The Guild of Scientific Troubadours

The Guild of Scientific Troubadours

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Articles by grant

ICE is data-mining driver’s license photos.

9 July 2019 grant 0

TechCrunch reveals that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement – ICE, the agency formed in 2003 as a replacement for the INS – has been quietly analyzing driver’s… Read the rest “ICE is data-mining driver’s license photos.”

Scientific illustration of three kinds of squid, from 1912

Science Art: Cephalopoda (Figs. 441-443), from The Depths of the Ocean, 1912

7 July 2019 grant 0

Scientific illustration of three kinds of squid, from 1912Click to embiggen

Three kinds of squid-kids (I think; at least one is identified as a juvenile), from the research expedition of the Norwegian steamer Michael Sars, published in 1912. These… Read the rest “Science Art: Cephalopoda (Figs. 441-443), from The Depths of the Ocean, 1912”

Preparing for another set of CRISPR-modified babies.

5 July 2019 grant 0

Nature reports on another geneticist – a Russian, this time – who has announced that he, too, will be gene-modifying human babies for HIV-positive mothers:

Molecular biologist

… Read the rest “Preparing for another set of CRISPR-modified babies.”

You are your own threat to your air quality. (Well, one of the threats, anyway.)

4 July 2019 grant 0

Science Daily reports on the discovery that human skin oils react with ozone in the atmosphere inside your office or house to create “the Pig-Pen Effect” – a cloud of … Read the rest “You are your own threat to your air quality. (Well, one of the threats, anyway.)”

We’re running out of… sand?

2 July 2019 grant 0

Nature says that our need for silicon – the main substance in computer chips, as well as glass windows, bottles, and things like bricks and mortar – could actually threaten … Read the rest “We’re running out of… sand?”

Scientific illustration - a cartoon of a tranparent human, a visible skeleton, emerging from an X-ray laboratory.

Science Art: X-Ray Lab, cartoon from Resonance: Journal of Scientific Education, August 1996.

30 June 2019 grant 0

Scientific illustration - a cartoon of a tranparent human, a visible skeleton, emerging from an X-ray laboratory. Click to embiggen

It’s funny, see? See?

This cartoon appeared in Resonance between an article called “Genetics to Genetic Algorithms: Solution to Optimisation Problems… Read the rest “Science Art: X-Ray Lab, cartoon from Resonance: Journal of Scientific Education, August 1996.”

An inoculation against fake news: a video game in which you create propaganda.

26 June 2019 grant 0

The University of Cambridge has studied 15,000 people and determined that playing a quick browser game is effective in getting folks to resist the seductive effects of fake news:

Players

… Read the rest “An inoculation against fake news: a video game in which you create propaganda.”

Song is late

26 June 2019 grant 0

Will happen soon. Have tracks, but words are hard.

Scientific illustration or, well, painting of Water and marine life as an elemental face

Science Art: Water, by Giuseppe Arcimboldo, 1566

23 June 2019 grant 0

Scientific illustration or, well, painting of Water and marine life as an elemental faceClick to embiggen

I’m not sure if this really is a scientific illustration, but I think, given the time, it counts as natural history. This thing – heads made of… well…… Read the rest “Science Art: Water, by Giuseppe Arcimboldo, 1566”

Yep, that whale was plenty weird. Half narwhal, half beluga.

21 June 2019 grant 0

Science News shares the genetic solution to a puzzle that’s had marine biologists (and Greenland whale hunters) puzzled since the 1980s. Namely, what the heck was that weird whale… Read the rest “Yep, that whale was plenty weird. Half narwhal, half beluga.”

Robot fish has battery blood.

21 June 2019 grant 0

Nature powers up with a mechanical fish that runs off a circulating liquid power source:

The roughly 40-centimetre soft robot doesn’t have solid batteries — instead it is propelled by a

… Read the rest “Robot fish has battery blood.”

