nellgreenfieldboyce, to science

At a meeting in Germany that attracts dozens of Nobel prize winners, one of them objected to its focus on diversity, saying “as a male scientist, I have a feeling of discrimination when I am here, in the climate that this meeting is being held.” Science magazine reports that a visibly nervous early-career researcher stood up to respond….

https://www.science.org/content/article/nobel-laureate-claimed-antimale-discrimination-early-career-researcher-called-it-out

Link to video, her response is at 46:39
https://www.mediatheque.lindau-nobel.org/recordings/41064

scandrof, to science

"After briefly attending music college, Dr Larissa Suzuki abandoned plans to be a professional pianist and switched to a computer science degree, where she describes being the only girl in a class of 40 boys. “At first, I never questioned why there aren’t many girls in here,” she said.

However, she recalls being underestimated, including by one professor who suggested she had copied a classmate’s homework, when the reverse was the case. “They asked me, ‘Where did you get these answers?’” she said. “They believed these boys, who were skipping class and laughing in lessons, had done the work and I had not, even though I was so dedicated.”

Suzuki says that being autistic may have allowed her to look beyond engineering stereotypes. “I wanted to make things and solve problems for humanity and I thought I can do that with computer science,” she said. “Because I’m autistic, I wanted to know all the steps to get there – and if step A fails, this is step B and step C.”"

‘It’s not like science fiction any more’: Nasa aiming to make spaceships talk | Nasa | The Guardian https://www.theguardian.com/science/2023/jun/24/nasa-spaceships-talk-chatgpt-larissa-suzuki

Women in the History of Science | Free book download (www.uclpress.co.uk)

Women in the History of Science brings together primary sources that highlight women’s involvement in scientific knowledge production around the world. Drawing on texts, images and objects, each primary source is accompanied by an explanatory text, questions to prompt discussion, and a bibliography to aid further research....

ditsch42, to random
@ditsch42@troet.cafe avatar

We would also be extremely happy to welcome some more to our group! Our numbers are growing, but there's still space for more :ablobcatheartsqueeze:

stux, to random
@stux@mstdn.social avatar

Headlines that make me happy :nkoHappy:

Astro_Jmona,

@ohiorob @stux let it be known that ever since I migrated from the birdsite, I've never felt safer on any other social media platform than I do here. Sprinkle the right amount of science unto my safety and as a woman it means to me more than winning the lottery.
Women and , just want to be safe and heard. Thank you, FediFam!

TarkabarkaHolgy, to science
@TarkabarkaHolgy@ohai.social avatar

I'm reading Eugenie Clark's memoir The Lady and the Sharks about starting her marine laboratory in Florida in the 1950s.

My favorite story is that they accidentally sent (for IDing) a box of snails to an plant expert and a box of plants to a malacologist.

They both identified them correctly, but the plant guy asked why he had to scrape plant matter from snails, and the malacologist asked why they included so much plant matter with that one little snail 😄

gdinwiddie, to random
@gdinwiddie@mastodon.social avatar

TIL that the word "scientist" was coined by William Whewell in 1834 in his review of Mary Somerville's treatise, On the Connexion of the Physical Sciences.

https://allthatsinteresting.com/mary-somerville

itnewsbot, to science

Remembering Virginia Norwood, Mother of NASA’s Landsat Success - Virginia T. Norwood passed away earlier this year at the age of 96, and NASA’s far... - https://hackaday.com/2023/05/13/remembering-virginia-norwood-mother-of-nasas-landsat-success/

akosma, (edited ) to random
@akosma@mastodon.online avatar

So, I found my late grandmother's maths diploma from the University of Geneva, dated July 1927, signed by William Rappard himself, and then I found her name in the archives of the university. I'm feeling a mix of pride and emotion that's hard to describe. She's my all-time hero.
https://www.unige.ch/archives/files/9115/3866/3096/Diplomes_1926-1927.pdf

nellie_m,

@akosma @acf @Sheril

This is a grandmother to be very proud of.

danielcolquitt, to random
@danielcolquitt@mathstodon.xyz avatar

RT @livuniphyssci
Join us on May 12 to celebrate Women in Mathematics Day 2023!
Register here: https://tinyurl.com/yck6emyj

cepaea, to random

Important article that sets the record straight on Rosalind Franklin's role in the discovery of DNA as a double helix -- with significant new findings.

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-01313-5

EU_Commission, to random
@EU_Commission@social.network.europa.eu avatar

🎖 120 years ago, Polish-French scientist Marie Skłodowska–Curie became the first woman to receive a Nobel Prize.

Today as in 1903, European women are leading excellence in research and innovation.

Of the 74M people working in science and technology in the EU, 52% are women. A figure that has grown over the years, bridging the gender gap.

We want to give every woman, from Faro to Kyiv, opportunities to usher in a new era of research.

Discover how: https://europa.eu/!x9wRVT

renordquist, to random

I'm finding my home feed here to be getting more interesting, but also very male dominated.

I'll be following women and boosting women for some time to try to balance that.

renordquist,

For anyone who is wondering how this is going: quite well. It has taken months of stoically sticking to this plan of following and boosting women, but my feed has now taken on a much less male-dominated tinge. This makes me happy.

AVerger, to random


Women scientists maybe you thought were men

Maud Menten (Michaelis–Menten equation)
Yvonne Barr (Epstein-Barr virus)
Marilyn Kozak (Kozak consensus sequence)
Tsuneko Okazaki (Okazaki fragments - with her husband Reiji)
Helen Quinn (Peccei–Quinn theory)
Phyllis Nicolson (Crank–Nicolson method)
Hilde Mangold (Spemann-Mangold organizer)
Laura P. Bautz (Bautz–Morgan classification )
Katharine B. Blodgett (Langmuir–Blodgett (LB) film)
Martha Chase (Hershey–Chase experiments)

AVerger, to random

Hello #ScienceMastodon Twitter refugees

#introduction I am a 🇫🇷 molecular & structural biologist working at the CNRS. I study the molecular mechanisms that control human gene expression focusing on #transcription factors & the Pol II machinery

Expect to see here a lot of info on #generegulation, #enhancers, #histone modifications & structural insights into the eukaryotic Transcription Initiation machinery. #CryoEM
I will also highlight #womeninscience to give them the visibility they deserve

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