‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات YAMMM. إظهار كافة الرسائل
‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات YAMMM. إظهار كافة الرسائل

Oxford Global Sequencing Meetings: Where MEN Tell You About Sequencing #YAMMM

Well, got an email invite to one of these Oxford Global Meetings. Sadly the gender ratio of listed speakers is awful. I highlighted the list below (men in yellow, women in green).  Ratio of 17:3.  (See below).  No thanks Oxford Global.

Dear Professor Jonathan Eisen ,
 We hope you are well and we would like to invite you to speak at our forthcoming Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) USA congress (www.nextgenerationsequencingusa-congress.com) or co-located  Single Cell Analysis USA congress (www.singlecellusa-congress.comto be held on 27th -28th October 2015 at Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA.
 Over the two days, the NGS USA congress aims to cover updates and application of NGS technologies in genomics and genetics research in the US and UK, Europe. Topics are comprised of NGS & NGS Data Analysis Technologies and Platforms, NGS for Cancer Drug Development, Microbiology and Immunotherapy as well as Clinical Applications & Diagnostics. Novel updates in Gene Synthesis, Protein Sequencing and Targeted Sequencing will also be explored The Single Cell Analysis USA congress looks at new methods in DNA sequencing, epigenomic DNA sequencing and RNA sequencing, informatics, data handling as well as application of single cell genomics in understanding cancer  other areas of cancer research such as cancer stem cells and immunotherapy. The presentations are also comprised of novel techniques in imaging and cytometry, isolation and processing of single cells. The congress also covers the applications in translational medicine and the clinic for therapeutic targeting.
 The combination of carefully researched topics and high-level networking opportunities creates a unique discussion platform for over 250 senior scientists we are expecting in attendance from research institutions and pharmaceutical companies. Confirmed Speakers for 2015 include:NGS·          Sreekumar Kodangattil, Senior Principal Scientist, Pfizer       
·          Shrikant M. Mane, Senior Research Scientist in Genetics; Director, MBB Keck Biotech laboratory; Director, Yale Center for Genome Analysis
·          Stephan Schuster, Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Penn State University
·          Richard  McCombie, Professor, Human Genetics, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
·          Jingyue  Ju, Director, Center for Genome Technology and Biomolecular Engineering, Professor of Chemical Engineering and Pharmacology, Columbia University            
·          Christopher Mason, Chair, ABRF NGS Consortium, Assistant Professor, Weill Cornell Medical College. Dept. of Physiology & Biophysics; The Brain & Mind Research Institute
·          Michaela Bowden, Associate Director, Center for Molecular Oncologic Pathology, Dana Farber Cancer Institute      
·          Yuan Gao, Director, Associate Professor, Lieber Institute/Johns Hopkins University
·          Sheng Li, Instructor in Bioinformatics, Department of Neurological Surgery, Weill Cornell Medical College
·          Michael  Fraser, Associate Director, CPC-GENE Prostate Cancer Genomics Program, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre    
 Single Cell·          Daniel Chiu, Professor, University of Washington    
·          Steve Potter, Professor, Division of Developmental Biology, Cincinnati Children's Medical Center
·          Norman Dovichi, Professor, University Notre Dame 
·          Zaida Luthey-Schulten, Professor of Chemistry, University of Illinois
·          Paul Bohn, Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Notre Dame       
·          Navin Varadarajan, Assistant Professor, University of Houston
·          Alexander R., Ivanov, Director of the HSPH Proteomics Resource, Research Scientist
Harvard School of Public Health·          Viktor Adalsteinsson, Researcher, Researcher, Koch Institute at MIT, Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard Medical School
·          Xinghua Victor Pan, Research Scientist, Single Cell Genomics Group, Sherman Weissman Laboratory, Department of Genetics, Yale University School of Medicine
·          Cheng-Zhong Zhang, Computational Biologist, Department of Medical Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute




Another "Yet another mostly male meeting (YAMMM)" from BGI

Well just saw an announcement for this meeting on Twitter: The First Announcement of The Tenth Annual Meeting of the International Conference on Genomics (ICG

And I hoped beyond hope that they would have a decent representation of women speakers at the meeting.  Why did I hope this?  Well, in the past, BGI run meetings have had incredibly skewed gender ratios of speakers.  See this post for a discussion of their past record: Kudos to the DOE-JGI for organizing a genomics meeting w/ a good gender ratio - no kudos to BGI - yet again

I guess I had hoped that perhaps they would try to change their practices after I and other people criticized them for their past record.  So - I went to the web site for the ICG10 meeting advertised in the Tweet.  Oh well, silly me for hoping.

On the front page they have 14 speakers they are promoting - all of them male.

Screen shot from ICG10 web site

On the announcement page they have a slightly different list where the ratio is 14:1
  • Jef Boeke, NYU Langone University School of Medicine, USA
  • Sydney Brenner, 2002 Nobel Laureate in Physiology or Medicine, Singapore
  • Charles Cantor, Sequenom, Inc., USA
  • Julio Celis, Danish Cancer Society Research Center, Denmark
  • Richard Durbin, Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, UK
  • Leroy Hood, Institute for Systems Biology, USA
  • Thomas Hudson, Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, Canada
  • Maria Leptin, Chair of EMBO, Germany
  • Maynard Olson, University of Washington, USA
  • Aristides Patrinos, J. Craig Venter Institute, USA
  • Mu-ming Poo, University of California, Berkeley, USA
  • Richard Roberts, New England Biolabs, 1993 Nobel Laureate in Physiology or Medicine, USA
  • Eils Roland, Heidelberg University, Germany
  • Mathias Uhlen, Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden
  • Tilhuan Yilma, University of California, Davis, USA
Regardless, this is a consistent pattern of not having an even remotely balanced ratio of male to female speakers at their meetings.  And please, avoid their meetings until they change this.

Repeated, extremely biased ratio of M:F at meetings from SFB 680 "Evolutionary Innovations" group #YAMMM



Well, this is disappointing, to say the least - there is a conference coming up in July 2015 on "Forecasting Evolution":  SFB 680 | Molecular Basis of Evolutionary Innovations at the Gulbenkian Foundation in Lisbon.

Here is the listed lineup of invited speakers:
  1. Andersson (Uppsala University), (NOTE I AM ASSUMING THIS IS DAN ANDERSSON)
  2. Trevor Bedford (Hutchinson Cancer Research Center), 
  3. Jesse Bloom (Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center), 
  4. Arup Chakraborty (MIT)
  5. Michael Desai (Harvard University), 
  6. Michael Doebeli (University of British Columbia), 
  7. Marco Gerlinger (Institute of Cancer Research, London, 
  8. Michael Hochberg (CRNS, Montpellier), 
  9. Christopher Illingworth (Cambridge University), 
  10. Roy Kishoni (Harvard University), 
  11. Richard Lenski (Michigan State University), 
  12. Stanislas Leibler (Rockefeller University), 
  13. Marta Luksza (IAS Princeton), 
  14. Luke Mahler (University of California, Davis), 
  15. Leonid Mirny (MIT), 
  16. Richard Neher (MPI Tuebingen), 
  17. Julian Parkhill (Sanger Institute), 
  18. Colin Russell (University of Cambridge), 
  19. Sohrab Shah (University of British Columbia), 
  20. Boris Shraiman (UCSB), 
  21. Olivier Tenaillon (Inserm Paris).
For a whopping 20:1 ratio of men to women or 4.8% women. And this in a field that is just overflowing with excellent female researchers.

So I dug around a little bit.  Here is another meeting from the same group at the University of Cologne - a group known as SFB 680. SFB 680: Molecular Ecology and Evolution: Cologne Spring Meeting 2012.



Speakers:
  1. Ian Thomas Baldwin, MPI Jena
  2. Nitin Baliga, ISB Seattle 
  3. Andrew Beckerman, University of Sheffield 
  4. Joy Bergelson, University of Chicago
  5. Michael Boots, University of Sheffield 
  6. John Colbourne, Indiana University 
  7. David Conway, LSHTM London
  8. Santiago Elena, IBMCP Valencia
  9. Duncan Greig, MPI Plön 
  10. Bryan Grenfell, Princeton University 
  11. Eddie Holmes, Pennsylvania State University 
  12. Peter Keightley, University of Edinburgh
  13. Britt Koskella, University of Oxford
  14. Juliette de Meaux, University of Münster 
  15. Thomas Mitchell-Olds, Duke University
  16. Hélène Morlon, Ecole Polytechnique Paris 
  17. Wayne Potts, University of Utah 
  18. Michael Purugganan, New York University
  19. Andrew Rambaut, University of Edinburgh 
  20. Walter Salzburger, University of Basel 
  21. Johanna Schmitt, Brown University
  22. Ralf Sommer, MPI Tübingen
  23. Miltos Tsiantis, University of Oxford 
  24. Diethardt Tautz, MPI Plön 
  25. Daniel Weinreich, Brown University
Session and Meeting Chairs:
  1. Michael Lassig
  2. Maarten Koornneef
  3. Eric von Elert
  4. Thomas Wiehe
  5. Jonathan Howard
That would be 25:5 or 16.6% female.

