• Self-Doubt and Statistical Fallacies: My First Time Reviewing

    Self-Doubt and Statistical Fallacies: My First Time Reviewing

    Kim Reid’s first peer review task is to review the manuscript of two of the biggest names in her field of expertise. In taking on this daunting challenge she finds a useful online guide and remembers the key teaching of a CLEX chief investigator, Dietmar Dommenget.

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  • Are Video Games Turning Your Kids into Environmentalists?

    Are Video Games Turning Your Kids into Environmentalists?

    Amidst the Victorian lockdown Kim Reid has escaped into her favourite video games and found that many of them carry a powerful environmental message.

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  • What’s in a name?

    What’s in a name?

    Kim Reid describes everything you ever wanted to know about atmospheric rivers, and then some. Front, Warm Conveyor Belt, Atmospheric River, Tropical Moisture Exports and Flexible Tubes. Are these phrases describing different phenomenon or are they merely alternative names for same system?

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  • Charuni’s blog: PhD confirmation in the age of COVID

    Charuni’s blog: PhD confirmation in the age of COVID

    Charuni writes about the stress of facing a PhD confirmation during a pandemic and how doing a PhD has changed her attitude to herself. She also suggests some approaches that have made the confirmation process a little easier.

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  • How to have a successful conference when you’re an introverted agoraphobic

    How to have a successful conference when you’re an introverted agoraphobic

    Kim Reid had a very fruitful conference at AMOS 2020, but she also had two panic attacks. Here she talks about living with these attacks and how someone in a similar situation can navigate and still get plenty of benefits from crowded conferences.

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  • Enter the Plastisphere

    Enter the Plastisphere

    Intergenerational equity was the theme of last weekend. On Friday I attended the Climate Strike in Melbourne. The crowd was massive as people of all ages and all walks of life gathered to tell the leaders of the world that we wanted real action on climate change.

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  • Music and Intelligence: not a Love Story

    Music and Intelligence: not a Love Story

    Kim Reid takes the release of a new Taylor Swift album as the jump-off point to explore the space in a Venn diagram where music, trash films unfalsifiable hypotheses and spurious correlations intersect.

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  • Imposter syndrome clouds joy of first accepted paper

    Imposter syndrome clouds joy of first accepted paper

    Kim had her first paper accepted in the Journal of Climate and was over the moon but sneaking up behind her was another first she didn’t expect – her first bout of imposter syndrome.

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  • The Future of Figures

    The Future of Figures

    In her first blog Kim Reid looks at a small part of the future of science. Multimedia figures, technology and open access journals may provide a glimpse of what is to come.

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