August
(17)
►
July
(18)
►
June
(14)
►
May
(8)
►
April
(9)
►
March
(8)
►
February
(10)
►
January
(8)
►
2006
(139)
►
December
(9)
►
November
(10)
►
October
(15)
►
September
(17)
►
August
(9)
►
July
(8)
►
June
(18)
►
May
(13)
►
April
(6)
►
March
(8)
►
February
(15)
►
January
(11)
►
2005
(119)
►
December
(11)
►
November
(10)
►
October
(5)
►
September
(14)
►
August
(7)
►
July
(12)
►
June
(17)
►
May
(12)
►
April
(6)
►
March
(9)
►
February
(11)
►
January
(5)
►
2004
(172)
►
December
(13)
►
November
(13)
►
October
(6)
►
September
(10)
►
August
(14)
►
July
(20)
►
June
(15)
►
May
(10)
►
April
(17)
►
March
(11)
►
February
(21)
►
January
(22)
►
2003
(132)
►
December
(6)
►
November
(8)
►
October
(11)
►
September
(19)
►
August
(19)
►
July
(16)
►
June
(13)
►
May
(10)
►
April
(7)
►
March
(12)
►
February
(9)
►
January
(2)
►
2002
(98)
►
December
(6)
►
November
(16)
►
October
(14)
►
September
(4)
►
August
(9)
►
July
(16)
►
June
(32)
►
May
(1)
Follow this blog
Creative Commons
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License
.
1 comments:
Congratulations Dr. Zen!
Post a Comment