Welcome!

More information about CAnMove and the research activities within the programme can be found at:

http://canmove.lu.se

tisdag 15 april 2014

Linneaus meeting in Stömstad!


Last week a group of CAnMovians visited Strömstad for a joint meeting with one of sister Linnaeus Centre’s from Gothenburg University, The Linnaeus Centre for Marine Evolutionary Biology (CeMEB). Invited to the meeting was also the "Butterfly Group" from Stockholm University.

Between Wednesday and Friday we could enjoy both a poster session and exiting lectures with extremely diverse themes. For example, the participants learned more about Insect life cycle genomics and Diapause, local adaptation in marine snails and aerodynamic performance in flying birds.


The participants also got to experience a guided boat trip to the beautiful Koster archipelago. We thank CeMEB for the hospitality and a very nice arrangement. We also hope that we will eventually have the opportunity to invite you to Lund!

//Kaj Hulthén

fredag 11 april 2014

Achieving equality: What it takes to understand and manage diversity


Last Friday (4 April), CAnMove organized a workshop on equality. About 30 curious CAnMove members (and a few from other departments) spent the afternoon thinking about and discussing this important but potentially complicated concept. We were guided by Kerstin Fritsches and Stephen Evill from PostDocTraining.
During the workshop we touched upon the many different aspects of the social environment that can affect equality in a research environment such as CAnMove: leadership, how the things we say and write are perceived by others, understanding and accepting the different personalities we have around us, dealing with cultural differences, and giving as well as receiving feed-back. Lectures were mixed with small exercises in an inspiring and relaxed way. 

The participants could test whether they are practical or creative personalities and we got the flavour of how it would be to work in a super-feminine cultural environment or, at the other extreme, a high-power distance culture with an all-mighty leader. No doubt there are many exciting aspects to dive into as far as equality is concerned and how a research environment will reach its full potential. There are definitely themes for more equality workshops. The workshop and afternoon ended with a nice buffet.

 //Text: Åke Lindström, Photo: Helena Osvath 

måndag 7 april 2014

Wikipedia workshop – not only for besserwissers!

Last Friday in March, I was participating in the Wikipedia workshop by Wikimedia in cooperation with Lund University. The Wikipedia workshop was led by John Andersson, Project Wikimedia Sweden and Sara Mörtsell, Training Wikimedia Sweden. Wikimedia Foundation (WMF) is a non-profit group, operating Wikipedia, communicating outwards, while those who work on Wikipedia are working on the job online and writing.

We Canmovians are scientists that want to share knowledge and research novelty on Wikipedia. 

It is easy! It turns out, you don´t even have to log in to contribute to Wikipedia. Go to Wikipedia and search for whatever you want to find. Let´s say, that you don´t find it. Someone need to get greasy and do the job. You click “You can ask for it to be created” (just below search results) and you have started creating an article on Wikipedia! It´s that simple. More simple still, is to edit an existing post.


Facts about the world's 6th largest website
Wikipedia has about 500 million readers every month. It was launched 15 of January 2001 (now called Wikipedia Day by some users). Every day, 300 items are coming in to the Swedish Wikipedia site, but only 100 articles get past the gatekeepers. Apparently, Wikipedia is no place to post your CV, images or personal views. Still, some will always try!

1 in 10 people that write on Wikipedia is a woman. Get started girls. If not for yourself, do it for equality for future women (your kids).

Wiki in Education

Students use Wikipedia extensively, probably more than any other social group. Academics discredit the website for several reasons: articles can be written by anyone, not necessarily an expert. Editing and regulation are imperfect and a reliance on Wikipedia can discourage students from engaging with genuine academic writing. Despite Wikipedia's drawbacks, students will continue to take advantage of the resource – and the response of academics to simply advise against using the site is not likely to have much effect.
Lund University see it as a chance for scientists and communicators to expertly write about their areas of knowledge. It is a channel to work with outreach that we cannot ignore anymore. If you missed this workshop, you have your chance in June again! More information will come as the date closes in.

Using Wikipedia

Veracity

Something that has been the topic of the day ever since Wikipedia was created, and that is how we can make sure that the information posted is true. There are 3 tools that make it easier to judge the veracity of articles.

  1. Are there any references/sources in a post?
  2. History – click the History-button to see the history of the article. You can see when it was posted and all the entries and changes in the post. Little or no changes, signals that nobody has been checking it. More history makes it more likely that the material in the post has been changed a lot.
  3. Discussion – there is a discussion-page for every post. Here, Wikipedia-editors start a discussion online to talk about the post. Little or no discussion can be a sign of no examination. Error in a post is changed or removed very quickly by experts. Posts are even polished a little bit to become easier to read. The experts (frequently correcting all kinds of posts) are very alert and change your stuff fast. To track the changes, you can subscribe to your post of interest by subscribing to a watchlist. To do that, you need to have an account on Wikipedia and be logged in.

Write and edit in Wikipedia
To get a crash course: http://wikipediaineducation.weebly.com/


What I did during the workshop

I added all the Linneus centers in Sweden to an existing Wiki-post called “Linné-bidragen”. Since there is no CAnMove-post on Wikipedia yet, I created a Swedish post linked to the Linné-bidragen-post, and wrote a little about CAnMove.

Just hours after the creation, a Wikipedia expert that frequently go through new posts, commented on the Centre for Animal Movement-post: Why is it necessary for this post to exist in Wikipedia? Is there any encyclopedic relevance for this post? 

I am working on it, but I need your help. Go here: http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centre_for_animal_movement. Have a look and start writing (in Swedish)!