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The tangled history of mRNA vaccines
The messenger-RNA (mRNA) vaccines against COVID-19 are among the most important and profitable in history, and have been given to hundreds of millions of people around the world. But the route to success was not direct. Scientists had worked on mRNA vaccines for decades before the coronavirus pandemic brought a breakthrough. The story illuminates the twisting path that many scientific discoveries take on the way to becoming life-changing innovations: decades of dead ends, rejections and battles over potential profits, but also generosity, curiosity and dogged persistence against scepticism and doubt.
Gender gap in major research awards
Women’s share of international prizes rewarding research excellence is increasing, but still lags behind the proportion of professorial positions held by women. Researchers analysed 141 top science prizes awarded over the past two decades to determine whether gains in professorships for women have translated into awards honouring their work. The findings show a narrowing but persistent gender gap in the highest tiers of awards, with the greatest disparity in disciplines including life sciences, computer science and mathematics. Hans Petter Graver, president of the Norwegian academy that administers the Abel and Kavli prizes, says the results send “a signal to institutions awarding prestigious science prizes to do more for diversity”.
Reference: Quantitative Science Studies paper
Swedish misconduct agency swamped
Scientists have inundated Sweden’s new national research-misconduct investigation agency with cases. The National Board for Assessment of Research Misconduct (NPOF) is among the world’s first national bodies set up to deal with misconduct allegations. Typically, those cases are handled in-house by universities and research institutions. Researchers brought 46 cases to NPOF in its first year — three times higher than officials were expecting.
Cows learn to use the loo
A herd of calves has been successfully trained to pee in a designated location. Researchers rewarded the calves with sweet treats when they used their latrine, and sprayed them with water from lawn sprinklers when they didn’t. In weeks, 10 of the 16 cows had been potty-trained. Collecting the excreta of cattle could reduce greenhouse-gas emissions and soil and water contamination while still allowing cows to roam freely. “Cattle, like many other animals, are quite clever and they can learn a lot,” says animal psychologist and study co-author Jan Langbein. “Why shouldn’t they be able to learn how to use a toilet?”
Reference: Current Biology paper
Features & opinion
Biochemistry without boundaries
Biochemist Edmond Fischer discovered the first example of reversible protein phosphorylation, a process that regulates most aspects of cell life. This fundamental discovery earned Fischer and his collaborator Edwin Krebs the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1992. In the course of his long life, Fischer, who has died aged 101, witnessed his discovery being applied in ways that have saved millions of lives. “It was important to him that science should always be fun,” writes enzymologist Philip Cohen, who collaborated with Fischer. “He treated his researchers as if they were his family, meeting new arrivals at the airport, and insisting that they stay at his house until they had found an apartment.”
How to have preprints without harm
“The case for releasing preprints is clear,” argues research-integrity and epidemiology researcher Gowri Gopalakrishna. “But efforts to promote preprints without simultaneously implementing firm measures to ensure that the research is of high quality put the cart before the horse.” Looking at the proliferation of preprints on COVID-19, Gopalakrishna suggests six ways to minimize the transfer of harmful or low-quality information to the public sphere.
The Chair in the hot seat
Academics reeling from the experience of watching The Chair might enjoy a chat between co-creator (and former adjunct professor) Annie Julia Wyman and Los Angeles Review of Books senior editor (and assistant professor) Sarah Chihaya. Wyman discusses her worries that young people wouldn’t want to watch a programme about “professors unraveling” and how she went from “a really discouraged and unhappy graduate student” to co-creating a hit show on Netflix.
Los Angeles Review of Books | 38 min read