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Academic Mixtape X

good stuff to read and know about
Academic Mixtape X

A new review paper is out detailing exactly how problematic outdoor house cats are. Here’s a writeup in NPR that I thought was pretty good.

Jezebel is back!

Sexism in academia is bad for science and a waste of public funding. You knew this but yet again it’s another academic paper with data to explain how important this is. And this picture speaks a thousand curse words:

Representation of men and women in academic positions relative at varying levels of seniority. From this paper in Nature reviews materials

The most mysterious song on the internet.

A country of “walking coffins”

Here is another installment of “quitlit,” but I think that’s not a fully apt label for this post: Dr. Ambika Kamath is an assistant professor at the University of Colorado, and she announced on her blog that she’s leaving her position take a leading role in a science communication strategy consulting firm that she’s re-launching. She explains that engaging with broader audiences about science can have a substantial impact on the science itself and how it is done. And she also explains how she’s about to publish a book with some cool and important ideas about animal behavior (which I am excited to read), and how she isn’t so excited about spending so much of her time in her career to promote and defend these ideas, but is more interested in letting ideas take root and move on to communicate about a variety of other consequential things. I found myself really sympathizing with her motivations. It says a lot when some of the most motivated scientists with big ideas and a desire to change the status quo are finding that doing this within the professoriate isn’t the way to go.

Another piece of kind-of quitlit: Stephen Heard reflects on retiring, right at the point when he figured everything out. At one point, he says, “I’m quitting” so there’s that.