Speaking only for myself I'd say opportunity cost. HoS is interesting, but if I'm going to read academic papers I expect to benefit more (at least in the short term) from reading something closely related to my work. If I'm reading for fun, there's too many other things I also enjoy.
August 21, 2025 at 6:04 PM
Speaking only for myself I'd say opportunity cost. HoS is interesting, but if I'm going to read academic papers I expect to benefit more (at least in the short term) from reading something closely related to my work. If I'm reading for fun, there's too many other things I also enjoy.
That seems reasonable to me! I wonder if any (senior) academics likely to review applications would be put off by statements like that. Although it's hard to imagine why someone would prefer the generic "in prep."
April 14, 2025 at 7:43 PM
That seems reasonable to me! I wonder if any (senior) academics likely to review applications would be put off by statements like that. Although it's hard to imagine why someone would prefer the generic "in prep."
Excited to share our latest paper in PLOS Comp Bio, describing how accurate, multi-species segmentation models for bacteria can be created quickly and easily using image-to-image translation. 🧪⚛️ #biophysics#imageanalysis#microscopy#AI
Excited to share our latest paper in PLOS Comp Bio, describing how accurate, multi-species segmentation models for bacteria can be created quickly and easily using image-to-image translation. 🧪⚛️ #biophysics#imageanalysis#microscopy#AI
Hey, very cool paper, thanks for sharing! Out of curiosity: do you know if this formation of distinct layers, especially driven by topological defects, has been observed in any other species of bacteria (or a different active system altogether) ?
January 23, 2025 at 3:05 PM
Hey, very cool paper, thanks for sharing! Out of curiosity: do you know if this formation of distinct layers, especially driven by topological defects, has been observed in any other species of bacteria (or a different active system altogether) ?