We, Us.

All the shit that doesn't fit!
If it doesn't go into the other forums, stick it in here.
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rubato
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We, Us.

Post by rubato »

Someone objected to my referring to the achievements of UCSC graduate Joseph De Risi as "we" in a different thread. Professor DeRisi is not only notable for his incandescent scientific achievements but for the values he has expressed in doing so, values typical of UCSC. He gave away a fast method of screening viruses when it was worth millions of dollars as a commercial product. He is unfailingly generous with recognition for others in his lab as he was for Ellen Yeh (MD-PhD Stanford) when there was a major breakthrough in studying the Malaria parasite. http://www.ucsf.edu/news/2011/08/10524/ ... d-vaccines Since between my wife and I we have 3 degrees, 20 years as staff members and more than $15,000 in direct support I think the usage is justified. And we are very proud of what has been achieved and will happily support the campus as much as we can.


Harry Noller is mentioned as a short-list for the Nobel prize for his work on t-RNA and the ribosome. This is his latest:

http://news.ucsc.edu/2013/06/ribosome.html

Study reveals key step in protein synthesis

Protein-building ribosome caught in the act, showing a crucial mechanism in the translation of genetic code into protein structures

June 27, 2013

By Tim Stephens
ribosome-image-400.jpg

This image of the molecules involved in translation of genes into proteins shows the ribosome in transparent rendering. In the foreground are the messenger RNA (green), the elongation factor EF-G (brown), and the four sequential positions of transfer RNA as it moves from right to left during translocation (dark blue, light blue, red, and gray). The tRNA positions are like four frames of a molecular movie describing its movement through the ribosome during protein synthesis. (Image courtesy of H. Noller)

Scientists at the University of California, Santa Cruz, have trapped the ribosome, a protein-building molecular machine essential to all life, in a key transitional state that has long eluded researchers. Now, for the first time, scientists can see how the ribosome performs the precise mechanical movements needed to translate genetic code into proteins without making mistakes.

"This is something that the whole field has been pursuing for the past decade," said Harry Noller, Sinsheimer Professor of Molecular Biology at UC Santa Cruz. "We've trapped the ribosome in the middle of its movement during translocation, which is the most interesting, profound, and complex thing the ribosome does."

Understanding ribosomes is important not only because of their crucial role as the protein factories of all living cells, but also because many antibiotics work by targeting bacterial ribosomes. Research on ribosomes by Noller and others has led to the development of novel antibiotics that hold promise for use against drug-resistant bacteria.

Noller's lab is known for its pioneering work to elucidate the atomic structure of the ribosome, which is made of long chains of RNA and proteins interlaced together in complicated foldings. Using x-ray crystallography, his group has shown the ribosome in different conformations as it interacts with other molecules. The new study, led by postdoctoral researcher Jie Zhou, is published in the June 28 issue of Science.

To make a new protein, the genetic instructions are first copied from the DNA sequence of a gene to a messenger RNA molecule. The ribosome then "reads" the sequence on the messenger RNA, matching each three-letter "codon" of genetic code with a specific protein building block, one of 20 amino acids. In this way, the ribosome builds a protein molecule with the exact sequence of amino acids specified by the gene. The matching of codons to amino acids is done via transfer RNA molecules, each of which carries a specific amino acid to the ribosome and lines it up with the matching codon on the messenger RNA.

"The big question has been to understand how messenger RNA and transfer RNA are moved synchronously through the ribosome as the messenger RNA is translated into protein," Noller said. "The transfer RNAs are large macromolecules, and the ribosome has moving parts that enable it to move them through quickly and accurately at a rate of 20 per second."

The key step, called translocation, occurs after the bond is formed joining a new amino acid to the growing protein chain. The transfer RNA then leaves that amino acid behind and moves to the next site on the ribosome, along with a synchronous movement of the messenger RNA to bring the next codon and its associated amino acid into position for bond formation. The new study shows the ribosome in the midst of a key step in this process.

"This gives us snapshots of the intermediate state in the movement," Noller said. "We can now see how the ribosome does this with a rotational movement of the small subunit, and we can see what look to be the 'pawls' of a ratcheting mechanism that prevents slippage of the translational reading frame."

