eeb journal club
EEB Journal Club
O'Bannon's 103 Boyett, College Station, United States… Friday, Sept 7. This Friday at 4 pm we will meet at O’Bannon’s on Northgate to host our first journal club of the semester. At BEER (behavior, ecology, and evolution reading), students and faculty affiliated with the EEB program come together to review papers in the field of EEB. This is a great opportunity […]
EEB Journal Club
O'Bannon's 103 Boyett, College Station, United States... Friday, Nov 9. Please join us for an ethical/scientific debate at this week's Behavior, Ecology, and Evolution Reading (BEER) group led by Emma Lehmberg. Attached are papers on two different viewpoints: fish don't feel pain (as we do; Rose et al) vs. fish have consciousness and experience pain (Braithwaite). For the Rose et al. […]
EEB Journal Club
O'Bannon's 103 Boyett, College Station, United StatesThis week, Dan Powell will be discussing allele-specific expression and the role it plays in overcoming intergenomic gene expression interaction conflicts hybrids. As usual, hope to see everyone at O'Bannon's at 4pm.
EEB Journal Club
O'Bannon's 103 Boyett, College Station, United States... Friday, April 19. After excellent talks at EIS and great food and camaraderie at the Annual Crawfish Boil, we'll start our EEB journal club back up. This week, Amanda Beckman will discuss an article examining how extra pair mating influences sexual selection in white-throated sparrows. Hope to see everyone at O'Bannon's on Friday at […]
EEB Journal Club
O'Bannon's 103 Boyett, College Station, United StatesHowdy EEB community! Hope everyone's first week back to school is going well. We are going to start our behavior, ecology, and evolution reading (BEER) group back up again this Friday at 4:00 PM at O'Bannon's on Northgate. The BEER group is a graduate student-run social journal club that meets each week. In the past, […]
EEB Journal Club
O'Bannon's 103 Boyett, College Station, United States. . . Friday, September 13. Zach Hancock will lead a discussion on the origins of genome complexity. The paper argues that the transition in genome complexity from prokaryotes to eukaryotes emerged passively by nonadaptive processes. Should make for a fun discussion. We will meet on Friday at 4 PM at O'Bannon's. Also, here is a […]