And then there was this: Perspectives in Biophysics in October 2014
  1. Konstantin Doubrovinski
  2. Tobias Bollenbach
  3. Stefano Pagliara
  4. Damien Faivre
  5. Ingmar Schön
  6. Kurt Schmoller
  7. Max Ulbrich
  8. Florian Rehfeld
  9. Steffen Sahl
  10. Timo Betz
  11. Alexandre Persat
  1. Rubén Alcázar (MPI for Plant Breeding Research, Cologne)
  2. John Baines (Christian-Albrechts-University, Kiel)
  3. Thomas Bataillon (University of Aarhus)
  4. Frank Chan (MPI for Evolutionary Biology, Plön)
  5. George Coupland (MPI for Plant Breeding Research, Cologne)
  6. Susanne Foitzik (Johannes Gutenberg-University, Mainz)
  7. Isabel Gordo (Instituto Gulbenkian, Lisbon)
  8. Oskar Hallatschek (MPI for Dynamics and Self-Organization, Göttingen
  9. Jonathan Howard (University of Cologne)
  10. JinYong Hu (MPI for Plant Breeding Research, Cologne)
  11. Jeffrey Jensen (University of Massachusetts, Medical School, Worchester)
  12. Michael Lässig (University of Cologne)
  13. Dirk Metzler (Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich)
  14. Ville Mustonen (Welcome Trust Sanger Institute)
  15. John Parsch (Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich)
  16. Frank Rosenzweig (University of Montana, Missoula)
  17. Christian Schlötterer (University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna)
  18. Shamil Sunyaev (Brigham & Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School) 
  19. Karl Schmid (University of Hohenheim)
  20. Ana Sousa (Instituto Gulbenkian, Lisbon)
  21. Diethard Tautz (MPI for Evolutionary Biology, Plön)
  22. Xavier Vekemans (University of Lille)
Session and Meeting Chairs
  • Wolfgang Stephan
  • Michael Lässig
  • Berenike Maier
  • Wolfgang Stephan
  • Peter Pfaffelhuber
  • Juliette de Meaux
For a 19:3 ratio or 13.6 % women for the speakers and if you include session chairs it comes to 23:5 or 18 % female total.

And Evolutionary Innovations in 2010. 

Invited speakers:
  1. R. Bundschuh (Ohio State University), 
  2. C. Callan (Princeton University),
  3. A. Clark (Cornell University), 
  4. J. Colbourne (Indiana University),
  5. E. Dekel (Weizmann Institute),
  6. L. Hurst (University of Bath), 
  7. S. Elena (Universidad Polytecnica de Valencia), 
  8. E. Koonin (National Center for Biotechnology Information), 
  9. M. Kreitman (University of Chicago),
  10. S. Leibler (Rockefeller University, New York and Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton),
  11. T. Lengauer (Max Planck Institute for Informatics), 
  12. S. Maerkl (Ecole Polytechnique de Lausanne), 
  13. C. Marx (Harvard University), 
  14. L. Mirny (Massachusetts Intitute of Technology), 
  15. V. Mustonen (Sanger Institute), 
  16. C. Pal (Biological Research Center, Szeged),
  17. D. Petrov (Stanford University), 
  18. B. Shraiman (Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, Santa Barbara),
  19. S. Sunyaev (Harvard University), 
  20. D. Tautz (Max-Planck-Institute for Evolutionary Biology)
Plus session chairs 
  1. Johannes Berg
  2. Siegfried Roth
  3. Wolfgang Werr
  4. Martin Lercher
And addition speakers not listed on their invited speakers page:
  1. Michael Lassig
  2. Ruben Alcazar
  3. Juliette de Meaux
  4. Joachim Krug
For a whopping ratio of 27:1 or 3.6 %

The only meeting from them I could find with a decent / non massively skewed ratio was the following very small one: Evolution of Development
  1. Cassandra Extavour
  2. Angela Hay
  3. Felicity Jones
  4. Nicolas Gompe
  5. Kristen Panfillio
  6. Christiane Kiefer
This is a nice case.  But it really seems like an exception in a long list of meetings with a much smaller representation of female speakers than one would expect based on the researchers in the fields.   I think the SFB680 seriously need to consider what is causing these biases and they should do something about it.

---------------------------------------------
See this page for other posts of mine on this and related topics.

Apparently, the National Academy of Sciences thinks only one sex is qualified to talk about alternatives to sex #YAMMM

Just got this email from Francisco Ayala:
January 9-10, 2015 
In the Light of Evolution IX. Clonal Reproduction: Alternatives to Sex 
Organizers: Michel Tibayrenc, John C. Avise and Francisco J. Ayala 
Beckman Center of the National Academies, Irvine, CA 
Evolutionary studies of clonal organisms have advanced considerably in recent years, but are still fledgling. Although recent textbooks on evolution and genetics might give the impression that nonsexual reproduction is an anomaly in the living world, clonality is the rule rather than the exception in many viruses, bacteria, and parasites that undergo preponderant asexual evolution in nature. Clonality is thus of crucial importance in basic biology as well as in studies dealing with transmissible diseases. 
This Colloquium will bring together specialists in various disciplines, including genetics, evolution, statistics, bioinformatics, and medicine. A balance will be sought between the various disciplines, including clonal animals and plants, animal and human cloning, pathogens, and cancer studies.   
Registration is now open http://www.nasonline.org/programs/sackler-colloquia/upcoming-colloquia/ILE_IX_Clonal_Reproduction.html
Registration fee is $150. 
Graduate students and postdoctoral researchers are eligible for discount fee of $100. 
All meals, break and reception refreshments listed on the agenda are included in the registration fee.
For more information, contact sackler@nas.edu.
Could be interesting right?  Alas, then, I clicked on the link.  And I discovered the meeting could also be referred to as "Only one sex talks about alternatives to sex".  Men are highlighted in yellow. Women highlighted in green. (Note - I am making some guesses as to gender but I think these are reasoably accurate).
Organizers: Michel Tibayrenc, John C. Avise and Francisco J. Ayala 
I. General Considerations  
  • 8:30 AM Overview: The ILE Series. John C. Avise  
  • 8:40 AM Introduction and Chair, John C. Avise  
  • 8:40 AM  Can eukaryotes be considered clonally propagating cell lines with intermittent sex?, Dave Speijer, University of Amsterdam 
  • 9:30 AM Cancer in Parasitic Protozoan Trypanosoma brucei and Toxoplasma gondii, Zhao-Rong Lun, Sun Yat-Sen University 
  • 10:40 AM Mathematical Models of Clonality, Dominik Wodarz, University of California, Irvine 
  • 11:30 AM The Cost of Sex: Why Aren’t We All Clonal?, Claus-Peter Stelzer, University of Innsbruck 
II. Clonality in Multicellular Organisms  1:30 PM Chair, Zhao-Rong Lun
  • 1:30 PM  Genets, Ramets and Unisexual Reproduction in Plants, Spencer C.H. Barrett, University of Toronto
  • 2:20 PM Clonality in Asexual Invertebrate Animals, John M. Logsdon, Jr., University of Iowa
  • 3:30 PM Natural Clonality in Vertebrate Animals, John C. Avise, University of California, Irvine
  • 4:20 PM Artificial Cloning of Domestic Animals, Carol L. Keefer, University of Maryland
Keynote Address 
  • 6:45 PM Introduction, Michel Tibayrenc
  • 6:50 PM Cloning Humans: Biological and Ethical Considerations, Francisco J. Ayala, University of California, Irvine
III. Clonality in the Microbial World  
  • 8:00 AM Chair, Carol L. Keefer  
  • 8:00 AM Clonality and Intracellular Polyploidy in Virus Evolution and Pathogenesis, Esteban Domingo, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
  • 8:50 AM The Impermanence of Bacterial Clones, Howard Ochman, University of Texas, Austin
  • 10:00 AM Clonal Reproduction in Fungi, John Taylor, University of California, Berkeley
  • 10:50 AM Clonal Reproduction in Parasitic Protozoa, Michel Tibayrenc, IRD, Montpellier, France
IV. Clonality, Cancer, and Evolution
  • 12:50 PM Organismal Fitness, Somatic Evolution, and Cancer, James DeGregori, University of Colorado School of Medicine
  • 1:40 PM Cancer and Pathogens as Clonal Processes, Edwin L. Cooper, University of California, Los Angeles
  • 2:50 PM Stem Cell Competitions: Evolution, and Cancer Progression, Irving Weissman, Stanford University
  • 3:40 PM Clonal Reproduction: An Evolutionary Curse or Blessing?, Marcel E. Dorken, Trent University
  • 4:30 PM Concluding Remarks, Francisco J. Ayala, University of California, Irvine
So - whether you count just speakers, or speakers plus session chairs, the gender ratio is not good.  Really there is only one woman as far as I can tell involved with this meeting.  Sadly this is not the only meeting at the NAS Beckman Center with gender issues.  See this post for example Today's YAMMM (Yet Another Mostly Male Meeting) Brought to You by CIFAR & NAS.  Does NAS even make any effort in regard to diversity of speakers?

UPDATE 10/25/14 - Some responses from Twitter






For more on this topic see my other posts on "Diversity in STEM"

UPDATE 2: 10/26 - New NAS Sackler meeting after this one - better but barely in gender ratio

The next Sackler meeting after this one is on "Drawing Causal Inference from Big Data".  Here are the speakers they list with the same colors as used above.
  • Edoardo Airoldi, Harvard University
  • Susan Athey, Stanford University 
  • Leon Bottou, Microsoft Corporation 
  • Danah Boyd, Microsoft Corporation
  • Peter Buhlmann, ETH Zurich 
  • Susan Dumais, Microsoft Corporation
  • Dean Eckles, Facebook 
  • James Fowler, University of California, San Diego  
  • Michael Hawrylycz, Allen Institute 
  • David Heckerman, Microsoft Corporation 
  • Jennifer Hill, New York University 
  • Guido Imbens, Stanford University
  • Michael Jordan, University of California, Berkeley 
  • Steven Levitt, The University of Chicago 
  • David Madigan, Columbia University
  • Thomas Richardson, University of Washington 
  • Bernhard Schölkopf, Max Planck Institute 
  • Jasjeet Sekhon, University of California, Berkeley 
  • Cosma Shalizi, Carnegie Mellon University  
  • Richard Shiffrin, Indiana University 
  • John Stamatoyannopoulos, University of Washington 
  • Hal Varian, Google, Inc. 
  • Bin Yu, University of California, Berkeley 
That is a ratio of 18:5 or 21% women.  Not sure what the gender balance is for people working on "big data" but still, given the Sackler's recent issues with gender ratio in fields with an almost 50:50 ratio of men:women I am not willing to give them the benefit of the doubt here.  And I note - the link they provide for Susan Athey goes to the web site of Richard Shiffrin.  So I am just going to assume that the name on the list is correct not the link to Shiffrin.

