Neuromag July 2016 | Page 15

In her article, Dr. Szalinski, quotes Dr. Tracey Weissgerber, an assistant professor in the Division of Nephrology and Hypertension at the Mayo Clinic who said, “We like bar graphs because they make data look clean and neat and pretty, but data aren’t clean and neat and pretty. Everybody’s data are messy and sometimes that messiness isn’t just noise, it’s critical information.” I still see bar graphs used commonly on scientific posters, at conferences, and in high impact journals. I, for one, will avoid using bar graphs at all costs. After we’ve done all the hard work and found something worth sharing with the scientific community, let’s share it fully. Do not hide your data; show them in their full glory! Michael Paolillo, USA Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience Master’s Program ‘15 Currently a GTC Doctoral student at the Interfaculty Institute for Biochemistry in the lab of Prof. Dr. Robert Feil The title graphic was created by Leslee Lazar, PhD 1. Weissgerber TL, et al. (2015) Beyond Bar and Line Graphs: Time for a New Data Presentation Paradigm. PLoS Biol 13(4):e1002128. FINCHES Written by Vinay Jayaram What are birds? Just wind-up toys, given a tickle by the cherubic sun, off to set their clockwork tumbling? And we eat it up rhapsodic, study their ineffable blood and guts in labs, with cavernous machines of din, we eat their song with beeping and with mashing and with a polyrhythm of neurons snapping furious, to and fro against a breeze nobody can feel, not even the birds, any more, shut inside their cages deep in the sterile shining walls of the lab. On and on, the columns tumble and the song rolls free, even as they sit fluorescent and immobile, trailing their bloody wires because we cannot let song be. Vinay Jayaram, USA Currently a GTC Doctoral student at the MPI for Intelligent Systems in the Machine Learning for Neural Engineering group of Dr.-Ing. Moritz Grosse-Wentrup July 2016 | NEUROMAG | 15