Author: Amanda

Why support crowdfunding for science research? Graphs from CF1.We were curious about this question, and we decided to take the opportunity presented by the annual meeting of the American Association for Advancement of Science and the first conference of the newly formed Citizen Science Association, which both took place in San Jose last week and this weekend. We put together a short survey and tweeted/blogged/Facebooked it to the attendees and our followers: to you laypeople, this is what's known as a "convenience sample" (convenience sampling is the reason so much basic research is done on university students). We figured a few thousand people keen on advancing science generally and citizen science in particular would be a great way to find people who had supported science crowdfunding. The response, unfortunately, was not what we'd hoped. We had seven responses, with one respondent giving reasons for supporting science via crowdfunding. A huge thank you to those who participated. While we sure won't be publishing any papers with these responses (and that was never the plan anyway!), we can talk about the data points we got—and for those who are keen to learn more, we've added some links at the end.

‘Tis the season to bestow the gift of science on friends, relatives and work colleagues only marginally brushed by science. For those who lack an easy familiarity with phages, diatoms, Erlenmeyer flasks and string theory, we have suggestions for easy online gifting that brings science into a previously dark (and dare we say it, dull) life Or maybe you’ll be swayed by some cool science giftery as well? Read on.

[caption id="attachment_4383" align="alignleft" width="300"] APOPO HeroRAT getting food reward. By Gooutside (Own work) [Public domain].[/caption]In addition to offering a stellar array of science communications services, Talk Science To Me would like to help with your gift list in the run-up to the festive season. Have...

My #lifeonacomet has just begun @ESA_Rosetta. I'll tell you more about my new home, comet #67P soon… zzzzz #CometLanding — Philae Lander (@Philae2014) November 15, 2014 So how did you feel when Philae sent its last tweet? Here at Talk Science To Me, we deal with science communications day...