Faculty recruitment seminars in MCB at UC Davis.
Category: Misc.
Cassie Stoddard talks at @ucdavis 2/1 and 2/2 on Avian Eggs
Got this in email and thought some would be interested:
Cassie Stoddard from Princeton University is giving two very different talks linked only by eggs:
THURSDAY February 1st 4.00pm in 2205 Haring Hall: THE EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY OF AVIAN EGGS
FRIDAY February 2nd 12.00pm in 194 Young Hall: COLOR, CAMOUFLAGE AND MIMICRY IN AVIAN EGGS
mofofospoomics Solves #TomBrady “Injury” Mystery
So – there is great controversy surrounding the “Injury” to New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady. See for example:
- Tom Brady Is Refusing to Talk About the Only Thing Anyone Wants to Talk About
- Will Tom Brady’s glove eclipse the legend of Curt Schilling’s bloody …
And much much more.
So – in the interest of showing the power of science and the power of microbiome science, I have decided to tackle (so to speak) the topic. If you are not familiar with the power of microbiome science in addressing Tom Brady related controversies then you must check out the use of microbial forensics to solve the #deflategate controversy.
See “Secret microbiome forensic study reveals #deflategate culprit” and the amazing video below
So given this prior record of the value of mofofospoomics (microbiome forensics for sports) I decided to see what we could learn about Tom Brady’s injury.
I started, as any goo microbiome study does, with collecting all the relevant hypotheses to test and not in any way doing an exploratory analysis. So I surveyed the internet by Googling, and searched around Twitter for 3-4 minutes and I found the following plausible hypothesis:
A: Brady was really injured in practice and got a cut that was then treated with stitches and topical antibiotics.
B. Brady had surgery to add an additional finger to hold a future Super Bowl championship ring. In addition, one would assume that oral or IV antibiotics were given as part of the post surgery treatment.
See for example:
Does Tom Brady have an extra finger? pic.twitter.com/OPSwAK7xpJ
— Kurt Morin (@K_Morin7) December 31, 2017
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js
BREAKING: Tom Brady’s hand injury was really just a surgical procedure to add another finger for his sixth Super Bowl ring. pic.twitter.com/d6HCaZUvyd
— Fake SportsCenter (@FakeSportsCentr) January 21, 2018
https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js
C. Brady and Bill Belichick are faking it to force Jacksonville to alter practice plans.
All three seem completely plausible. I would give them each equal wait in a Bayesian prior sense. So the key question was – could one develop some ways to use a mofofospoomics approach to test for which of these three hypothesis was most likely to be correct.
The first thing to do was to make some mofofospoomics related predictions based on each hypothesis. This actually was relatively easy.
Under hypothesis A, I would expect one key mofofospoomics related signature. Assuming the topical antibiotics were only applied to his right hand then one would expect his right hand to have a different microbiome than his left and to look abnormal like all antibiotic treated skin samples do. So to test for this hypothesis A all we would need would be some hand microbiome samples from him.
Under hypothesis B, I would expect two mofofospoomics related signatures. First, one would expect Brady’s hand to show the typical signature of post surgical changes in the microbiome (see for example Grice 2014). In addition, one would expect there to be affects of the antibiotics used. The oral or IV antibiotics would be expected to affect all of his microbiome – skin and gut for example. Thus both his hands should look like apocalypse happened relative to the microbiome. Also we might expect the new finger to look different from the other fingers since translated parts look more like the donor than the recipient. So to test for this hypothesis B all we would need would be some hand microbiome samples from him and also possibly a fecal sample.
Under hypothesis C, I would expect no mofofospoomics related signatures. That his, his hands should look normal. Or maybe they should look normal for a superstar athlete. So one would need to compare to other well known athlete microbiome signatures.
So – from examination of the possible tests for the three hypothesis it seemed that getting hand microbiome samples for Brady would allow us to use a mofofospoomic approach to determine which of the three was best.