Many antibiotics interfere with the function of the bacterial ribosome by preventing or retarding this translocational movement. Understanding the structural and dynamic details of this movement could help researchers design new antibiotics.

Translocation involves two steps (as Noller's lab showed back in 1989). Step one is the movement of the tRNA's "acceptor end" (where it carried the amino acid). This leads to a hybrid state, with the two ends of the tRNA in two different sites on the ribosome: the "anticodon end" is still lined up with the matching mRNA codon in one site, while the acceptor end has moved on to the next site. Step two is the movement of the tRNA's anticodon end together with the messenger RNA, which advances by one codon. Step two requires a catalyst called elongation factor G (EF-G). The new study shows the ribosome in the middle of step two, with EF-G bound to it and the tRNA halfway between the hybrid state and the final state.

Noller has spent decades working to understand how the ribosome works. Being able to see how it moves, he said, is an exciting moment.

"This is one of the most fundamental movements in all of biology, at the root of the whole mechanism for translation of the genetic code, and we now understand it all the way down to the molecular level," Noller said. "This mechanism had to be in place around the origin of life as we know it."

In addition to Noller and Zhou, the coauthors of the paper include postdoctoral researcher Laura Lancaster and research specialist John Paul Donohue. This work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health.
yrs,
rubato

rubato
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Re: We, Us.

Post by rubato »

And the brilliant Anna Tsing who won the $5 Million dollar Bohr award:

http://news.ucsc.edu/2013/06/tsing-dani ... rship.html
Anthropology professor Anna Tsing wins $5 million Danish research award

Professorship funds transdisciplinary research into environmental challenges

June 12, 2013

By Guy Lasnier
Anthropology professor Anna Tsing is creating a program that will encompass the humanities, natural sciences, social sciences, and the arts.

UC Santa Cruz anthropology professor Anna Tsing is one of six international scholars to win a $5 million Niels Bohr Professorship from the Danish National Research Foundation.

The professorships are for five years and were established to bring senior international scholars to Denmark to host research programs “characterized by novelty, creativity, and excellence.”

The award will support Tsing's research and teaching both in Denmark and at UC Santa Cruz. Tsing will establish a transdisciplinary program that will encompass the humanities, natural sciences, social sciences, and the arts in an exploration of what has been called the "Anthropocene." Anthropocene is that geologic epoch defined by human disturbance of the earth’s ecosystems.

Tsing calls her program "Living in the Anthropocene: Discovering the Potential of Unintended Design on Anthropogenic Landscapes." It will include conferences and fellowships for graduate students, post-docs, and colleagues. The project will sponsor a public conference next May at UCSC titled, "Imagining Life and Death in Difficult Times." Science fiction author Ursula K. Le Guin will be a featured participant along with more than a dozen other scholars.

The conference will also be the kickoff of the "Bateson Initiative," a program the UCSC anthropology department is establishing to honor the work of Gregory Bateson, the English anthropologist who taught at UCSC in the 1970s. "It will continue the intellectual tradition of creativity that Bateson pursued in his life," Tsing said.

Tsing will spend next fall quarter at Aarhus University, then teach in winter and spring at UCSC. She will spend academic year 2014-2015 at Aarhus, Denmark's second oldest university. Founded as a public university in 1928, it is located about 120 miles west of Copenhagen and is now Denmark's largest university with 43,600 students after a merger with the Aarhus School of Engineering.

Tsing spent six months at the university in 2010 while on a Guggenheim Fellowship.

Social Sciences Dean Sheldon Kamieniecki congratulated Tsing on the professorship and said it "will provide great opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students at UCSC and will bring many advantages to UCSC's interdisciplinary research in the social sciences.

"It is a wonderful program that we're very much looking forward to," he said.

Niels Bohr was a Danish physicist who won the Nobel Prize in 1922 for his contributions to understanding atomic structure and quantum mechanics, He was also a philosopher and a promoter of scientific research. Tsing said Bohr was known for working with a diverse group of thinkers who created an atmosphere that resulted in unexpected discoveries.

She said she hopes to continue the tradition of working across academic boundaries. "We need to revitalize conversation between the human and natural sciences," she said. “One way to do this is through developing common tools of observation.”