Boaty McBoatface’s Big Breakthrough

19 June 2019 grant 0

The Telegraph reports on the internet’s favorite ocean-going vessel, the submersible Boaty McBoatface, and the plucky little robot sub has just been doing some potentially world-saving… Read the rest “Boaty McBoatface’s Big Breakthrough”

Bigger houses aren’t making people happier.

18 June 2019 grant 0

They’re just taking up more space. That’s the conclusion, published in The Atlantic, of researchers looking at how satisfied people are with their homes – compared… Read the rest “Bigger houses aren’t making people happier.”

Scientific Illustration of an Early Modern or Late Renaissance class for exploration; how sailors got where they were going.

Science Art: favorite image Petrus Plancius Instructing Students in the Science of Navigation, early 17th century

16 June 2019 grant 0

Scientific Illustration of an Early Modern or Late Renaissance class for exploration; how sailors got where they were going. Click to embiggen

The Age of Exploration included at least a little bit of schoolwork. Here are navigation students learning the ways of current and coastline. Their teacher, Petrus Plancius… Read the rest “Science Art: favorite image Petrus Plancius Instructing Students in the Science of Navigation, early 17th century”

How the zebra got its stripes. (An 85-year-old researcher’s first published study!)

14 June 2019 grant 0

Popular Science thinks they know – and the answer is literally cool:

Now the 85-year-old amateur scientist [Allison Cobb] has published her first scientific study [in the Journal

… Read the rest “How the zebra got its stripes. (An 85-year-old researcher’s first published study!)”

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Something to Believe In

GRANT: something to believe in

You could write a review of this album here on iTunes.

That would be generous.

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acoustics aeronautics agronomy anatomy anthropology archaeology astronomy biochemistry biology botany chemistry climatology computer science ecology economics electrical engineering electronics engineering entomology epidemiology evolution genetics geology linguistics marine biology mathematics medicine meteorology microbiology microscopy nanotechnology neurology oceanography optics paleontology pharmacology physics psychology quantum physics research robotics sociology space exploration theremin zoology
RSS Help Wanted: ScienceCareers
  • Midwestern University - Downers Grove: Assistant Professor- IL- Pathology
  • Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH: Research Software Engineer
  • Baylor College of Medicine: Postdoctoral Associate - cancer epidemiology
  • University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and UPMC: Postdoctoral Fellow Research Opportunity in Immunometabolism, Cardiovascular & Metabolic Disease
  • Duke - NUS Medical School: Tenure Track Faculty Positions, Programme in Cancer and Stem Cell Biology
  • Ellison Institute of Technology: Postdoctoral Research Fellow (Zuercher Lab) - Generative Biology Institute
Honorary Troubadours
  • Jonathan Coulton, Contributing Troubadour for Popular Science.
  • Laura Veirs, who knows her way around a polysyllable.
  • Thomas Dolby, godfather of scientific pop.
  • Squeaky, fact-based rock about fusion containment & rocket science.
  • Cosmos II, a.k.a. Boston University astronomer Alan Marscher.
  • Dr. Fiorella Terenzi, astrophysicist who makes music from cosmic radio sources.
  • Dr. Jim Webb, astronomy professor and acoustic guitarist.
  • Artichoke, the band behind 26 Scientists, Vols. I and II.
  • They Might Be Giants, unrelenting proponents of scientific popular song.
  • Symphonies of Science, the people who make Carl Sagan and others sing.
  • Giant Squid, doom metal about the sublime horrors of marine biology.
  • Gethan Dick,6 scientists, 6 musicians, 1 great album
Related Projects
  • Squid Pro Crow
  • Grant Bandcamp
  • Grant Soundcloud
  • Penitential Originals Playlist
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"Is it a fact—or have I dreamt it—that, by means of electricity, the world of matter has become a great nerve, vibrating thousands of miles in a breathless point of time?"
— Nathaniel Hawthorne, The House of the Seven Gables, 1851

grant balfour made this website.

Member institution: Duct Tape Aesthetic Laboratories
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