Thus the next issue was – how to get hand microbiome samples from Mr. Brady. First, we tried to get the gloves he has been wearing since the “injury” assuming we could turn them inside out and do all sorts of cool things. Alas, apparently, he has not taken them off at all.
So we were left with one alternative possibility. It is well known that before every major game, Mr. Brady destroys his cell phones to make sure that nobody can find directions to his house. Or for some other reason. Well this is key because it is well known that phones contain a signature of the users finger microbiome whereby one can identify individuals using the phones for criminal or other investigations (see also this).
So all we would need would be to get his latest phone. To do this, we placed fake garbage cans on the path from the parking area to their training facility yesterday and .. voila .. Brady walked by and tossed something into the can. Using our patented SmartGarbage sample collector, what he threw in was sealed inside sterile, DNA free plastic. And later in the evening we collected it and … voila voila .. we had a smashed phone itself in a plastic bag (I guess Brady does not want people to get exposed to the cell phone dust). Thanks Tom.
So we took the phone back to our private lab and we asked one key question that was critical to whether we could proceed. Will it blend? And it did.
So then we took the cell phone dust and did standard mofofospoomic analysis on it (DNA isolation, both rRNA gene PCR and sequencing and shotgun metagenomic sequencing, de multiplexing, QC). Kit and other controls were included in every step. And we also downloaded and added sequences from studies of human skin, hands, antibiotic treated or not, cell phones, and also some controls like sports objects.
And then we we fed all the data into the new integrated MAQDADDY pipeline (a combination of Mothur, Anvi’o, QIIME, and DADA). And we used it to test the three hypotheses. Amazingly none of them showed a good match to the data.
For example, the Brady phone sample did not really even resemble a phone well
So this was really disappointing. But as one last ditch effort, we decided to download all of the available microbiome data from any sample on the planet. Like all of it. We then reran the MAQDADDY pipeline and found an amazing result.
What I think this means is that Tom Brady had a Luke Skywalker operation. That is, his hand is robotic. So cool.
I just love mofofospoomics.
Today at @ucdavis: Katie Hinde ” More than food: how hormones in mother’s milk organize infant behavior”
Updated with location …
This week’s Animal Behavior Graduate Group seminar:
More than food: how hormones in mother’s milk organize infant behavior
Dr. Katie Hinde
Associate Professor, Arizona State University
Friday, January 19th, 12:10 pm in Young Hall 194
Coffee and cookies will be available
"Dr. Hinde’s research focuses on how mother’s milk contributes to infant development and behavior in socially complex taxa, particularly humans and monkeys. This includes not only provision of energy and materials for growth, but also milk constituents that shape immunological, neurobiological, and behavior development. She investigates how variation in mother’s milk and behavioral care influences infant outcomes from post-natal life and into adulthood, and subsequent generations.” – The Evolution Institute
For more information on Dr. Hinde’s research: http://mammalssuck.blogspot.com/?view=classic
At #UCDavis 1/18: Katie Hinde “Older than Dinosaurs: Mammalian Milk in Evolutionary and Ecological Context”
ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION SEMINAR SERIES
Katie Hinde, Associate Professor of Human Evolution and Social Change at Arizona State University,
Older than Dinosaurs: Mammalian Milk in Evolutionary and Ecological Context
4:10 p.m. Thursday, January 18, 2018 Haring Hall, Room 2205
At #UCDavis 1/19: Katie Hinde “More than food: how hormones in mother’s milk organize infant behavior”
This week’s Animal Behavior Graduate Group seminar:
**please note that the location will be announced prior to Friday’s seminar**
More than food: how hormones in mother’s milk organize infant behavior
Dr. Katie Hinde
Associate Professor, Arizona State University
Friday, January 19th, 12:10 pm – LOCATION TO BE DETERMINED
Coffee and cookies will be available
"Dr. Hinde’s research focuses on how mother’s milk contributes to infant development and behavior in socially complex taxa, particularly humans and monkeys. This includes not only provision of energy and materials for growth, but also milk constituents that shape immunological, neurobiological, and behavior development. She investigates how variation in mother’s milk and behavioral care influences infant outcomes from post-natal life and into adulthood, and subsequent generations.” – The Evolution Institute
For more information on Dr. Hinde’s research: http://mammalssuck.blogspot.com/?view=classic
1/24 and 1/25 at #UCDavis: Peter Mumby, Storer Lecturer, on Coral Reefs
Posting as requested:
PLEASE POST AND DISTRIBUTE:
We are pleased to announce that Peter Mumby, Professor of Marine Spatial Ecology Laboratory from the University of Queensland in Australia, will be presenting two lectures in the Storer Lectureship in Life Sciences Series, “The Future of Coral Reefs,” at 4:10 p.m. on Wednesday, January 24, 2018 in the Alumni and Visitors Center and “The Connectivity, Ecosystem Overfishing and Rebuilding of Coral Reef Fisheries” at 4:10pm on Thursday January 25, 2018 in Haring Hall. Please see the attached flyer for additional information.