"Scholars still have a lot to learn about noticing," she said, "but for this we need the resources of all the disciplines."

"If we want to address the massive environmental challenges of our times, we must do a better job of noticing who lives with us on human-disturbed landscapes, and under what conditions," she said.

Tsing's previous research followed the wild mushroom called matsutake from forest to marketplace. The matsutake, a delicacy in Japan, grows in forests, such as in the Pacific Northwest, that have been disturbed by previous human activity.

Tsing is an internationally renowned anthropologist and in 2011 was the recipient of the Martin M. Chemers Award for Outstanding Research in the Social Sciences Division. She joined UCSC in 1987.
yrs,
rubato

rubato
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Re: We, Us.

Post by rubato »

And we're always in the top group for research impact. (measured by its effect)



http://news.ucsc.edu/2013/04/leiden-ranking.html


UCSC highly ranked in worldwide survey of research impact

April 22, 2013

By Tim Stephens
leiden-logo.jpg

UC Santa Cruz placed 11th on the annual Leiden Ranking, which measures the scientific performance of 500 major universities worldwide.

The 2013 Leiden Ranking from the Center for Science and Technology Studies of Leiden University is based on data from the Web of Science bibliographic database produced by Thomson Reuters. The annual ranking aims to provide accurate measurements of the scientific impact of universities and of universities' involvement in scientific collaboration. Scientific impact is determined by several indicators, including the average number of citations of the publications of a university and the proportion of the publications of a university that, compared with other publications in the same field and in the same year, belong in the top 10 percent of the most frequently cited papers.

UCSC has received high rankings in a number of different analyses that look at the same kinds of data using different methodologies. For example, UCSC ranked second for research influence in the Times Higher Education (THE) World University Rankings 2012-13, published last year.

The 2013 Leiden Ranking is based on Web of Science indexed publications from the period 2008–2011. It includes the 500 universities worldwide with the largest publication output in the Web of Science database.

Other UC campuses on the list include UC Santa Barbara (ranked 2nd), UC Berkeley (7th), UCSF (9th), UC San Diego (15th), and UCLA (25th).

rubato
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Re: We, Us.

Post by rubato »

A lot of scientific research is just ... well ... fun. this is an example:


http://news.ucsc.edu/2013/04/puma-study.html

Puma tracking in Santa Cruz Mountains reveals impact of habitat fragmentation

UCSC researchers document influences on physiology, behavior, ecology, conservation

April 17, 2013

By Guy Lasnier
puma-7f-300.jpg
7F, an approximately 7-year-old mother is treed by trailing hounds so researchers can replace her collar before the batteries fail. 7F lives in the mountains above Los Gatos and has had three litters of kittens in the four years since she was first collared. (Photo by Paul Houghtaling)
puma-17m-350.jpg
16M, an approximately 6-year-old adult male roamed a territory that crossed Highway 17 for about a year and a half. He has a fresh wound on his right hip and thigh after being hit by a car while crossing the highway in November 2010. His collar fell off shortly afterwards. The photo was taken with a motion-sensing trail camera at Loch Lomond Recreation Area December 23, 2010. (Photo by UC Santa Cruz Puma Project)

In the first published results of more than three years of tracking mountain lions in the Santa Cruz Mountains, UC Santa Cruz researchers document how human development affects the predators' habits.

In findings published today (April 17) in the online journal PLOS ONE, UCSC associate professor of environmental studies Chris Wilmers and colleagues with the UC Santa Cruz Puma Project describe tracking 20 lions over 6,600 square miles for three years. Researchers are trying to understand how habitat fragmentation influences the physiology, behavior, ecology, and conservation of pumas in the Santa Cruz Mountains.

"Depending on their behavior, animals respond very differently to human development," Wilmers said. Lions are "totally willing to brave rural neighborhoods, but when it comes to reproductive behavior and denning they need more seclusion."

The large predators living relatively close to a metropolitan area require a buffer from human development at least four times larger for reproductive behaviors than for other activities such as moving and feeding.

"In addition, pumas give a wider berth to types of human development that provide a more consistent source of human interface," such as neighborhoods, than they do in places where human presence is more intermittent, as with major roads or highways, the authors write.