UPDATE 3: 10/26 - Made a Storify to track discussion of this.

UPDATE 4: 10/26 -- and another recent Sackler meeting

Epigenetic changes in the developing brain: Effects on behavior

This meeting was held March 28-29, 2014 at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C. and organized by Donald W. Pfaff (The Rockefeller University) and Eric Barrington Keverne (King’s College, Cambridge).
  • Introduction and welcome, Donald Pfaff and Barry Keverne
  • Session I. DNA methylation (Chair, Tom Insel)
    • Mechanisms that establish and maintain genomic methylation patterns in mammalian tissues, Tim Bestor, Columbia University
    • Signaling networks that regulate synapse development and dysfunction, Michael Greenberg, Harvard University
    • Impact of early life experiences on DNA methylation: Implications for brain development and behaviour, Frances Champagne, Columbia University
  • Session II. Histone modifications (Chair, Barry Keverne)
    • A histone methylation network regulates epigenetic inheritance, Yang Shi, Harvard University
    • Global Epigenomic Reconfiguration during Mammalian Brain Development, Joseph Ecker, Salk Institute for Biological Studies
    • H3.3 nucleosomal dynamics regulate synaptic development and plasticity in postreplicative neurons, Ian Maze & David Allis, The Rockefeller University
    • Steroid hormone actions on histone tail modifications in the brain, Donald Pfaff, The Rockefeller University
  • 14th Annual Sackler Public Lecture
    • Introduction – Diane Griffin, Vice President, National Academy of Sciences
    • Deconstructing circuits for motor behavior, Thomas Jessell, Columbia University
  • Session III. Genomic imprinting (Chair, Rusty Gage)
    • Genomic imprinting,action and interaction of two genomes in mother, Barry Keverne, Cambridge University
    • Epigenetic regulation of imprinted gene loci, Marisa Bartolomei, University of Pennsylvania Medical School
    • Monoallelic gene expression, Andrew Chess, Mount Sinai Hospital
  • Session IV. Non-coding RNA’s (Chair, Don Pfaff)
    • Linking RNA to Nuclear Architecture, John L. Rinn, Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT
    • Human retrotransposons ("jumping genes") in health and disease, Haig Kazazian, Johns Hopkins University
  • Session V. CNS applications (Chair, Tim Bestor)
    • Mobile Element Activity in Evolution and Disease, Fred Gage, Salk Institute
    • The Epigenetic Language of the Circadian Clock, Poalo Sassone-Corsi, University of California, Irvine
    • Epigenomics of Major Psychiatric Disease, Art Petronis, University of Toronto
    • Imprinting mechanisms underlying Prader Willi and Angelman syndromes, James Resnick, University of Florida
  • Closing remarks: Brain Exceptionalism, Tom Insel, Director, National Institute of Mental Health, NIH

So - if you just count all the speaking / session chair slots that comes to 24 slots to men and 3 to women for a wonderful 11% female percentage.  Even if you count just speakers (and not session chairs) the #s don't look good.  Looking pretty bad NAS Sackler meetings.

UPDATE 5: Copying in my analysis of gender ratio at the most recent Sackler meeting on Symbioses becoming permanent: The origins and evolutionary trajectories of organelles which I refer to above but only via a link out to my post.  Here is the speaker analysis:

  • Organizers: W. Ford DoolittlePatrick Keeling, and John McCutcheon
  • Distinctive Voices Public Lecture presented by Michael Gray, CIFAR Advisor, Dalhousie University
  • Session 1: Genomes (evolutionary rates, oddities, and reduction)
    • Introduction and welcome remarks – W. Ford Doolittle, CIFAR Advisor & Patrick Keeling, CIFAR Program Director and Senior Fellow
    • John McCutcheon, CIFAR Associate Fellow, University of Montana
    • John Archibald, CIFAR Senior Fellow, Dalhousie University, Nuclear organelles 
    • Andrew Roger, CIFAR Senior Fellow, Dalhousie University, Organelle reduction 
    • Siv Andersson, Uppsala University, Alphaproteobacterial genome evolution 
    • David Smith, University of Western Ontario, Roots of genomic architecture variation 
    • Daniel Sloan, Colorado State University, Cytonuclear co-evolution under extreme mitochondrial mutation rates
    • John Allen, University College London, Why keep genomes?
  • Session 2: Integration/Control (trafficking, signaling, transporters)
    • Debash Bhattacharya, Rutgers University, Transporters in organellogenesis 
    • Nancy Moran, University of Texas, Austin, Insect endosymbionts 
    • Geoff McFadden, University of Melbourne, Diversity of protein trafficking
    • Chris Howe, Cambridge University, Why integrate?
    • Steve Perlman, CIFAR Fellow, University of Victoria, Maternal transmission, sex ratio distortion, and mitochondria 
    • William Martin, Düsseldorf University, Endosymbiont and organelle, what’s the difference? 
    • Moriya Okhuma, Riken University, Metabolic integration across endosymbiotic communities
  • Session 3: Theories and Models
    • Eors Szathmary, Loránd University, A fresh look at cooperation in some major transitions, especially the origin of eukaryotes
    • Marc Ereshefsky, University of Calgary, Evolutionary individuality
    • Peter Godfrey-Smith, City University of New York, Individuality and the egalitarian transitions 
    • Maureen O’Malley, University of Sydney, Philosophical Reflections on Endosymbiosis: Implications for Evolutionary Theory
    • Toby Kiers, University Amsterdam, Bacterial cooperativity
  • Closing remarks J. McCutcheon
That is a ratio of 19:4 for speakers slots for men vs. women.  Sensing a pattern anyone?

UPDATE 6: I feel much better now looking at the meeting before the developing brain meeting.  It is so much better (not). 

In the Light of Evolution VIII: Darwinian Thinking in the Social Sciences. January 10-11, 2014 at the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Center in Irvine, CA. 
  • Organized by Brian Skyrms, John C. Avise and Francisco J. Ayala
  • I.  Evolution of Social Norms
    • Bargaining and Fairness, Kenneth Binmore, University College London
    • Cooperation, Natalia Komarova, University of California, Irvine
    • Friendship and Natural Selection, James H. Fowler, University of California, San Diego
    • Reputation and Punishment, Michihiro Kandori, University of Tokyo
  • II. Social Dynamics
    • The Replicator Equation and Other Game Dynamics, Ross Cressman, Wilfrid Laurier University
    • Payoff-Based Learning Dynamics, Alvin Roth, Harvard University
    • Strategic Learning Dynamics, David K. Levine, Washington University
    • Cultural Evolution, Marcus W. Feldman, Stanford University
  • Keynote Address:  Public Goods: Competition, Cooperation, and Spite, Simon A. Levin, Princeton University
  • III. Special Sciences
    • Evolutionary Demography, Kenneth W. Wachter, University of California, Berkeley
    • Folklore of the Elite and Biological Evolution, Barry O’Neill, University of California, Los Angeles
    • Economics, Ted Bergstrom, University of California, Santa Barbara
    • Psychology, Dale Purves, Duke-National University of Singapore Graduate Medical School
  • IV. Applications
    • Evolutionary Implementation in Mechanism Design, Éva Tardos, Cornell University
    • Some Dynamics of Signaling, Brian Skyrms, University of California, Irvine
    • The Rate of Innovation Diffusion in Social Networks, H. Peyton Young, Oxford University
    • Homophily, Culture, and Coordinating Behaviors, Matthew O. Jackson, Stanford University
That is 15:2 males to females in speaking slots and also three main organizers. 

Update 7: A trend in meetings coorganized by John Avise and Francisco Ayala

I note the meeting above in Update 6 is the second recent meeting coorganized by John Avise and Francisco Ayala with a highly skewed gender ratio.  So I decided to go back and look at other meetings they coorganized.  For example here is the next most recent one.

In the Light of Evolution VII: The Human Mental Machinery

Organized by Camilo J. Cela-Conde, Raúl Gutiérrez Lombardo, John C. Avise and Francisco J. Ayala

This meeting was held January 10-12, 2013 at the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Center in Irvine, CA.
  •  I. Theory of Mind 
    • Theory of Mind: Darwin’s legacy, John Searle, University of California, Berkeley
    • Human mind and brain – pathological evidence, Robert E. Clark, University of California, San Diego 
    • Theory of Mind in Other Primates, Robert M. Seyfarth, University of Pennsylvania
  • II. Cognition
    • Evolution of Working Memory, Peter Carruthers, University of Maryland
    • The evolution of episodic memory, Norbert Fortin, University of California, Irvine
    • Natural Basis of Cognition, Terrence J. Sejnowski, Salk Institute for Biological Studies
    • Human and Animal Consciousness, Michael T. Alkire, University of California, Irvine
    • Co-Evolution: Culture, mind and brain, Chet C. Sherwood, George Washington University 
  • Keynote Address 
    • Unusual and Exceptional Capacities of the Human Mind, James L. McGaugh, University of California, Irvine     
  • III. Evolving Piece by Piece: Levels of Modularity in Neurobiology
    • Neuronal Networks of the Moral Judgment, Patricia Churchland, University of California, San Diego
    • Pathological Altruism, Barbara A. Oakley, Oakland University
    • Theory of Justice in Non-Human Primates, Sarah F. Brosnan, Georgia State University
    • Evolutionary Dynamics of Altruism, Martin Nowak, Harvard University
    • Human and Animal Neuroeconomics, Michael Platt, Duke University 
  • IV. Aesthetics 
    • Music and the Brain, Robert Zatorre, Montreal Neurological Institute 
    • Aesthetic and Ethnic Emotions, Oshin Vartanian, University of Toronto, Scarborough
    • Aesthetic Perception: Mind and Brain , Camilo J. Cela-Conde, University of the Baleares Islands, Spain
That is a ratio of 14:3 for speakers of men: women. 

