Not Exactly Rocket Science
My small attempt to celebrate science and to make it interesting and fun by giving jargon, confusion and elitism a solid beating with the stick of good writing.
Profile
Ed Yong is an award-winning British science writer. Not Exactly Rocket Science is his attempt to make the latest scientific discoveries interesting to everyone. He finds writing about himself in the third person strange and unsettling.
What others are saying...
"One of the best sites for in-depth analysis of interesting scientific papers" - The Times
"A consistently illuminating home for long, thoughtful, and thorough explorations of science news" - National Association of Science Writers
"Ed Yong... is made of pure unobtanium and rides TWO Toruks." - Frank Swain
"Ed Yong is better than chocolate, fairy lights, and kittens chasing yarn. That is all." - Christine Ottery
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Why I blog
An interview with me
The original site • Tell me about you: Part 1 Part 2
This work is licenced under a Creative Commons Licence.
140-character ramblings
My wife, who makes it all possible
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Recent Posts
- 'Wasabi protein' responsible for the heat-seeking sixth sense of rattlesnakes
- Subliminal flag shifts political views and voting choices
- Pocket Science - geneticist hunts down the cause of his own genetic disorder, and male moths freeze females by mimicking bats
- Every cell in a chicken has its own male or female identity
- Science in the Media: Rude or Ailing Health?
- DNA from the largest bird ever sequenced from fossil eggshells
- Pocket Science - chameleons hunt with cold-proof tongues and zebrafish babies go blind at night
- Pay it forward? Cooperative behaviour spreads through a group, but so does cheating
- Smell a lady, shrug off flu - how female odours give male mice an immune boost
- Pocket Science - when enslaved bacteria go bad, gut microbes and fat mice, and stretchy beards of iron
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- Chris M. on 'Wasabi protein' responsible for the heat-seeking sixth sense of rattlesnakes
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- Chris M. on 'Wasabi protein' responsible for the heat-seeking sixth sense of rattlesnakes
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- Ed Yong on 'Wasabi protein' responsible for the heat-seeking sixth sense of rattlesnakes
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- Erika on 'Wasabi protein' responsible for the heat-seeking sixth sense of rattlesnakes
- Aaron on Corn is everywhere in American fast food
Blogroll
Science blogs
- Adventures in Ethics and Science
- Aetiology
- Ars Technica
- The Artful Amoeba
- Arthropoda
- Babel's Dawn
- Bad Science
- Beyond the Short Coat
- Bioephemera
- A Blog Around the Clock
- Bonobo Handshake
- Cancer Research UK Science Update Blog
- The Chicken or the Egg
- Cocktail Party Physics
- Collision Detection
- Culture Dish
- The Daily Monthly
- Deep Sea News
- Dot Earth
- Dr Petra Boynton
- Drugmonkey
- EarthLab
- Effect Measure
- Embargo Watch
- Ethical Palaeontologist
- Eureka Zone (Times)
- Evolving Thoughts
- The Examining Room of Dr Charles
- Finite Attention Span
- Fists Full of Science
- The Flying Trilobite
- The Frontal Cortex
- Gary Schwitzer's HealthNewsReview
- Genetic Future
- Gene Expression
- Genomicron
- Gimpy's Blog
- Highly Allochthonous
- The Intersection
- The Inverse Square Blog
- Joanne Loves Science
- Just a Theory
- Laelaps
- Lay Scientist
- Loom
- Mark Changizi
- The Millikan Daily
- Mind Hacks
- Myrmecos
- Naked Little Ape
- Neurologica
- Neurophilosophy
- Neuron Culture
- Neurotopia 2.0)
- NHS Choices
- Null Hypothesis
- Open Minds and Parachutes
- Oh for the Love of Science
- On Becoming a Domestic and Laboratory Goddess
- Observations of a Nerd
- Predictably Irrational
- The Primate Diaries
- Respectful Insolence
- Save Your Breath for Running Ponies
- Savvy Saplings
- The Science Project
- Science Punk
- ScienceLine
- ScienceLush
- Sex, Drugs and Rockin' Venom - Confessions of an Extreme Scientist
- Skepchick
- A Somewhat Old But Capacious Handbag
- Stranger Fruit
- Terra Sigillata
- Tetrapod Zoology
- The Bird's Brain
- Thus Spake Zuska
- Vagina Dentata
- Virginia Hughes
- Voyages Around my Camera
- Weird Bug Lady
- White Coat Underground
- Why Evolution is True
- Wild Muse
- Wired Science
- Words of Science
- XKCD
- Zooillogix
- Cafe Philos
- Miss Cellania
- orbyn.blog
- Stop and Wander
- Unspeak
- You Do Too Much
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
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- December 2008
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Archives
About me and this blog
Who are you?
This blog is an outlet for my love of science and of writing. After leaving university with degree in hand, I made an abortive foray into research before realising that I much prefer to talk about science than to actually do it. I started the blog after realising that I like (a) science, (b) writing, and (c) the Internet, and thus, there was a fairly good chance that I would like (d) writing about science on the Internet.
What's the blog about?
This a news site - I cover breaking scientific discoveries in any field that interests me including animal behaviour, environmental science, psychology, neuroscience, evolution, genetics, molecular biology, medicine and more. The "rules" are as follows:
- Everything is written with a educated but non-scientific audience in mind. Regardless of their previous knowledge of science, should be able to rock up and find something they will enjoy.
- I only ever write from primary research papers, and never from press releases or news stories. Everything you read here is original. No churnalism allowed.
- I have to understand the science to a reasonable degree. If I can't actually comprehend the work myself, I have no place explaining it to someone else.
- I only write about things that excite me. I try to avoid sensationalism - if something sounds enthusiastic, it's because I'm genuinely excited about it.
If you want more details, try this post on why I blog and this one on what I think science's rightful place is.
My position is that science can be complicated, it should never have to be impenetrably so. It is a sad situation that new discoveries are all too often shrouded behind veils of jargon, elitism, confusion, sensationalism and inaccuracy. That hurts the perception of science, especially at a time where scientific knowledge is paramount. More than ever, the fundamental concepts that underlie evolution, global warming, vaccinations, cancer and more, are necessary for understanding the world around us, and making informed decisions about our lives.
This blog is my small attempt to celebrate the wonder of science and above all else, to make it as interesting and fun to any reader as it is to me.
What else do you do?
As well as blogging, I'm also a freelance science writer. After nabbing three consecutive runner-up prizes in the Daily Telegraph's Science Writer Awards, I finally won the competition in 2007 and have since written for Nature, Nature Network, New Scientist, the Economist and the Daily Telegraph.
Disclaimer: I currently work as an information officer at Cancer Research UK, where I get to keep up-to-date with new scientific research, write about it and get paid for my trouble. Sweet. The content, views and opinions in this blog in no way reflect those of Cancer Research UK.
How can I get in touch?
You can contact me at edyong209 AT yahoo DOT co DOT uk. By the way, if you're emailing for David Attenborough's contact details (happens with ridiculous frequency), sorry, I don't give them out.
What's the deal with comments?
The usual rules - you're free to comment or to express dissenting opinions. But keep it relevant and civil. Most people here are a friendly, knowledgeable bunch. Don't be inane, unless it's really funny ;-) I entirely reserve the right to kill your comments or your ability to leave them at my discretion, although I have *very* rarely done so. I may also deface your comment if you're being wilfully disruptive.