Making Science Public: A blog on science, language and culture

  • Metaphors in science communication: Hits and misses

    Metaphors in science communication: Hits and misses

    At the beginning of August, various scientific announcements whizzed past me on Twitter. First, a new room-temperature super-conductor (LK-99 for short), which I just dismissed in my head as hype*, then a new pill that cured cancer, which sounded a bit more plausible. In news coverage of both announcements, the phrase ‘holy grail’ came up,…

  • Global boiling

    Global boiling

    On 27 July Secretary-General António Guterres gave a press conference at United Nations headquarters. He spoke about climate change against the backdrop of widespread floods, terrestrial and marine heatwaves and wildfires unfolding around the world and in the context of new data coming in from the World Meteorological Organization and the European Commission’s Copernicus Climate…

  • The climate speaks in words and pictures: Is anybody listening?

    The climate speaks in words and pictures: Is anybody listening?

    I can’t open twitter nowadays without being confronted by red-hot images of heatwaves, just like a few weeks ago it was all about wildfires, orange skies and smoke. The climate is speaking to us, indeed sending us smoke signals, from the air, the land and the water which are all alarmingly warm. This is not…

  • Gravitational waves, music and metaphors

    Gravitational waves, music and metaphors

    On Thursday, June 29, 2023, the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves or NANOGrav announced evidence for gravitational waves emitted by pairs of supermassive black holes across the universe or, in the words of the astrophysicist Katie Mack: “We’re using RADIATION JETS from DEAD STARS to detect RIPPLES IN SPACE from the COLLISIONS OF…

  • Synthetic embryos: Science, communication, clarification

    Synthetic embryos: Science, communication, clarification

    Earlier in the month (June, 2023) I saw some headlines saying things like “Scientists say first synthetic human ’embryo’ created” or “First reported synthetic human embryo sparks ethical concerns, creates questions” or “Synthetic human embryos created for first time using no eggs or sperm”. These headlines appeared soon after an exclusive article on the matter…

  • Artificial intelligence and existential risk: From alarm to alignment

    Artificial intelligence and existential risk: From alarm to alignment

    1956 was a momentous year: I and AI were born. Ok, I was born and artificial intelligence was defined as a field of research in computer science. A lot has happened since, especially over the last two decades; and now speculation is rife as to whether AI might lead to the extinction of humanity. By…

  • Mitochondrial replacement and the pangenome

    Mitochondrial replacement and the pangenome

    Recently two events caught my attention, which should at least be noted on this blog: the publication of the first human pangenome on 10 May 2023 and the birth of babies through a new human fertilisation technique variously known as mitochondrial donation, mitochondrial transfer, mitochondrial transplant or mitochondrial replacement on 12 May. I’ll say a…

  • The Gmelin family: From chemistry to phlogiston and permafrost

    The Gmelin family: From chemistry to phlogiston and permafrost

    I had Covid. I was lying in bed. I saw a tweet by Mark Carnal saying: “Historians of Biology. How on earth is Gmelin pronounced? I’ve not had to say it out loud before.” I am not a historian of biology but, as a German speaker, I was intrigued. So, I looked up the name…

  • Bridge or Barrier – Does generative AI contribute to more culturally inclusive higher education and research?

    Bridge or Barrier – Does generative AI contribute to more culturally inclusive higher education and research?

    This post by Dr Dimitrinka Atanasova was initially posted on the LSE Impact Blog on 4 May, 2023. It is cross-posted here with permission. Dr Dimitrinka Atanasova is a Lecturer in Intercultural Communication at Lancaster University. Her research focuses on health & science communication (particularly the topics of obesity, mental health, climate change, sustainability, nitrogen…

  • LLaMas, Alpacas and Dolly 2.0: Exploring an emerging AI menagerie

    LLaMas, Alpacas and Dolly 2.0: Exploring an emerging AI menagerie

    There was a time when llamas were llamas and small furry creatures from Alpha Centauri were small furry creatures from Alpha Centauri. Now we have LLaMas, Alpacas and AI programmes that impersonate cloned sheep. I’ll first say something about ChatGPT, the AI chatbot that launched a hundred fury creatures, then something about another chatbot that…