Friday, June 30, 2017

Fun with an AI

We're all familiar with the motivational posters popular in workplaces, encouraging employees to greater productivity and better morale with inspirational quotes set against soothing backgrounds. Unfortunately, artificial intelligence has a hard time understanding this concept.

InspiroBot is "an artificial intelligence dedicated to generating unlimited amounts of unique inspirational quotes" and claims, "all I want to do is please humans."

Inspire yourself at inspirobot.me/.

Friday, June 23, 2017

NSF moving their headquarters; websites will be down

The National Science Foundation is moving to Alexandria Virginia over a six week period from August 24 to October 1, 2017. To prepare for the physical move, they are taking advantage of the July 4th holiday weekend to move their Data Center in order to reduce the impact to the research community. NSF.gov, FastLane and Research.gov will all be down from 8pm on Friday June 30 to 6pm on July 4th. So you have no choice but to enjoy your barbecue. More information here: https://www.nsf.gov/pubs/issuances/in139.jsp.

Monday, June 12, 2017

Amid controversy, NIH backs down on grant limits

On June 8, Francis Collins posted on The NIH Director about the Grant Support Index (GSI), the method that was used to determine the advantage limiting NIH grants over a researcher's career had for beginning and mid-level researchers, as well as taxpayers, and the fact that "significant concerns" about the GSI's methodology have been expressed -- enough so that the NIH is now backing off that plan, and has come up with a new one called the Next Generation Researchers Initiative. While this plan also "place[s] greater emphasis on current NIH funding programs aimed at early-stage and mid-career investigators", some researchers feel it's not enough, and that the initial plan was perhaps abandoned because it was "shoved down quickly by a bunch of senior folks," as Gary S. McDowell states in The Chronicle of Higher Education. We'll have to wait and see how this all plays out for all our researchers, regardless of seniority.

Thursday, June 8, 2017

NIH policy workshop on biosafety and emerging technology in July

On July 18-19, the NIH will be hosting a workshop entitled "NIH Guidelines: Honoring the Past, Charting the Future" in Rockville, MD. The workshop is designed for investigators, research administrators and biosafety professionals. More information about the event and how to register can be found here: https://tinyurl.com/ybpt2tm9

Authors weigh costs and benefits of applying for grants

In an 2015 article in PLOS One that has been making the rounds lately, Ted and Courtney von Hippel report on a three-year study looking at 195 scientists and social scientists submitting a total of 287 federal research proposals. On average, they found that each proposal took 116 hours of work for the PIs, and an additional 55 hours of Co-Investigators' time. Was it worth it? On the whole, they calculated that each additional proposal submitted in a year increased the chances of being funded, but beyond that, participants in their study reported that even when unfunded, the experience of writing a proposal benefitted them in other ways such as helping to create new collaborations, fine-tune scientific thinking or train grad students and/or post-docs. You can read the entire article here: https://tinyurl.com/ycny2f82.