UPDATE 8: The next most recent meeting coorganized by Avise and Ayala

In the Light of Evolution VI: Brain and Behavior
January 19-21, 2012
Arnold and Mabel Beckman Center
Organized by Georg F. Striedter, John C. Avise and Francisco J. Ayala

  • Session I. Brains in History: Descent with Modification
    • Chair, John C. Avise, University of California, Irvine
    • Evolution of Brain Development, Georg Striedter, University of California, Irvine
    • Evolution of Neuronal Cell Types, Nipam H. Patel, University of California, Berkeley
    • Homology and Homoplasy of Behavior and Neural Circuits, Paul S. Katz, Georgia State University
    • Evolution of Cognitive Traits, Lucia F. Jacobs, University of California, Berkeley
  • Session II. Brains in Ecology: Adapatation by Natural Selection
    • Chair, Georg Striedter, University of California, Irvine
    • Adaptation of Neuron-typical Molecules and Processes, Harold H. Zakon, University of Texas, Austin
    • Evolution of Specialized Sensory Systems, Kenneth C. Catania, Vanderbilt University
    • Evolution of Specialized Motor Systems, Andrew H. Bass, Cornell University
    • Evolving Neural Mechanisms of Social Diversity and Cognition, James L. Goodson, Indiana University
  • Keynote Address
    • Introduction, Francisco J. Ayala, University of California, Irvine
    • Evolution of Centralized Nervous Systems, R. Glenn Northcutt, Scripps Institution of Oceanography
  • Session III. Evolving Piece by Piece: Levels of Modularity in Neurobiology
    • Chair, Lucia F. Jacobs, University of California, Irvine
    • Molecular Models in Neurobiology, Kenneth S. Kosik, University of California, Santa Barbara
    • Devolpmental Modules in Nervous Systems, Leah A. Krubitzer, University of California, Davis
    • Neuroanatomical and Physiological Modules, Jon H. Kaas, Vanderbilt University
    • Modularity of Cognitive Processes, Jessica F. Cantlon, University of Rochester
  • Session IV. Human Evolution: Brains and Behavior
    • Chair, Francisco J. Ayala, University of California, Irvine
    • Molecular Aspects of Human Brain Evolution, Todd M. Preuss, Emory University School of Medicine
    • Evolution of Primate Brain Morphology, Suzana Herculano-Houzel, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
    • Evolution of Primate Brain Functions, Lizabeth M. Romanski, University of Rochester
    • The Evolution of Human Cognition, Clark Barrett, University of California, Los Angeles
  • Concluding Remarks
    • Francisco J. Ayala, University of California, Irvine
That isa ratio of 17:6 if one includes all slots (chairs, speakers, etc) or 14:5 if you just include speaking slots. 

UPDATE 9: This is NOT just about speaking at meetings.

I note - many of the Sackler meetings turn into special collections in PNAS and thus the limited representation of women speakers (which is a problem) is made worse by then directly affecting publishing in PNAS.

UPDATE 10: 10/27/14. Going back to another Avise/Ayala meeting from 2001

In the Light of Evolution V: Cooperation

Organized by Joan E. Strassmann, David C. Queller, John C. Avise, and Francisco J. Ayala
January 7-8, 2011

(Note Joan Strassmann is one of my favorite scientists and people on the planet - great to see her in a role as coorganizer here)

  • Session I. Foundations of Cooperation
    • John C. Avise, University of California, Irvine, Chair
    • Insect Societies: pinnacles of cooperation - Peter Nonacs, University of California, Los Angeles
    • Families in vertebrates - Dustin R. Rubenstein, Columbia University
    • The major evolutionary transitions In bacterial symbiosis - Joel L. Sachs, University of California, Riverside
    • Kin, kith, and kind: the varieties of social experience - David C. Queller, Rice University
  • Session II. Genetic Basis of Cooperation and Conflict
    • David Queller, Chair
    • Altruism and cheating in a social microbe, Dicytostelium discoideum - Joan E. Strassmann, Rice University
    • A prokaryotic model system -Greg Velicer, Indiana University
    • The evolution of restraint in simple communities - Ben Kerr, University of Washington
    • Selfish genetic elements - Jack H. Werren, University of Rochester
  • Banquet Lecture
    • Francisco J. Ayala, University of California, Irvine, Introduction
    • Evolution of insect society: eat, drink and be scary - Gene E. Robinson, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • Session III. Hamiltonian Medicine
    • Joan E. Strassmann, Chair
    • Genomic imprinting, helpers at the nest, and age at menarche David Haig, Harvard University 
    • Pathology from evolutionary conflict - Steven A. Frank, University of California, Irvine 
    • The sociobiology of drug resistance and pathogen virulence - Andrew Read, Pennsylvania State University
    • Microbial sociality: implications for disease - Kevin Foster, Harvard University
  • Session IV. Are Humans Different?
    • Francisco J. Ayala, Chair
    • Cooperation and conflict in traditional cultures - Beverly I. Strassmann, University of Michigan 
    • The cultural niche - Robert Boyd, University of California, Los Angeles
    • Social Bonds to Social Preferences; the foundations for human moral sentiments  - Joan Silk, University of California, Los Angeles
    • What does primate cooperation tell us? - Dorothy Cheney, University of Pennsylvania
  • Concluding Remarks
    • John C. Avise, University of California, Irvine
So - for speaking and chairing slots - that comes to a ratio of 17:5 male to female.  Even with Joan Strassmann being involved as a coorganizer (and she is truly wonderful in a million ways) this meeting still has the NAS and Avise/Ayala pattern of very few female speakers or session chairs, even in fields where ther are many candidates.  Yuck.

I think I would make one recommendation out of this to begin with - John Avise and Francisco Ayala should not be allowed to run any NAS meetings again.  And NAS needs to have and use policies on educating meeting organizers about gender bias and requiring some type of efforts to have reasonable representations of diversity among speakers and chairs.

UPDATE 11: Meetings from 1990s I went to while in graduate school

Just scanned in notes from some of these NAS Beckman Center meetings that I attended while in graduate school at Stanford.  I added them to my collection of "Retroblogging Meetings and Seminars: Posting Scans of Notes".  The meetings then had even worse gender ratios of speakers.

1994: Tempo and Mode in Evolution.  See scans here. All speakers except one were male.
1997: Genetics and the Origin of Species. See scans here.





Personalized Medicine World Conference 2015: 55 speakers 7 of which are women #YAMMM #StemWomen

Well, umm, Ralph Snyderman, despite the email invitation I will not be attending PMWC 2015 Silicon Valley.  Why not?  Well how about the fact that you have 55 speakers listed, only 7 of which are women.






Previous year's meetings are not much better.  For example, for the 2014 Meeting in Silicon Valley the Track 1 session (which they call the premier session or something like that) has a ratio of 52:5 Male:Female.


#YAMMM Alert: Drug Discovery and Therapy World Congress, a meeting made for @realDonaldTrump & other men

Note - see update at bottom of post

Elizabeth Bik sent me a link to this meeintg: DRUG DISCOVERY & THERAPY WORLD CONGRESS 2015 with a comment about the ratio of males to females in the keynote speakers.  And it is painful.  Of the plenary and keynote speakers, 15 are male and 1 is female.  Below I show pics of the plenary and keynote speakers:

Plenary and Keynote Speakers at Drug Discovery and Thearpy World Congress

Female Plenary and Keynote Speakers at Drug Discovery and Thearpy World Congress
Two bonus people who could have been giving keynote talks but who actually are not.

The gender bias at this meeting puts into perspective the push by the NIH to get drug researchers to inlcude more female subjects in their studies.  See for example, Why Are All the Lab Rats Boys? NIH Tells Drug Researchers to Stop Being Sexist Pigs.  Here is a thought, maybe we can get some of these speakers to cancel speaking at the meeting and also maybe we can get nobody to attent the meeting.  Sigh.  Yet another mostly male meeting.  Also known as "YAMMM".

--------------------
UPDATE October 14, 2014.

Well, this is one of the strangest and lamest things I have seen associated with a conference in a while.  Elizabeth Bik just emailed me to show me an invite she received to the "Global Biotechnology Congress 2015."  And here is the bizarre thing.  It is at the same time as the Drug Discovery meeting discussed here.  Same place.  Same speakers.  It is apparently the same meeting with a new name.


Same bad gender ratio of course too.

Did they do this to avoid people discovering my post about the awful gender ratio?  I don't know but seems like it might be so.  What a joke.  Well, I can guarantee people will associated this meeting name with the previous one.  


A distasteful & disgraceful "Are there limits to evolution?" meeting at the University of Cambridge #YAMMM

Well, I saw this Tweet the other day
And though there was a bit of a discussion on Twitter I felt I had to follow up with a blog post. When I saw the post I was at a conference (Lake Arrowhead Microbial Genomes) where I could get Twitter access but for some reason very little web access. So I could not dig around until now (I am home). 

This meeting is a complete disgrace and an embarassment for the field of evolutionary biology, for the University of Cambridge which is hosting the meeting, and for the Templeton Foundation which is sponsoring it.

Why do I say this? Well, pretty simple actually. The meeting site lists the Invited Keynote speakers for the meeting.  Notice anything?  How about I help you by bringing all the pictures together.


Notice anything now?  How about I help you some more by masking out the men and not the women.


Impressive no?  25 speakers - 23 of them male.  I guess that means there are no qualified female speakers who coudl discuss something about evolution right?  It would be worth reading "Fewer invited talks bu women in evolutionary biology symposia" to get some context.  What an incredible, disgusting, distasteful and disgraceful meeting.  

I recommend to everyone who was considering going to this meeting - skip it.  Also consider writing to the University of Cambirdge and the Templeton Foundation to express your thoughts about the meeting.  This certainly is a fine example of Yet Another Mostly Male Meeting (YAMMM).  Well, maybe I should word that differently - this is a disgusting example of a YAMMM.  


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    ‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات YAMMM. إظهار كافة الرسائل
    ‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات YAMMM. إظهار كافة الرسائل

    الخميس، 19 فبراير 2015

    Oxford Global Sequencing Meetings: Where MEN Tell You About Sequencing #YAMMM

    Well, got an email invite to one of these Oxford Global Meetings. Sadly the gender ratio of listed speakers is awful. I highlighted the list below (men in yellow, women in green).  Ratio of 17:3.  (See below).  No thanks Oxford Global.