37 lions captured

Wilmers and his team, which includes graduate students, and a dog tracking team working with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, have captured 37 lions to date. Twenty–12 females and eight males–were closely followed between 2008 and 2011. Once captured and anesthetized, the lions' sex was determined, they were weighed, measured, fit with an ear tag and a collar with a GPS transmitter. The collars, developed, in part, by an interdisciplinary team at UCSC, including wildlife biologists and engineers, transmit location data every four hours. ... " see link for full article

rubato
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Re: We, Us.

Post by rubato »

The world around us is beautiful and entrancing and supporting research into this is just a pure pleasure.

Who wouldn't want to do this?


yrs,
rubato

rubato
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Re: We, Us.

Post by rubato »

Gabe Zimmerman was a staff member for Gabrielle Giffords and a UCSC graduate killed in the attack which seriously wounded her.

I think this is an appropriate memorial:
Gabe Zimmerman Room formally dedicated at U.S. Capitol ceremony

A conference room at the U.S. Capitol named for the late congressional staffer Gabriel Zimmerman (Stevenson, '02, sociology) was formally dedicated Tuesday (April 16) in a ceremony attended by Vice President Joe Biden, House Speaker John Boehner, and other political luminaries.

yrs,
rubato

rubato
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Re: We, Us.

Post by rubato »

Like I said, a lot of science is just pure fun:

http://news.ucsc.edu/2013/04/boogie-woo ... viral.html

yrs,
rubato

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Lord Jim
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Re: We, Us.

Post by Lord Jim »

Like I said, a lot of science is just pure fun:
Image

Yes rube, and once you've mastered that level of scientific expertise, I'm sure we will all be duly impressed... 8-)
ImageImageImage

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Gob
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Re: We, Us.

Post by Gob »

rubato wrote:Someone objected to my referring to the achievements of UCSC graduate Joseph De Risi as "we" in a different thread.
yrs,
rubato
No they didn't.

Someone objected to the statement;
rubato wrote: We are the best in the world.


yrs,
rubato

When referring to a scientist's achievement, as this is a meaningless platitude, made by a desperate nonentity in the vain hope of gaining some reflected glory off the work of others. It's the sort of statement a child who has not developed beyond the egocentric stage would make when his football team wins; "we're the bestest team in the whole world"

Moronic and unsupportable, I'm sure the scientist involved is a far better man than to associate himself with such a puerile notion.
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”

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Econoline
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Re: We, Us.

Post by Econoline »

In rubato's defense, if he had said "we" in reference to some sport's team's success, as people do all the time, probably no one would have found that objectionable or unusual at all. (Except of course for the ones who find everything rubato says objectionable. ;) )

It's good to see someone identifying with a university's science team instead of its sports team.
rubato wrote:Since between my wife and I we have 3 degrees...
What a coincidence, my wife has 3 degrees too... :mrgreen:
People who are wrong are just as sure they're right as people who are right. The only difference is, they're wrong.
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Gob
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Re: We, Us.

Post by Gob »

:funee:
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”

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dales
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Re: We, Us.

Post by dales »

Image

Your collective inability to acknowledge this obvious truth makes you all look like fools.


yrs,
rubato

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Crackpot
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Re: We, Us.

Post by Crackpot »

There's 4 between my wife and I. Oh yeah I have an associates in applied sciences! You know what that makes me...
Okay... There's all kinds of things wrong with what you just said.

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Sean
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Re: We, Us.

Post by Sean »

An astronaut?
Why is it that when Miley Cyrus gets naked and licks a hammer it's 'art' and 'edgy' but when I do it I'm 'drunk' and 'banned from the hardware store'?

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Joe Guy
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Re: We, Us.

Post by Joe Guy »

rubato wrote:Since between my wife and I we have 3 degrees
A high school diploma isn't commonly called a degree but you've done your part and we're proud of you.

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Gob
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Re: We, Us.

Post by Gob »

5 consecutive posts trying to garner some reflected glory off the achievements of others? Now that is the sign of a very secure and well adjusted person, who definitely has no self esteem issues or personality problems.

:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”

rubato
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Re: We, Us.

