Science Magazine's Top Stories of 2007
ahab_2001 writes "The journal Science has put up its annual Breakthrough of the Year list. They're looking at the top-ten scientific accomplishments for 2007. Leading the list are studies of human genetic variation, and a flood of new discoveries that point toward a future of genomic medicine and even "personal genomics" — with all of the potential issues of ethics and privacy that entails. Runners-up include advances in cellular and structural biology, astrophysics, physics, immunology, synthetic chemistry, neuroscience, and computer science. In addition to the articles from the journal, there's a video on human genetic variation and a podcast as well." Some similarities here to Time magazine's list on the same subject.
Missing option: the aperture labs handheld portal device.
liqbase
Funding isn't even at the nominal rate of inflation (4 percent) - NIH/NIIT/NIA/etc is about 0.5 percent higher for 2008 than 2007. And with the cost of research materials being about 8 to 10 percent, this represents a substantial cut in US funding.
But, it's a great time to be working on medical genetics as a bioinformatician.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
Global Warming? Why? I don't see how this could compete with the others on the list. I didn't see any real breakthrough here (maybe I missed it), but I wouldn't count Al Gore's movie such.
The study of Global warming has been pretty steady over the past years. An Inconvenient Truth didn't make any new discoveries in the field that I know of. It looked more like a sob story to me, look more ice is melting, but don't you love nature like I do? Maybe we needed a movie to get people's attention, but it makes you feel like he is blaming YOU. If you are willing to dedicate your life to this noble cause, then don't take a private Jet to the showings.
shower curtains.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
Imagine people trying to understand why that can't happen.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
Either string theory, perpetual motion, or Self Googling.
I vote for the possible unification of physics by garrett lisi, as was slashdotted about a month ago. http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/11/15/2322225 maybe its too early to know, but this could be the biggest breakthrough since Eisenstein. Also, the advent of the self-contained nuclear power plant that toshiba got slashdotted for recently: http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/10/21/166237 Assuming they arent bot vaporware, which they probably are...
One of their runners up is evidence that memory and imagination use the same parts of the brain. This counts as insight? Remember being in another room somewhere. Now imagine being in that same room. Notice that remembering and imagining are very much the same experience? It would be news if neuroscience discovered there were two very separate things there. But it's news when neuroscience "discovers" that they're both pretty much the same use of mind?
Wake me when neuroscience gets to the point of describing things that poets and painters haven't known for centuries. How can the science-educated be so illiterate about their own minds that the imaginative commonality of memory and foresight could come as any surprise to either the researchers here, or the editors of this somewhat consequential magazine?
"with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
Science doesnt prove things, it provides a best fit explaination of observed phenomena.
If you're looking to entice a flame war, that isnt the way to start it. Read up on what science is, and is not.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science
...people with a certain personality-related gene
hmm..correct and incorrect, imho. Sure, there has been significant advances in the way sequencing works; the lastest being 454 sequencing http://www.454.com/, or Solexa http://www.illumina.com/pages.ilmn?ID=203 or SOLID http://www.illumina.com/pages.ilmn?ID=203, which has significantly reduced cost to sequencing. However, with each of these new techniques come new challenges in statistics and data analysis that are not just technological problems - they require significant, real breakthroughs in algorithms and statistical methods - how do you identify genes? what statistical methods would you use to identify distant repeats separated by millions of years? How accurate and reliable are these identification methods? We've come to a point where getting the data is now almost trivial and cheap - making sense of it, even being able to order it in the right way - we're just beginning to make headway there. So its not all tech - there is a lot of science there - only, it is difficult to argue it is biology any more - more chemistry and math and a bit of CS :)
"Laziness is an optimisation protocol"
Algorithms and statistics are technology. Science is about discovering new quite universal relationships. I admit that distinction between science and technology is blurred, but people clearly prefer to use term "science", or "applied science". Applied science IS technology! There even should not be such a term "applied science".
Math IS technology.
I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
.. continuing. And the reason why people like to use science instead of technology is access to funds.
If what you do is called "science", you are more likely to get more money with less accountability from various scientific funds. If it is called "technology", you have to go to businessmen interested in practical results.
It is one of those materialistic games.
I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
Considering that viruses can mutate and jump inter species (Bird Flu) let alone something as simple as family genetics, that wouldn't work as the virus creator intended.
"I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
-Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
I didn't RTFA either because "Science" as a publication is practically useless to me until they publish the papers available for all to read for free. The AAAS is disgustingly hypocritical in supporting the existence of a journal which restricts access to information which ought to be available to all the members of a modern society. In contrast the physics community with arXiv.org and the people behind the Public Library of Science (PLoS) http://www.plos.org/ are to be congratulated for sharing their work with the world.
In short: fuck "Science" and the AAAS, especially because of the dismay (commonly expressed by scientists) that the public is ill-informed and under educated about science.