Copying Storify of Phil Campbell talk at UC Davis
Philip Campbell of @nature talk at @ucdavis met w/ some skepticism …
Edit
Philip Campbell of @nature talk at @ucdavis met w/ some skepticism …
Sir Philip Campbell gave a talk at UC Davis on “Challenges for Research Group Leaders”. A few people Tweeted during his talk. Here is a recap. I threaded all my Tweets with my first one below so it might be better / easier to follow the discussion if you just go directly to that Tweet.
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@phylogenomics @ucdavis @nature LMFTFY Campbell will speak on “Challenges for WHITE MALE research group leaders and the support they need” Maybe a toss away slide for POC/Women pic.twitter.com/rnLITkvsIo
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Hey @PsyArXiv – you’re in Philip Campbell’s talk (EiC of Nature). He’s encouraging authors to use preprint servers.
@improvingpsych pic.twitter.com/Uzbji33LZR -
When @nature editor Campbell was in MN giving a similar talk, multiple women said he spent downtime joking about “women in the kitchen” and such. HILL-arious. https://twitter.com/phylogenomics/status/935207488084893696 …
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Also, a super fine stamp of approval from their most white dood reviewers! https://twitter.com/phylogenomics/status/935209620586479617 …
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Also, a super fine stamp of approval from their most white dood reviewers! https://twitter.com/phylogenomics/status/935209620586479617 …
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Apparently I’m just going to sit here from afar and heckle @phylogenomics twitter stream on @nature editors blah-blah about promoting science. pic.twitter.com/GDm1tE8U3w
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@phylogenomics @ucdavis @nature Pressures on PIs like needing to have 4 post docs work for 4 years to get a @nature publication? Like that kind of pressure? pic.twitter.com/36n3pVwwrU
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Wait….sprinkle some holy water on Sir Phillip and see if he burns for this lie! Also, WTF is up with their dumbass editorials and mansplaining? https://twitter.com/phylogenomics/status/935210672954081280 …
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@phylogenomics Sure, not when reviewing; when deciding to send out to review 🙂
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Editor in Chief of Nature: editors don’t consider who author is, “authorship is not the point” (See pic) But double-blind review is optional pic.twitter.com/jWuIm9VN77 -
@phylogenomics aka Kant Understand!
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Tell me more about the values of @nature editors who doxx pseud female bloggers. 🍿🍿🍿 https://twitter.com/phylogenomics/status/935210672954081280 …
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This doesn’t work. Editors and reviewers are human. You can’t just tell them to ignore who the authors are. https://twitter.com/siminevazire/status/935211323423571968 …
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Only someone who hasn’t read Anderson, or tried to argue in good faith with him, could say that. Than again, Nature is a for-profit anti-science scam so perhaps ol’ Phil believes his own bullshit. https://twitter.com/phylogenomics/status/935210038594912257 …
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But…but….citations don’t matter! I heard Sir Phillip say this himself! https://twitter.com/phylogenomics/status/935212658701123585 …
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@phylogenomics From just two months ago during #NatureDown https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NlYj4oinQCM …
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Also, the submission and publication fees to glam journals – those will set a new PI back a bit! https://twitter.com/phylogenomics/status/935213122926690304 …
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At @ucdavis talk by Nature editor in chief. Can’t wait for Q & A – pretty sure @phylogenomics will make it interesting.