    Dear Professor Jonathan Eisen ,
     We hope you are well and we would like to invite you to speak at our forthcoming Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) USA congress (www.nextgenerationsequencingusa-congress.com) or co-located  Single Cell Analysis USA congress (www.singlecellusa-congress.comto be held on 27th -28th October 2015 at Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA.
     Over the two days, the NGS USA congress aims to cover updates and application of NGS technologies in genomics and genetics research in the US and UK, Europe. Topics are comprised of NGS & NGS Data Analysis Technologies and Platforms, NGS for Cancer Drug Development, Microbiology and Immunotherapy as well as Clinical Applications & Diagnostics. Novel updates in Gene Synthesis, Protein Sequencing and Targeted Sequencing will also be explored The Single Cell Analysis USA congress looks at new methods in DNA sequencing, epigenomic DNA sequencing and RNA sequencing, informatics, data handling as well as application of single cell genomics in understanding cancer  other areas of cancer research such as cancer stem cells and immunotherapy. The presentations are also comprised of novel techniques in imaging and cytometry, isolation and processing of single cells. The congress also covers the applications in translational medicine and the clinic for therapeutic targeting.
     The combination of carefully researched topics and high-level networking opportunities creates a unique discussion platform for over 250 senior scientists we are expecting in attendance from research institutions and pharmaceutical companies. Confirmed Speakers for 2015 include:NGS·          Sreekumar Kodangattil, Senior Principal Scientist, Pfizer       
    ·          Shrikant M. Mane, Senior Research Scientist in Genetics; Director, MBB Keck Biotech laboratory; Director, Yale Center for Genome Analysis
    ·          Stephan Schuster, Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Penn State University
    ·          Richard  McCombie, Professor, Human Genetics, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
    ·          Jingyue  Ju, Director, Center for Genome Technology and Biomolecular Engineering, Professor of Chemical Engineering and Pharmacology, Columbia University            
    ·          Christopher Mason, Chair, ABRF NGS Consortium, Assistant Professor, Weill Cornell Medical College. Dept. of Physiology & Biophysics; The Brain & Mind Research Institute
    ·          Michaela Bowden, Associate Director, Center for Molecular Oncologic Pathology, Dana Farber Cancer Institute      
    ·          Yuan Gao, Director, Associate Professor, Lieber Institute/Johns Hopkins University
    ·          Sheng Li, Instructor in Bioinformatics, Department of Neurological Surgery, Weill Cornell Medical College
    ·          Michael  Fraser, Associate Director, CPC-GENE Prostate Cancer Genomics Program, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre    
     Single Cell·          Daniel Chiu, Professor, University of Washington    
    ·          Steve Potter, Professor, Division of Developmental Biology, Cincinnati Children's Medical Center
    ·          Norman Dovichi, Professor, University Notre Dame 
    ·          Zaida Luthey-Schulten, Professor of Chemistry, University of Illinois
    ·          Paul Bohn, Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Notre Dame       
    ·          Navin Varadarajan, Assistant Professor, University of Houston
    ·          Alexander R., Ivanov, Director of the HSPH Proteomics Resource, Research Scientist
    Harvard School of Public Health·          Viktor Adalsteinsson, Researcher, Researcher, Koch Institute at MIT, Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard Medical School
    ·          Xinghua Victor Pan, Research Scientist, Single Cell Genomics Group, Sherman Weissman Laboratory, Department of Genetics, Yale University School of Medicine
    ·          Cheng-Zhong Zhang, Computational Biologist, Department of Medical Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute




    الاثنين، 9 فبراير 2015

    Another "Yet another mostly male meeting (YAMMM)" from BGI

    Well just saw an announcement for this meeting on Twitter: The First Announcement of The Tenth Annual Meeting of the International Conference on Genomics (ICG

    And I hoped beyond hope that they would have a decent representation of women speakers at the meeting.  Why did I hope this?  Well, in the past, BGI run meetings have had incredibly skewed gender ratios of speakers.  See this post for a discussion of their past record: Kudos to the DOE-JGI for organizing a genomics meeting w/ a good gender ratio - no kudos to BGI - yet again

    I guess I had hoped that perhaps they would try to change their practices after I and other people criticized them for their past record.  So - I went to the web site for the ICG10 meeting advertised in the Tweet.  Oh well, silly me for hoping.

    On the front page they have 14 speakers they are promoting - all of them male.

    Screen shot from ICG10 web site

    On the announcement page they have a slightly different list where the ratio is 14:1
    • Jef Boeke, NYU Langone University School of Medicine, USA
    • Sydney Brenner, 2002 Nobel Laureate in Physiology or Medicine, Singapore
    • Charles Cantor, Sequenom, Inc., USA
    • Julio Celis, Danish Cancer Society Research Center, Denmark
    • Richard Durbin, Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, UK
    • Leroy Hood, Institute for Systems Biology, USA
    • Thomas Hudson, Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, Canada
    • Maria Leptin, Chair of EMBO, Germany
    • Maynard Olson, University of Washington, USA
    • Aristides Patrinos, J. Craig Venter Institute, USA
    • Mu-ming Poo, University of California, Berkeley, USA
    • Richard Roberts, New England Biolabs, 1993 Nobel Laureate in Physiology or Medicine, USA
    • Eils Roland, Heidelberg University, Germany
    • Mathias Uhlen, Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden
    • Tilhuan Yilma, University of California, Davis, USA
    Regardless, this is a consistent pattern of not having an even remotely balanced ratio of male to female speakers at their meetings.  And please, avoid their meetings until they change this.

    الجمعة، 21 نوفمبر 2014

    Repeated, extremely biased ratio of M:F at meetings from SFB 680 "Evolutionary Innovations" group #YAMMM



    Well, this is disappointing, to say the least - there is a conference coming up in July 2015 on "Forecasting Evolution":  SFB 680 | Molecular Basis of Evolutionary Innovations at the Gulbenkian Foundation in Lisbon.

    Here is the listed lineup of invited speakers:
    1. Andersson (Uppsala University), (NOTE I AM ASSUMING THIS IS DAN ANDERSSON)
    2. Trevor Bedford (Hutchinson Cancer Research Center), 
    3. Jesse Bloom (Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center), 
    4. Arup Chakraborty (MIT)
    5. Michael Desai (Harvard University), 
    6. Michael Doebeli (University of British Columbia), 
    7. Marco Gerlinger (Institute of Cancer Research, London, 
    8. Michael Hochberg (CRNS, Montpellier), 
    9. Christopher Illingworth (Cambridge University), 
    10. Roy Kishoni (Harvard University), 
    11. Richard Lenski (Michigan State University), 
    12. Stanislas Leibler (Rockefeller University), 
    13. Marta Luksza (IAS Princeton), 
    14. Luke Mahler (University of California, Davis), 
    15. Leonid Mirny (MIT), 
    16. Richard Neher (MPI Tuebingen), 
    17. Julian Parkhill (Sanger Institute), 
    18. Colin Russell (University of Cambridge), 
    19. Sohrab Shah (University of British Columbia), 
    20. Boris Shraiman (UCSB), 
    21. Olivier Tenaillon (Inserm Paris).
    For a whopping 20:1 ratio of men to women or 4.8% women. And this in a field that is just overflowing with excellent female researchers.

    So I dug around a little bit.  Here is another meeting from the same group at the University of Cologne - a group known as SFB 680. SFB 680: Molecular Ecology and Evolution: Cologne Spring Meeting 2012.



    Speakers:
    1. Ian Thomas Baldwin, MPI Jena
    2. Nitin Baliga, ISB Seattle 
    3. Andrew Beckerman, University of Sheffield 
    4. Joy Bergelson, University of Chicago
    5. Michael Boots, University of Sheffield 
    6. John Colbourne, Indiana University 
    7. David Conway, LSHTM London
    8. Santiago Elena, IBMCP Valencia
    9. Duncan Greig, MPI Plön 
    10. Bryan Grenfell, Princeton University 
    11. Eddie Holmes, Pennsylvania State University 
    12. Peter Keightley, University of Edinburgh
    13. Britt Koskella, University of Oxford
    14. Juliette de Meaux, University of Münster 
    15. Thomas Mitchell-Olds, Duke University
    16. Hélène Morlon, Ecole Polytechnique Paris 
    17. Wayne Potts, University of Utah 
    18. Michael Purugganan, New York University
    19. Andrew Rambaut, University of Edinburgh 
    20. Walter Salzburger, University of Basel 
    21. Johanna Schmitt, Brown University
    22. Ralf Sommer, MPI Tübingen
    23. Miltos Tsiantis, University of Oxford 
    24. Diethardt Tautz, MPI Plön 
    25. Daniel Weinreich, Brown University
    Session and Meeting Chairs:
    1. Michael Lassig
    2. Maarten Koornneef
    3. Eric von Elert
    4. Thomas Wiehe
    5. Jonathan Howard
    That would be 25:5 or 16.6% female.

