Early career researcher | Focus on ferroelectrics and polar materials using scanning probe microscopy, x-ray diffraction and dielectric spectroscopy | she/her
The article related to this poster is finally published! More than 2 years of tears and sweat after the first submission.
It's time for a second thread to go over the content! 1/9
#AcademicTwitter#WomenInSTEM#dundeeuni#qub
https://t.co/JHwhZ50mbY
My poster contribution!
This is part of the work that I took part in while at @QUBMathsPhys.
My plan is to carry on working on this topic @UoDSciEng to hopefully find a physical explanation for this anomalous motion. This is very perplexing 🤔2/6
@hapsci Any from decathlon. I have had my first one for about 10 years, used it everyday cycling/walking/hiking under rain and snow to work and outside work. The new one I have had for 3 years, still good condition.
@jennifer_fowlie More than you think...
I vaguely remember a list of them that we have to learn in English class. The one that I struggle with is "demand"
If you are a Chinese national or know one who would be interested in doing a PhD on the coupling between polarisation and magnetisation in the oldest multiferroics, application to the CSC scholarships are still open!
https://t.co/1dXQKTUY2W
@vickyingram We were told that pdf is the most accessible format. Probably due to the fact that you can use free software to read them. Most of them also have read aloud functions, so that's probably fine.
My only concern is how to get the info from a pdf so that you can reuse it
@vickyingram Can you convert your form to pdf? I know it is along the lines of don't use word, but you may still be able to use word to prepare it and have the form accessible.
@lacour_c @depthsofwiki There's a similar debate on French wiki about endives/chicons.
In Scotland, corn is the main cereal: so it would have bee barley or oats or some other cereal depending on what was in fashion.
@pchapuis @MonniauxD J'avais aussi classé plus bas des écoles plus renommées, mais connue pour avec une ambiance moins inclusive. Donc, il faut quand même se poser les bonnes questions, si on veut faire avancer le schmilblick
@DevilleSy C'est un mensonge! Et j'ai grandi au sud d'"ici" (très probablement car il n'y a plus beaucoup de sud en France métropolitaine, après de toute façon...)
@GustauCatalan Exactly! I just can't think of one metric that people could use to evaluate disruptiveness.
Was Maxwell disruptive by unifying equations that mostly had already been proposed? Certainly! But it came after a lot of steady accumulation of progress
@GustauCatalan And surely, there is value in publishing incremental science that other people on the community can build upon quickly rather than waiting 10 years to publish a big piece.
The premise seems to value not sharing rather than collaborative/open science
@GustauCatalan There's also a decent jump downwards around 1995, when a pretty big disruptive thing became mainstream. A thing that has increased the availability of journal articles...
@MichelleDolgos We have a slow cooker that we genuinely love. There are plenty of recepies that you can do that freeze well. We also start it on Sunday mornings before we go out to do stuff and dinner is ready by the time we are back, which is very convenient too