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I’m dying for Campbell to bust out Diamondis at the end of the talk for more bad mentoring advice like the 120-hour work week. https://edgeforscholars.org/glam-journals-whiff-again-with-more-bad-mentoring-and-career-advice/ … https://twitter.com/phylogenomics/status/935212221054861312 …
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Editor in chief of Nature: survey results, what would improve reproducibility? “Journals enforcing standards” towards the bottom 🤔 pic.twitter.com/tcE4yCUNU3 -
@ucdavis @nature Honestly it is SO ridiculous for Sir Campbell to suggest @nature is trying to move away from the Impact Factor when all they do is promote their IF all the time http://www.nature.com/content/nature/impact_IF2014BANN/index.html?WT.mc_id=BAN_NATURE_1408_IF2014BANN … pic.twitter.com/EUJTx8AwqG -
@ucdavis @nature Honestly it is SO ridiculous for Sir Campbell to suggest @nature is trying to move away from the I… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/935214825189163014 …
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@phylogenomics @ucdavis @nature Are you KIDDING ME??? Nature publishes all the punching down editorials on trainees about how there are no jobs, they need to work more – UGH. @nature is the problem. pic.twitter.com/wGDAcd2PbC
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I bet Campbell isn’t even at UCDavis and @phylogenomics is just tweeting to make me have a stroke. pic.twitter.com/QP9LEV3L5u
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@dstephenlindsay Life scientists, I think? Last graph in this article: https://www.nature.com/news/1-500-scientists-lift-the-lid-on-reproducibility-1.19970 …
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@siminevazire @ucdavis @phylogenomics You should make it interesting. They are notoriously anti-female, beat down on trainees and driven by money not science.
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@phylogenomics @ucdavis @nature So…he’s just making a list of problems that @nature contributes to? Is that a fair summary of his talk thus far? Let’s get to some solutions there, Sir Phillip pic.twitter.com/BsTHoQJ8m3
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@matthewcobb @ucdavis @nature Well here is a page they have where they say “there may be some issues with IF” and then list their IF along w/ other metrics http://www.nature.com/npg_/company_info/journal_metrics.html … pic.twitter.com/yE0CGMSj0u -
@McLNeuro @siminevazire @ucdavis @phylogenomics I had this thought but don’t know how much risk it would entail for @siminevazire.
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@sennoma @siminevazire @ucdavis @phylogenomics I’m an assistant professor. You never have enough power, money or friends. I don’t get paid enough to not have an opinion when people are being punched down on.
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@sennoma @McLNeuro @siminevazire @ucdavis @phylogenomics Is @phylogenomics willing to communicate questions from the Twitter audience? 😈 The speaker should know that the world is watching & listening….
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Editor in chief of Nature: “Everyone complains about incentives. Who is in charge of incentives?” pic.twitter.com/aMb0qrV7OM -
@sennoma @siminevazire @ucdavis @phylogenomics I also don’t get paid enough to not end with a preposition
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@JoshFessel @sennoma @siminevazire @ucdavis @phylogenomics Actually, it’s just the five of us who are riled up. Everyone else is on about the royal wedding.
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@McLNeuro @siminevazire @ucdavis @phylogenomics I may have misread and/or miscommunicated. I meant that I didn’t feel right telling someone they should stir shit, when it’s them not me who’s going to live with the fallout. But I’m 100% pro-shit stirring!
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@McLNeuro @sennoma @siminevazire @ucdavis @phylogenomics I can be riled up about many things at once! I contain multitudes.