Post by rubato »

Six posts about significant achievements of an institution which we worked for for 20 years have several degrees from and support financially:



http://news.ucsc.edu/2013/02/flegal-aaas.html
Historic legacy of lead pollution persists despite regulatory efforts

February 16, 2013

By Tim Stephens
flegal-160.jpg
Russell Flegal

Efforts to reduce lead pollution have paid off in many ways, yet the problem persists and will probably continue to affect the health of people and animals well into the future, according to experts speaking at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Boston.

"Things have substantially improved with the virtual elimination of leaded gasoline, restrictions on lead paint, and other efforts to limit releases of industrial lead into the environment. But the historic legacy of lead pollution persists, and new inputs of industrial lead are adding to it," said A. Russell Flegal, professor of environmental toxicology at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Flegal presented a history of industrial lead contamination and explained why the problem won't go away in a AAAS symposium on Saturday, February 16. The good news, he said, is that atmospheric lead concentrations in the United States have fallen by 89 percent in the past three decades, and average blood lead levels in U.S. children have shown a corresponding decline, from 15 micrograms per deciliter (ug/dL) in 1976 to 1.3 ug/dL in 2008.

The bad news is that blood lead levels are still about 100 times higher than the natural background level, and there is no known threshold for lead toxicity. In other words, even tiny amounts of lead in the body can be harmful.

Lead pollution is a 5,000-year-old problem, Flegal said, citing elevated lead levels in Chinese lake sediments deposited during the Bronze Age. Recent records from U.S. lake sediments show decreases in lead pollution since the phasing out of leaded gasoline began in the 1970s. But industrial activities around the globe continue to release more lead into the environment. Major sources of lead emissions include the burning of coal, especially in developing countries such as China and India. Lead from these sources spreads around the globe, so that environmental lead contamination can be detected even in "pristine" environments such as the Arctic and the Swiss Alps, Flegal said.

In addition, consumer products contaminated with lead continue to enter the U.S. from other countries through global trade. These include some foods, health products, and children's toys. Just last year, U.S. customs officials seized 1,400 Halloween pirate costumes imported from China that contained 11 times the allowable level of lead.

Unlike organic pollutants, lead never degrades. To illustrate the persistence of lead in the environment, Flegal cited a 2005 study showing that 90 percent of the current atmospheric lead pollution in the Los Angeles basin originally came from leaded gasoline. Lead particles continue to be deposited on the ground and resuspended into the air decades after their original source was eliminated. Studies by Flegal and others also show that forest fires in California remobilize lead that was deposited in soils decades ago.

"It will take decades to centuries to purge these historic depositions from the environment," Flegal said.

Most people would see that supporting a great university who have done so many worthwhile things is a good thing.

Most emotionally intact adults who have enough achievements of their own not to be insecure .... would see it that way.


yrs,
rubato

rubato
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Re: We, Us.

Post by rubato »

And, if I am lucky, an institution which I will gladly take a > $30,000 / yr pay cut to work for again. ( I re-checked the numbers ) We are defined by the things we love and sacrifice for. "We", in this case, excludes you. Pity for you.

They do great stuff. Pity you lack the intelligence and interest to read the posts. It's very cool research.


yrs,
rubato

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Gob
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Re: We, Us.

Post by Gob »

rubato wrote:Six posts about significant achievements of an institution which we worked for for 20 years have several degrees from and support financially:
I don't believe you.


Most people would see that supporting a great university who have done so many worthwhile things is a good thing. (but only an insecure and maladjusted person woud boast about it.)

Most emotionally intact adults who have enough achievements of their own not to be insecure .... would see it that way. (but would not boast about it, thus proving you are not.)
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”

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Gob
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Re: We, Us.

Post by Gob »

rubato wrote:And, if I am lucky, an institution which I will gladly take a > $30,000 / yr pay cut to work for again. ( I re-checked the numbers ) We are defined by the things we love and sacrifice for. "We", in this case, excludes you. Pity for you.
What sort of institution would hire someone so obviously insecure, socially inept and repulsive? have tehy not met you?

I think you are lying.
They do great stuff.
I'm sure they do, I'm also sure they'd hate to be associated with you.
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”

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