    And then there was this: Perspectives in Biophysics in October 2014
    1. Konstantin Doubrovinski
    2. Tobias Bollenbach
    3. Stefano Pagliara
    4. Damien Faivre
    5. Ingmar Schön
    6. Kurt Schmoller
    7. Max Ulbrich
    8. Florian Rehfeld
    9. Steffen Sahl
    10. Timo Betz
    11. Alexandre Persat
    1. Rubén Alcázar (MPI for Plant Breeding Research, Cologne)
    2. John Baines (Christian-Albrechts-University, Kiel)
    3. Thomas Bataillon (University of Aarhus)
    4. Frank Chan (MPI for Evolutionary Biology, Plön)
    5. George Coupland (MPI for Plant Breeding Research, Cologne)
    6. Susanne Foitzik (Johannes Gutenberg-University, Mainz)
    7. Isabel Gordo (Instituto Gulbenkian, Lisbon)
    8. Oskar Hallatschek (MPI for Dynamics and Self-Organization, Göttingen
    9. Jonathan Howard (University of Cologne)
    10. JinYong Hu (MPI for Plant Breeding Research, Cologne)
    11. Jeffrey Jensen (University of Massachusetts, Medical School, Worchester)
    12. Michael Lässig (University of Cologne)
    13. Dirk Metzler (Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich)
    14. Ville Mustonen (Welcome Trust Sanger Institute)
    15. John Parsch (Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich)
    16. Frank Rosenzweig (University of Montana, Missoula)
    17. Christian Schlötterer (University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna)
    18. Shamil Sunyaev (Brigham & Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School) 
    19. Karl Schmid (University of Hohenheim)
    20. Ana Sousa (Instituto Gulbenkian, Lisbon)
    21. Diethard Tautz (MPI for Evolutionary Biology, Plön)
    22. Xavier Vekemans (University of Lille)
    Session and Meeting Chairs
    • Wolfgang Stephan
    • Michael Lässig
    • Berenike Maier
    • Wolfgang Stephan
    • Peter Pfaffelhuber
    • Juliette de Meaux
    For a 19:3 ratio or 13.6 % women for the speakers and if you include session chairs it comes to 23:5 or 18 % female total.

    And Evolutionary Innovations in 2010. 

    Invited speakers:
    1. R. Bundschuh (Ohio State University), 
    2. C. Callan (Princeton University),
    3. A. Clark (Cornell University), 
    4. J. Colbourne (Indiana University),
    5. E. Dekel (Weizmann Institute),
    6. L. Hurst (University of Bath), 
    7. S. Elena (Universidad Polytecnica de Valencia), 
    8. E. Koonin (National Center for Biotechnology Information), 
    9. M. Kreitman (University of Chicago),
    10. S. Leibler (Rockefeller University, New York and Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton),
    11. T. Lengauer (Max Planck Institute for Informatics), 
    12. S. Maerkl (Ecole Polytechnique de Lausanne), 
    13. C. Marx (Harvard University), 
    14. L. Mirny (Massachusetts Intitute of Technology), 
    15. V. Mustonen (Sanger Institute), 
    16. C. Pal (Biological Research Center, Szeged),
    17. D. Petrov (Stanford University), 
    18. B. Shraiman (Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, Santa Barbara),
    19. S. Sunyaev (Harvard University), 
    20. D. Tautz (Max-Planck-Institute for Evolutionary Biology)
    Plus session chairs 
    1. Johannes Berg
    2. Siegfried Roth
    3. Wolfgang Werr
    4. Martin Lercher
    And addition speakers not listed on their invited speakers page:
    1. Michael Lassig
    2. Ruben Alcazar
    3. Juliette de Meaux
    4. Joachim Krug
    For a whopping ratio of 27:1 or 3.6 %

    The only meeting from them I could find with a decent / non massively skewed ratio was the following very small one: Evolution of Development
    1. Cassandra Extavour
    2. Angela Hay
    3. Felicity Jones
    4. Nicolas Gompe
    5. Kristen Panfillio
    6. Christiane Kiefer
    This is a nice case.  But it really seems like an exception in a long list of meetings with a much smaller representation of female speakers than one would expect based on the researchers in the fields.   I think the SFB680 seriously need to consider what is causing these biases and they should do something about it.

    ---------------------------------------------
    See this page for other posts of mine on this and related topics.

    الجمعة، 24 أكتوبر 2014

    Apparently, the National Academy of Sciences thinks only one sex is qualified to talk about alternatives to sex #YAMMM

    Just got this email from Francisco Ayala:
    January 9-10, 2015 
    In the Light of Evolution IX. Clonal Reproduction: Alternatives to Sex 
    Organizers: Michel Tibayrenc, John C. Avise and Francisco J. Ayala 
    Beckman Center of the National Academies, Irvine, CA 
    Evolutionary studies of clonal organisms have advanced considerably in recent years, but are still fledgling. Although recent textbooks on evolution and genetics might give the impression that nonsexual reproduction is an anomaly in the living world, clonality is the rule rather than the exception in many viruses, bacteria, and parasites that undergo preponderant asexual evolution in nature. Clonality is thus of crucial importance in basic biology as well as in studies dealing with transmissible diseases. 
    This Colloquium will bring together specialists in various disciplines, including genetics, evolution, statistics, bioinformatics, and medicine. A balance will be sought between the various disciplines, including clonal animals and plants, animal and human cloning, pathogens, and cancer studies.   
    Registration is now open http://www.nasonline.org/programs/sackler-colloquia/upcoming-colloquia/ILE_IX_Clonal_Reproduction.html
    Registration fee is $150. 
    Graduate students and postdoctoral researchers are eligible for discount fee of $100. 
    All meals, break and reception refreshments listed on the agenda are included in the registration fee.
    For more information, contact sackler@nas.edu.
    Could be interesting right?  Alas, then, I clicked on the link.  And I discovered the meeting could also be referred to as "Only one sex talks about alternatives to sex".  Men are highlighted in yellow. Women highlighted in green. (Note - I am making some guesses as to gender but I think these are reasoably accurate).
    Organizers: Michel Tibayrenc, John C. Avise and Francisco J. Ayala 
    I. General Considerations  
    • 8:30 AM Overview: The ILE Series. John C. Avise  
    • 8:40 AM Introduction and Chair, John C. Avise  
    • 8:40 AM  Can eukaryotes be considered clonally propagating cell lines with intermittent sex?, Dave Speijer, University of Amsterdam 
    • 9:30 AM Cancer in Parasitic Protozoan Trypanosoma brucei and Toxoplasma gondii, Zhao-Rong Lun, Sun Yat-Sen University 
    • 10:40 AM Mathematical Models of Clonality, Dominik Wodarz, University of California, Irvine 
    • 11:30 AM The Cost of Sex: Why Aren’t We All Clonal?, Claus-Peter Stelzer, University of Innsbruck 
    II. Clonality in Multicellular Organisms  1:30 PM Chair, Zhao-Rong Lun
    • 1:30 PM  Genets, Ramets and Unisexual Reproduction in Plants, Spencer C.H. Barrett, University of Toronto
    • 2:20 PM Clonality in Asexual Invertebrate Animals, John M. Logsdon, Jr., University of Iowa
    • 3:30 PM Natural Clonality in Vertebrate Animals, John C. Avise, University of California, Irvine
    • 4:20 PM Artificial Cloning of Domestic Animals, Carol L. Keefer, University of Maryland
    Keynote Address 
    • 6:45 PM Introduction, Michel Tibayrenc
    • 6:50 PM Cloning Humans: Biological and Ethical Considerations, Francisco J. Ayala, University of California, Irvine
    III. Clonality in the Microbial World  
    • 8:00 AM Chair, Carol L. Keefer  
    • 8:00 AM Clonality and Intracellular Polyploidy in Virus Evolution and Pathogenesis, Esteban Domingo, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
    • 8:50 AM The Impermanence of Bacterial Clones, Howard Ochman, University of Texas, Austin
    • 10:00 AM Clonal Reproduction in Fungi, John Taylor, University of California, Berkeley
    • 10:50 AM Clonal Reproduction in Parasitic Protozoa, Michel Tibayrenc, IRD, Montpellier, France
    IV. Clonality, Cancer, and Evolution
    • 12:50 PM Organismal Fitness, Somatic Evolution, and Cancer, James DeGregori, University of Colorado School of Medicine
    • 1:40 PM Cancer and Pathogens as Clonal Processes, Edwin L. Cooper, University of California, Los Angeles
    • 2:50 PM Stem Cell Competitions: Evolution, and Cancer Progression, Irving Weissman, Stanford University
    • 3:40 PM Clonal Reproduction: An Evolutionary Curse or Blessing?, Marcel E. Dorken, Trent University
    • 4:30 PM Concluding Remarks, Francisco J. Ayala, University of California, Irvine
    So - whether you count just speakers, or speakers plus session chairs, the gender ratio is not good.  Really there is only one woman as far as I can tell involved with this meeting.  Sadly this is not the only meeting at the NAS Beckman Center with gender issues.  See this post for example Today's YAMMM (Yet Another Mostly Male Meeting) Brought to You by CIFAR & NAS.  Does NAS even make any effort in regard to diversity of speakers?

    UPDATE 10/25/14 - Some responses from Twitter






    For more on this topic see my other posts on "Diversity in STEM"

    UPDATE 2: 10/26 - New NAS Sackler meeting after this one - better but barely in gender ratio

    The next Sackler meeting after this one is on "Drawing Causal Inference from Big Data".  Here are the speakers they list with the same colors as used above.
    • Edoardo Airoldi, Harvard University
    • Susan Athey, Stanford University 
    • Leon Bottou, Microsoft Corporation 
    • Danah Boyd, Microsoft Corporation
    • Peter Buhlmann, ETH Zurich 
    • Susan Dumais, Microsoft Corporation
    • Dean Eckles, Facebook 
    • James Fowler, University of California, San Diego  
    • Michael Hawrylycz, Allen Institute 
    • David Heckerman, Microsoft Corporation 
    • Jennifer Hill, New York University 
    • Guido Imbens, Stanford University
    • Michael Jordan, University of California, Berkeley 
    • Steven Levitt, The University of Chicago 
    • David Madigan, Columbia University
    • Thomas Richardson, University of Washington 
    • Bernhard Schölkopf, Max Planck Institute 
    • Jasjeet Sekhon, University of California, Berkeley 
    • Cosma Shalizi, Carnegie Mellon University  
    • Richard Shiffrin, Indiana University 
    • John Stamatoyannopoulos, University of Washington 
    • Hal Varian, Google, Inc. 
    • Bin Yu, University of California, Berkeley 
    That is a ratio of 18:5 or 21% women.  Not sure what the gender balance is for people working on "big data" but still, given the Sackler's recent issues with gender ratio in fields with an almost 50:50 ratio of men:women I am not willing to give them the benefit of the doubt here.  And I note - the link they provide for Susan Athey goes to the web site of Richard Shiffrin.  So I am just going to assume that the name on the list is correct not the link to Shiffrin.