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@McLNeuro @JoshFessel @siminevazire @ucdavis @phylogenomics Inorite? It’s killing me. (Inherited power is an abomination.)
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@phylogenomics My favorite quote so far: every year we give a mentor award in a different country, last year was in the west coast. CA, OR, WA. Ha! The #bluewall has begun.
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@phylogenomics @ucdavis @nature If decisions abt promotion, tenure, & funding continue to be at least in part “outsourced” to high impact journals, that means @nature is in a powerful position as a change agent.
How is @nature going to use that power to the benefit of scientists & science? Help us.
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Mindless data-crunching made bearable with 2nd monitor showing live tweet commentary by @phylogenomics during Nature’s editor-in-chief talk at @ucdavis. I feel like I should pay for this entertainment.
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@phylogenomics @ucdavis Not to take anything away from the serious issued being raised though. Just loving the approach…
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All journals/editors should do this, in my opinion. Perhaps the easiest change we can make with potentially big impact. https://twitter.com/siminevazire/status/935232856242077697 …
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@siminevazire @phylogenomics @ucdavis @nature Thank you so, so much to @phylogenomics & @siminevazire for including the rest of us tweeps in the discussion!!! #21stcenturyscicomm
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Because youre a rockstar!! #AllHailEisen https://twitter.com/phylogenomics/status/935221961990406144 …
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Bookmarking this thread for a thorough read later: https://twitter.com/phylogenomics/status/935207488084893696 …
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@McLNeuro @phylogenomics Oh gawd that gif brings back memories.
“Ya hear that Elisabeth? I’m coming to join ya honey!” Lol #GoogOldDays -
I like the phrase “credibility revolution” – it captures both openness/transparency & reproducibility/rigor goals
https://www.econstor.eu/bitstream/10419/36365/1/621208477.pdf … -
Like this thread @phylogenomics but Pro-Tip: You don’t have to call him “Sir” every time just ‘cos some hereditary rich old cow across the pond 🇬🇧 says so! https://twitter.com/phylogenomics/status/935207488084893696 …
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@PSBROOKES I stopped it a few Tweets in – I think I copied that from somewhere and just pasted it in for a few tweets and then felt embarrassed …
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Good recap of Sir Philip Campbell’s (from Nature) talk, with excellent commentary from @McLNeuro https://twitter.com/phylogenomics/status/935207488084893696 …
Sam Westreich: A Bioinformatics Analysis Method for Metatranscriptomics and its Application for the Study of Gut Microbiomes
Wednesday December 20th
4:30
pm
GSBF Auditorium
Sam Westreich
Exit Seminar
“A Bioinformatics Analysis Method for Metatranscriptomics and its Application for the Study of Gut Microbiomes”
At #UCDavis 12/6 & 12/7 Hanna Kokko on “Males Exist. Does It Matter?” & “Bet-Hedging in Evolutionary Biology””
Hanna Kokko will be visiting next week and giving two talks, sponsored by the Storer endowment.
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Public Lecture:
Wednesday December 6, 2017 “Males Exist. Does It Matter?”
4:10 p.m.
Student Community Center, Multipurpose Room
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Scientific Lecture:
Thursday December 7, 2017
“Bet-Hedging in Evolutionary Biology”
4:10 p.m. Kleiber Hall
Some detail about Dr. Kokko:
Dr. Kokko is a professor in of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies at the University of Zürich. She started her career studying engineering and applied mathematics, but later became fascinated by the mathematical logic and foundation that underlies biological phenomena. Her work is at the interface between evolution and ecology. In particular, she is interested in studying the evolution and ecology of reproductive strategies and behavior in animals.
She was awarded the 2010 Per Brinck Oikos Award and the British Ecological Society’s Founder’s Prize. Prior to her appointment at the University of Zürich, she was a professor of Evolutionary Ecology at the Australian National University. While in Australia, she was named an Australian Laureate Fellow. She was made a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science in 2014.



