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Bill Fulkerson

Accounting for the gaps in ancient food webs - 0 views

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    If you want to understand an ecosystem, look at what the species within it eat. In studying food webs-how animals and plants in a community are connected through their dietary preferences-ecologists can piece together how energy flows through an ecosystem and how stable it is to climate change and other disturbances. Studying ancient food webs can help scientists reconstruct communities of species, many long extinct, and even use those insights to figure out how modern-day communities might change in the future. There's just one problem: only some species left enough of a trace for scientists to find eons later, leaving large gaps in the fossil record-and researchers' ability to piece together the food webs from the past.
Bill Fulkerson

Alarming COVID variants show vital role of genomic surveillance - 0 views

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    Efforts to track SARS-CoV-2 sequences have helped identify worrying variants - but researchers are blind to emerging mutations in some regions.
Bill Fulkerson

Researchers develop a mathematical model to explain the complex architecture of termite... - 0 views

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    Following a series of studies on termite mound physiology and morphogenesis over the past decade, researchers at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences have now developed a mathematical model to help explain how termites construct their intricate mounds.
Bill Fulkerson

Study: Folklore structure reveals how conspiracy theories emerge, fall apart | Ars Tech... - 0 views

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    There's rarely time to write about every cool science-y story that comes our way. So this year, we're once again running a special Twelve Days of Christmas series of posts, highlighting one science story that fell through the cracks in 2020, each day from December 25 through January 5. Today: the structure of folklore can help explain how unrelated facts and false information connect into a compelling narrative framework that can then go viral as a conspiracy theory.
Bill Fulkerson

Scientists introduce rating system to assess quality of evidence for policy - 0 views

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    The COVID-19 pandemic has underscored the critical need for robust scientific evidence to support policy decisions, such as around the effectiveness of various social distancing measures and the safety of drug therapies. Yet this need arises at a time of growing misinformation and poorly vetted facts repeated by influential sources. To address this gap, a group of scientists led by Kai Ruggeri, a professor at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, and James Green, chief scientist at NASA, has introduced a new framework to help set standards for the quality of evidence used in policymaking.
Bill Fulkerson

Understanding the 'deep-carbon cycle' - 0 views

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    New geologic findings about the makeup of the Earth's mantle are helping scientists better understand long-term climate stability and even how seismic waves move through the planet's layers.
Bill Fulkerson

https://twitter.com/erictopol/status/1362077740313190401?s=12 - 0 views

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    What has #AI done to help us in the pandemic so far? Very little.
Bill Fulkerson

The Politics of a Second Gilded Age - 0 views

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    The mass inequality of America's first Gilded Age thrived on identity-based partisanship, helping extinguish the fires of class rage. In 2021, we're headed down the same path.
Bill Fulkerson

Immune system variation can predict severe COVID-19 outcomes - 0 views

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    The differing immune system responses of patients with COVID-19 can help predict who will experience moderate and severe consequences of disease, according to a new study by Yale researchers published July 27 in the journal Nature.
Bill Fulkerson

Bumble bee disease, reproduction shaped by flowering strip plants - 0 views

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    Flowering strips-pollinator-friendly rows of plants that increase foraging habitat for bees-can help offset pollinator decline but may also bring risks of higher pathogen infection rates for pollinators foraging in those strips.
Bill Fulkerson

Scale and information-processing thresholds in Holocene social evolution | Nature Commu... - 0 views

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    Throughout the Holocene, societies developed additional layers of administration and more information-rich instruments for managing and recording transactions and events as they grew in population and territory. Yet, while such increases seem inevitable, they are not. Here we use the Seshat database to investigate the development of hundreds of polities, from multiple continents, over thousands of years. We find that sociopolitical development is dominated first by growth in polity scale, then by improvements in information processing and economic systems, and then by further increases in scale. We thus define a Scale Threshold for societies, beyond which growth in information processing becomes paramount, and an Information Threshold, which once crossed facilitates additional growth in scale. Polities diverge in socio-political features below the Information Threshold, but reconverge beyond it. We suggest an explanation for the evolutionary divergence between Old and New World polities based on phased growth in scale and information processing. We also suggest a mechanism to help explain social collapses with no evident external causes.
Bill Fulkerson

Do algorithms discriminate - 0 views

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    As the executive and academic director of a leadership center, my research indicates that relying on data analytics to eliminate human bias in choosing leaders won't help.
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