    UPDATE 3: 10/26 - Made a Storify to track discussion of this.

    UPDATE 4: 10/26 -- and another recent Sackler meeting

    Epigenetic changes in the developing brain: Effects on behavior

    This meeting was held March 28-29, 2014 at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C. and organized by Donald W. Pfaff (The Rockefeller University) and Eric Barrington Keverne (King’s College, Cambridge).
    • Introduction and welcome, Donald Pfaff and Barry Keverne
    • Session I. DNA methylation (Chair, Tom Insel)
      • Mechanisms that establish and maintain genomic methylation patterns in mammalian tissues, Tim Bestor, Columbia University
      • Signaling networks that regulate synapse development and dysfunction, Michael Greenberg, Harvard University
      • Impact of early life experiences on DNA methylation: Implications for brain development and behaviour, Frances Champagne, Columbia University
    • Session II. Histone modifications (Chair, Barry Keverne)
      • A histone methylation network regulates epigenetic inheritance, Yang Shi, Harvard University
      • Global Epigenomic Reconfiguration during Mammalian Brain Development, Joseph Ecker, Salk Institute for Biological Studies
      • H3.3 nucleosomal dynamics regulate synaptic development and plasticity in postreplicative neurons, Ian Maze & David Allis, The Rockefeller University
      • Steroid hormone actions on histone tail modifications in the brain, Donald Pfaff, The Rockefeller University
    • 14th Annual Sackler Public Lecture
      • Introduction – Diane Griffin, Vice President, National Academy of Sciences
      • Deconstructing circuits for motor behavior, Thomas Jessell, Columbia University
    • Session III. Genomic imprinting (Chair, Rusty Gage)
      • Genomic imprinting,action and interaction of two genomes in mother, Barry Keverne, Cambridge University
      • Epigenetic regulation of imprinted gene loci, Marisa Bartolomei, University of Pennsylvania Medical School
      • Monoallelic gene expression, Andrew Chess, Mount Sinai Hospital
    • Session IV. Non-coding RNA’s (Chair, Don Pfaff)
      • Linking RNA to Nuclear Architecture, John L. Rinn, Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT
      • Human retrotransposons ("jumping genes") in health and disease, Haig Kazazian, Johns Hopkins University
    • Session V. CNS applications (Chair, Tim Bestor)
      • Mobile Element Activity in Evolution and Disease, Fred Gage, Salk Institute
      • The Epigenetic Language of the Circadian Clock, Poalo Sassone-Corsi, University of California, Irvine
      • Epigenomics of Major Psychiatric Disease, Art Petronis, University of Toronto
      • Imprinting mechanisms underlying Prader Willi and Angelman syndromes, James Resnick, University of Florida
    • Closing remarks: Brain Exceptionalism, Tom Insel, Director, National Institute of Mental Health, NIH

    So - if you just count all the speaking / session chair slots that comes to 24 slots to men and 3 to women for a wonderful 11% female percentage.  Even if you count just speakers (and not session chairs) the #s don't look good.  Looking pretty bad NAS Sackler meetings.

    UPDATE 5: Copying in my analysis of gender ratio at the most recent Sackler meeting on Symbioses becoming permanent: The origins and evolutionary trajectories of organelles which I refer to above but only via a link out to my post.  Here is the speaker analysis:

    • Organizers: W. Ford DoolittlePatrick Keeling, and John McCutcheon
    • Distinctive Voices Public Lecture presented by Michael Gray, CIFAR Advisor, Dalhousie University
    • Session 1: Genomes (evolutionary rates, oddities, and reduction)
      • Introduction and welcome remarks – W. Ford Doolittle, CIFAR Advisor & Patrick Keeling, CIFAR Program Director and Senior Fellow
      • John McCutcheon, CIFAR Associate Fellow, University of Montana
      • John Archibald, CIFAR Senior Fellow, Dalhousie University, Nuclear organelles 
      • Andrew Roger, CIFAR Senior Fellow, Dalhousie University, Organelle reduction 
      • Siv Andersson, Uppsala University, Alphaproteobacterial genome evolution 
      • David Smith, University of Western Ontario, Roots of genomic architecture variation 
      • Daniel Sloan, Colorado State University, Cytonuclear co-evolution under extreme mitochondrial mutation rates
      • John Allen, University College London, Why keep genomes?
    • Session 2: Integration/Control (trafficking, signaling, transporters)
      • Debash Bhattacharya, Rutgers University, Transporters in organellogenesis 
      • Nancy Moran, University of Texas, Austin, Insect endosymbionts 
      • Geoff McFadden, University of Melbourne, Diversity of protein trafficking
      • Chris Howe, Cambridge University, Why integrate?
      • Steve Perlman, CIFAR Fellow, University of Victoria, Maternal transmission, sex ratio distortion, and mitochondria 
      • William Martin, Düsseldorf University, Endosymbiont and organelle, what’s the difference? 
      • Moriya Okhuma, Riken University, Metabolic integration across endosymbiotic communities
    • Session 3: Theories and Models
      • Eors Szathmary, Loránd University, A fresh look at cooperation in some major transitions, especially the origin of eukaryotes
      • Marc Ereshefsky, University of Calgary, Evolutionary individuality
      • Peter Godfrey-Smith, City University of New York, Individuality and the egalitarian transitions 
      • Maureen O’Malley, University of Sydney, Philosophical Reflections on Endosymbiosis: Implications for Evolutionary Theory
      • Toby Kiers, University Amsterdam, Bacterial cooperativity
    • Closing remarks J. McCutcheon
    That is a ratio of 19:4 for speakers slots for men vs. women.  Sensing a pattern anyone?

    UPDATE 6: I feel much better now looking at the meeting before the developing brain meeting.  It is so much better (not). 

    In the Light of Evolution VIII: Darwinian Thinking in the Social Sciences. January 10-11, 2014 at the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Center in Irvine, CA. 
    • Organized by Brian Skyrms, John C. Avise and Francisco J. Ayala
    • I.  Evolution of Social Norms
      • Bargaining and Fairness, Kenneth Binmore, University College London
      • Cooperation, Natalia Komarova, University of California, Irvine
      • Friendship and Natural Selection, James H. Fowler, University of California, San Diego
      • Reputation and Punishment, Michihiro Kandori, University of Tokyo
    • II. Social Dynamics
      • The Replicator Equation and Other Game Dynamics, Ross Cressman, Wilfrid Laurier University
      • Payoff-Based Learning Dynamics, Alvin Roth, Harvard University
      • Strategic Learning Dynamics, David K. Levine, Washington University
      • Cultural Evolution, Marcus W. Feldman, Stanford University
    • Keynote Address:  Public Goods: Competition, Cooperation, and Spite, Simon A. Levin, Princeton University
    • III. Special Sciences
      • Evolutionary Demography, Kenneth W. Wachter, University of California, Berkeley
      • Folklore of the Elite and Biological Evolution, Barry O’Neill, University of California, Los Angeles
      • Economics, Ted Bergstrom, University of California, Santa Barbara
      • Psychology, Dale Purves, Duke-National University of Singapore Graduate Medical School
    • IV. Applications
      • Evolutionary Implementation in Mechanism Design, Éva Tardos, Cornell University
      • Some Dynamics of Signaling, Brian Skyrms, University of California, Irvine
      • The Rate of Innovation Diffusion in Social Networks, H. Peyton Young, Oxford University
      • Homophily, Culture, and Coordinating Behaviors, Matthew O. Jackson, Stanford University
    That is 15:2 males to females in speaking slots and also three main organizers. 

    Update 7: A trend in meetings coorganized by John Avise and Francisco Ayala

    I note the meeting above in Update 6 is the second recent meeting coorganized by John Avise and Francisco Ayala with a highly skewed gender ratio.  So I decided to go back and look at other meetings they coorganized.  For example here is the next most recent one.

    In the Light of Evolution VII: The Human Mental Machinery

    Organized by Camilo J. Cela-Conde, Raúl Gutiérrez Lombardo, John C. Avise and Francisco J. Ayala

    This meeting was held January 10-12, 2013 at the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Center in Irvine, CA.
    •  I. Theory of Mind 
      • Theory of Mind: Darwin’s legacy, John Searle, University of California, Berkeley
      • Human mind and brain – pathological evidence, Robert E. Clark, University of California, San Diego 
      • Theory of Mind in Other Primates, Robert M. Seyfarth, University of Pennsylvania
    • II. Cognition
      • Evolution of Working Memory, Peter Carruthers, University of Maryland
      • The evolution of episodic memory, Norbert Fortin, University of California, Irvine
      • Natural Basis of Cognition, Terrence J. Sejnowski, Salk Institute for Biological Studies
      • Human and Animal Consciousness, Michael T. Alkire, University of California, Irvine
      • Co-Evolution: Culture, mind and brain, Chet C. Sherwood, George Washington University 
    • Keynote Address 
      • Unusual and Exceptional Capacities of the Human Mind, James L. McGaugh, University of California, Irvine     
    • III. Evolving Piece by Piece: Levels of Modularity in Neurobiology
      • Neuronal Networks of the Moral Judgment, Patricia Churchland, University of California, San Diego
      • Pathological Altruism, Barbara A. Oakley, Oakland University
      • Theory of Justice in Non-Human Primates, Sarah F. Brosnan, Georgia State University
      • Evolutionary Dynamics of Altruism, Martin Nowak, Harvard University
      • Human and Animal Neuroeconomics, Michael Platt, Duke University 
    • IV. Aesthetics 
      • Music and the Brain, Robert Zatorre, Montreal Neurological Institute 
      • Aesthetic and Ethnic Emotions, Oshin Vartanian, University of Toronto, Scarborough
      • Aesthetic Perception: Mind and Brain , Camilo J. Cela-Conde, University of the Baleares Islands, Spain
    That is a ratio of 14:3 for speakers of men: women. 

