Alastair Potts

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Alastair Potts

Alastair Potts

@pottsresearch

Plant ecologist interested in all things great and small. Eastern Cape (South Africa) melting pot of plant-life is my playground. Views are my own.

Nelson Mandela University, Port Elizabeth, South Africa Katılım Kasım 2017
212 Takip Edilen274 Takipçiler
Alastair Potts retweetledi
Daniel Hadas
Daniel Hadas@DanielHadas2·
It's rather strange that one of the core activities of academia—and, as far as I know, this is true across all its branches—has become the writing of texts that no one will ever read.
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Alastair Potts
Alastair Potts@pottsresearch·
🌿 Masters Scholarship 2026 🌿 Join our project at NMU & SANBI: “A new method to collect vegetation community data using citizen science platforms”. Funding: R150k/year × 2 yrs (SANBI scholarship). Deadline: 30 Sept 2025. pm me for more information
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Scholarship for PhD
Scholarship for PhD@ScholarshipfPhd·
Writing is thinking
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Boze Herrington, Library Owl 😴🧙‍♀️
In an age of widespread cognitive atrophy, nothing is more punk rock than the love of learning for its own sake. Brain-destroying tech is being peddled by those who seek to make a nation of illiterates. They don’t want you to read, and that is why you must never stop.
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Derek Thompson
Derek Thompson@DKThomp·
Yes. Writing is not a second thing that happens after thinking. The act of writing is an act of thinking. Writing *is* thinking. Students, academics, and anyone else who outsources their writing to LLMs will find their screens full of words and their minds emptied of thought.
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Gerardo L. Munck
Gerardo L. Munck@GerardoMunck·
Ontology, Epistemology, Methodology This figure, by political scientist Colin Hay, gets it right. Methods are very important. But we should not delink our discussions about methods from a consideration of ontological and epistemological questions.
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Boze Herrington, Library Owl 😴🧙‍♀️
As the university system collapses and millions succumb to tech-induced brain rot, the concept of the autodidact—a self-educated person who loves learning for its own sake—will become more important than ever. Read widely. Form study groups. Let the library be your college.
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Scholarship for PhD
Scholarship for PhD@ScholarshipfPhd·
How to Read a Research Paper (1/4)
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Selçuk Korkmaz
Selçuk Korkmaz@selcukorkmaz·
Understanding the difference between Standard Deviation (SD) and Standard Error (SE) is crucial for accurate data interpretation. SD measures the variability within your data, indicating how spread out the individual data points are from the mean. In contrast, SE measures the uncertainty around the sample mean as an estimate of the population mean. It reflects the precision of the mean, with SE decreasing as the sample size increases, making your estimate more reliable. The relationship between SD and SE is given by the formula: SE = SD / √(sample size). While SD remains relatively constant with larger samples, SE diminishes, highlighting the reduced uncertainty in the mean estimate. A common mistake in research is using the “±” notation without specifying whether it refers to SD or SE, leading to potential misinterpretation of the data. Clear distinction is essential for transparency and accuracy in reporting. Key Takeaways: • Use SD to describe data variability. • Use SE to indicate the precision of the mean. • Always specify which measure you are reporting.
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Bill Sutherland
Bill Sutherland@Bill_Sutherland·
Are you about to take exams in ecology or conservation? Here are 20 two-minute videos to refresh your knowledge, add extra ideas or insert neat facts for further marks. Hope you enjoy them and they work. Delighted if teachers can circulate. @Bill_Sutherland" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">youtube.com/@Bill_Sutherla
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Jake
Jake@JLBornstein·
Universities are funny. Hey what if we took a medieval institution for training priests and aristocrats and combined it w a hedge fund, sports franchise and resort for teenagers Oh and it'll be the backbone for fundamental research for our entire civilization
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Dr. Bismark Ofosu-Bamfo
Dr. Bismark Ofosu-Bamfo@bofosubamfo1·
If a botanist ever politely said to you, "You have a head quite like Treculia africana", this is what they meant. 👇🏾😃 Quite heavy for a fruit on a tall tree.
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Dr. Beth Penrose
Dr. Beth Penrose@bethpenrose·
About a year ago, I wrote myself a ‘research philosophy’ and stuck it to my wall. When research opportunities have come up, I’ve used it to decide whether to go for them or not. I can’t tell you how useful and liberating it’s been @AcademicChatter @OpenAcademics
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