Flyceum: Your Science. Your Career.

We’re following in the tradition of open discussions among scientists that has resulted in important advances in both science and society.

BenchFly’s Scientist Homepage Challenge

Today we’re incredibly excited to kick-off our Scientist Homepage Challenge!  There are no good reasons scientists shouldn’t have a web presence and the great folks over at flavors.me agree.  We’re working together to enable scientists to create beautiful homepages and to reward the crowd favorites with a full year of premium services at flavors.me.  It only takes a few minutes, so during your next incubation, follow these three easy steps and join The Challenge!

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My Boss Treats Me Like Rodney Dangerfield, No Respect.

Dear Dora: My boss shows me no respectDear Dora,

I’m a 6th year grad student and my boss has essentially written me off. He doesn’t support me at all and essentially acts like I’m an invisible person. Of course, now is the time when I need his help the most (pushing for graduation, finding a postdoc/job, letter of reference). How can I get him back on my side?

– Shan, grad student

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Botanical Sleuthing Recovers Endangered Maguire Daisy

Today we’re unveiling our ‘Mind the Gap’ series, which dives deeper into stories that we feel deserved a bit more attention.  Each piece will contain it’s own “gap” to mind and the first reader to leave a comment with the missing word will get their name added to the blog and will receive a sweet new BenchFly mug!

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Sensational Science Headlines: Read This or Die

Ever see a news article title and have to do a double take? For example: “Drunk scientists pour wine on superconductors and make an incredible discovery”. Sensational science headlines like that make me want to dig deeper and find out the truth. In this example the cited “source” is indeed a report on the effect that different forms of alcohol have on superconductivity, but there is no evidence that the scientists were drunk, or that their research was accidental in any way.

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So You’re Saying 50 Fellowship Applications is Enough?

Dear Dora: Are 50 fellowship applications is Enough?Dear Dora,

How many fellowship applications do most people submit when starting their postdoc?

– Dom, grad student

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Innovation: Acting on Your Ideas

I think that there’s a little engineer in every scientist.  In the scientific pursuit for knowledge, we often find ourselves optimizing, refining, and generally improving the ways we perform our research.  Some ideas we can act upon ourselves by, for example, altering our methods or protocols.  Others innovations are not so simple – concepts for improvements to products or for entirely new tools with which to perform our work.

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The Art of Organizing Your Literature

In the last post, we explored the use of bibliographic databases to locate papers and articles. In this final post we will look at ways in which to organize what you’ve found.

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The Path to Happiness in Research

For thousands of years, philosophers, psychiatrists and Eli Lilly have attempted to define the path to happiness, but remarkably, a singular solution remains elusive.  Yet finding daily happiness in the lab is key to our success as the process of discovery is long, arduous and will try the patience of even the most dedicated researchers.  In hopes of empowering scientists at the bench, we present the BenchFly Theory of Lab Happiness.

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I Have No Graduate School Regrets… Except This One.

Mark Twain once stated, “Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.”  Sage advice.  While spending time agonizing over missed opportunities in the past may not be the best use of our time in the present, a quick post mortem on our graduate school experience may help current students avoid some of the same mistakes we made.

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3 Steps to Mastering Literature Searches

Google and Yahoo make it easy to search the web, whatever you’re looking for you’ll probably find something out there! Thorough searching of bibliographic databases however requires a little more effort, although this is repaid by the quality of the material retrieved.  In this post we will be looking at how to search a bibliographic database. All bibliographic databases are different, but many of the same general principles apply. Here, we will look at PubMed which is a freely available and covers journals in life sciences and medicine.

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