    UPDATE 8: The next most recent meeting coorganized by Avise and Ayala

    In the Light of Evolution VI: Brain and Behavior
    January 19-21, 2012
    Arnold and Mabel Beckman Center
    Organized by Georg F. Striedter, John C. Avise and Francisco J. Ayala

    • Session I. Brains in History: Descent with Modification
      • Chair, John C. Avise, University of California, Irvine
      • Evolution of Brain Development, Georg Striedter, University of California, Irvine
      • Evolution of Neuronal Cell Types, Nipam H. Patel, University of California, Berkeley
      • Homology and Homoplasy of Behavior and Neural Circuits, Paul S. Katz, Georgia State University
      • Evolution of Cognitive Traits, Lucia F. Jacobs, University of California, Berkeley
    • Session II. Brains in Ecology: Adapatation by Natural Selection
      • Chair, Georg Striedter, University of California, Irvine
      • Adaptation of Neuron-typical Molecules and Processes, Harold H. Zakon, University of Texas, Austin
      • Evolution of Specialized Sensory Systems, Kenneth C. Catania, Vanderbilt University
      • Evolution of Specialized Motor Systems, Andrew H. Bass, Cornell University
      • Evolving Neural Mechanisms of Social Diversity and Cognition, James L. Goodson, Indiana University
    • Keynote Address
      • Introduction, Francisco J. Ayala, University of California, Irvine
      • Evolution of Centralized Nervous Systems, R. Glenn Northcutt, Scripps Institution of Oceanography
    • Session III. Evolving Piece by Piece: Levels of Modularity in Neurobiology
      • Chair, Lucia F. Jacobs, University of California, Irvine
      • Molecular Models in Neurobiology, Kenneth S. Kosik, University of California, Santa Barbara
      • Devolpmental Modules in Nervous Systems, Leah A. Krubitzer, University of California, Davis
      • Neuroanatomical and Physiological Modules, Jon H. Kaas, Vanderbilt University
      • Modularity of Cognitive Processes, Jessica F. Cantlon, University of Rochester
    • Session IV. Human Evolution: Brains and Behavior
      • Chair, Francisco J. Ayala, University of California, Irvine
      • Molecular Aspects of Human Brain Evolution, Todd M. Preuss, Emory University School of Medicine
      • Evolution of Primate Brain Morphology, Suzana Herculano-Houzel, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
      • Evolution of Primate Brain Functions, Lizabeth M. Romanski, University of Rochester
      • The Evolution of Human Cognition, Clark Barrett, University of California, Los Angeles
    • Concluding Remarks
      • Francisco J. Ayala, University of California, Irvine
    That isa ratio of 17:6 if one includes all slots (chairs, speakers, etc) or 14:5 if you just include speaking slots. 

    UPDATE 9: This is NOT just about speaking at meetings.

    I note - many of the Sackler meetings turn into special collections in PNAS and thus the limited representation of women speakers (which is a problem) is made worse by then directly affecting publishing in PNAS.

    UPDATE 10: 10/27/14. Going back to another Avise/Ayala meeting from 2001

    In the Light of Evolution V: Cooperation

    Organized by Joan E. Strassmann, David C. Queller, John C. Avise, and Francisco J. Ayala
    January 7-8, 2011

    (Note Joan Strassmann is one of my favorite scientists and people on the planet - great to see her in a role as coorganizer here)

    • Session I. Foundations of Cooperation
      • John C. Avise, University of California, Irvine, Chair
      • Insect Societies: pinnacles of cooperation - Peter Nonacs, University of California, Los Angeles
      • Families in vertebrates - Dustin R. Rubenstein, Columbia University
      • The major evolutionary transitions In bacterial symbiosis - Joel L. Sachs, University of California, Riverside
      • Kin, kith, and kind: the varieties of social experience - David C. Queller, Rice University
    • Session II. Genetic Basis of Cooperation and Conflict
      • David Queller, Chair
      • Altruism and cheating in a social microbe, Dicytostelium discoideum - Joan E. Strassmann, Rice University
      • A prokaryotic model system -Greg Velicer, Indiana University
      • The evolution of restraint in simple communities - Ben Kerr, University of Washington
      • Selfish genetic elements - Jack H. Werren, University of Rochester
    • Banquet Lecture
      • Francisco J. Ayala, University of California, Irvine, Introduction
      • Evolution of insect society: eat, drink and be scary - Gene E. Robinson, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
    • Session III. Hamiltonian Medicine
      • Joan E. Strassmann, Chair
      • Genomic imprinting, helpers at the nest, and age at menarche David Haig, Harvard University 
      • Pathology from evolutionary conflict - Steven A. Frank, University of California, Irvine 
      • The sociobiology of drug resistance and pathogen virulence - Andrew Read, Pennsylvania State University
      • Microbial sociality: implications for disease - Kevin Foster, Harvard University
    • Session IV. Are Humans Different?
      • Francisco J. Ayala, Chair
      • Cooperation and conflict in traditional cultures - Beverly I. Strassmann, University of Michigan 
      • The cultural niche - Robert Boyd, University of California, Los Angeles
      • Social Bonds to Social Preferences; the foundations for human moral sentiments  - Joan Silk, University of California, Los Angeles
      • What does primate cooperation tell us? - Dorothy Cheney, University of Pennsylvania
    • Concluding Remarks
      • John C. Avise, University of California, Irvine
    So - for speaking and chairing slots - that comes to a ratio of 17:5 male to female.  Even with Joan Strassmann being involved as a coorganizer (and she is truly wonderful in a million ways) this meeting still has the NAS and Avise/Ayala pattern of very few female speakers or session chairs, even in fields where ther are many candidates.  Yuck.

    I think I would make one recommendation out of this to begin with - John Avise and Francisco Ayala should not be allowed to run any NAS meetings again.  And NAS needs to have and use policies on educating meeting organizers about gender bias and requiring some type of efforts to have reasonable representations of diversity among speakers and chairs.

    UPDATE 11: Meetings from 1990s I went to while in graduate school

    Just scanned in notes from some of these NAS Beckman Center meetings that I attended while in graduate school at Stanford.  I added them to my collection of "Retroblogging Meetings and Seminars: Posting Scans of Notes".  The meetings then had even worse gender ratios of speakers.

    1994: Tempo and Mode in Evolution.  See scans here. All speakers except one were male.
    1997: Genetics and the Origin of Species. See scans here.





    الاثنين، 29 سبتمبر 2014

    Personalized Medicine World Conference 2015: 55 speakers 7 of which are women #YAMMM #StemWomen

    Well, umm, Ralph Snyderman, despite the email invitation I will not be attending PMWC 2015 Silicon Valley.  Why not?  Well how about the fact that you have 55 speakers listed, only 7 of which are women.






    Previous year's meetings are not much better.  For example, for the 2014 Meeting in Silicon Valley the Track 1 session (which they call the premier session or something like that) has a ratio of 52:5 Male:Female.


    الأربعاء، 24 سبتمبر 2014

    #YAMMM Alert: Drug Discovery and Therapy World Congress, a meeting made for @realDonaldTrump & other men

    Note - see update at bottom of post

    Elizabeth Bik sent me a link to this meeintg: DRUG DISCOVERY & THERAPY WORLD CONGRESS 2015 with a comment about the ratio of males to females in the keynote speakers.  And it is painful.  Of the plenary and keynote speakers, 15 are male and 1 is female.  Below I show pics of the plenary and keynote speakers:

    Plenary and Keynote Speakers at Drug Discovery and Thearpy World Congress

    Female Plenary and Keynote Speakers at Drug Discovery and Thearpy World Congress
    Two bonus people who could have been giving keynote talks but who actually are not.

    The gender bias at this meeting puts into perspective the push by the NIH to get drug researchers to inlcude more female subjects in their studies.  See for example, Why Are All the Lab Rats Boys? NIH Tells Drug Researchers to Stop Being Sexist Pigs.  Here is a thought, maybe we can get some of these speakers to cancel speaking at the meeting and also maybe we can get nobody to attent the meeting.  Sigh.  Yet another mostly male meeting.  Also known as "YAMMM".

    --------------------
    UPDATE October 14, 2014.

    Well, this is one of the strangest and lamest things I have seen associated with a conference in a while.  Elizabeth Bik just emailed me to show me an invite she received to the "Global Biotechnology Congress 2015."  And here is the bizarre thing.  It is at the same time as the Drug Discovery meeting discussed here.  Same place.  Same speakers.  It is apparently the same meeting with a new name.


    Same bad gender ratio of course too.

    Did they do this to avoid people discovering my post about the awful gender ratio?  I don't know but seems like it might be so.  What a joke.  Well, I can guarantee people will associated this meeting name with the previous one.  


    الجمعة، 19 سبتمبر 2014

    A distasteful & disgraceful "Are there limits to evolution?" meeting at the University of Cambridge #YAMMM

    Well, I saw this Tweet the other day
    And though there was a bit of a discussion on Twitter I felt I had to follow up with a blog post. When I saw the post I was at a conference (Lake Arrowhead Microbial Genomes) where I could get Twitter access but for some reason very little web access. So I could not dig around until now (I am home). 

    This meeting is a complete disgrace and an embarassment for the field of evolutionary biology, for the University of Cambridge which is hosting the meeting, and for the Templeton Foundation which is sponsoring it.

    Why do I say this? Well, pretty simple actually. The meeting site lists the Invited Keynote speakers for the meeting.  Notice anything?  How about I help you by bringing all the pictures together.


    Notice anything now?  How about I help you some more by masking out the men and not the women.


    Impressive no?  25 speakers - 23 of them male.  I guess that means there are no qualified female speakers who coudl discuss something about evolution right?  It would be worth reading "Fewer invited talks bu women in evolutionary biology symposia" to get some context.  What an incredible, disgusting, distasteful and disgraceful meeting.  

    I recommend to everyone who was considering going to this meeting - skip it.  Also consider writing to the University of Cambirdge and the Templeton Foundation to express your thoughts about the meeting.  This certainly is a fine example of Yet Another Mostly Male Meeting (YAMMM).  Well, maybe I should word that differently - this is a disgusting example of a YAMMM.  


    For more on this and related issues



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