The 'explanation' in the article is a little thin:
Why is the packing fraction 55% maximum (in globular proteins)? "The answer seems to be that the packing fraction stops increasing when the protein cores jam or rigidify." Ok, so ...
> "That is, the individual amino acids that make up the protein core couldn't compress any further when the protein folded"
So they can't pack any further because they 'jam'? Ohhh, from the abstract of the paper:
> "... However, important developments in the physics of jamming in particulate systems can shed light on the packing of protein cores. ... Then, we develop an all-atom model for proteins and find that, above ∼0.55, protein cores undergo a jamming-like transition"
Possibly this is related to the need for protein cores to remain relatively 'liquid', as enzymes (for example) need to be somewhat flexible when binding/releasing substrates. A fully 'jammed'/packed core would lead to an inflexible structure with lower ability to ... er... move, bind stuff (I'm handwaving here :) )
This is the kind of cool stuff I'm going to miss during the coming dark ages. When ever I read this in a paper:
"The authors acknowledge support from NIH Training Grant No. T32GM145452 (A.T.G., C.S.O., and Z.L.), NIH Training Grant No. T15LM007056-37 (J.A.L.), and the High Performance Computing facilities operated by Yale's Center for Research Computing."
All of these things (the NIH and Yale's Center for Research Computing) relied so heavily on government funding that they are no longer getting, especially if they don't sing ideologically pure songs for dear Leader.
> This is the kind of cool stuff I'm going to miss during the coming dark ages.
I really don't get this level of hyperbole. There's so much hand-wringing about funding getting cut, but it turns out it's like a 15% reduction[0]. That's not an insignificant amount, but it's not the end of the world. Taken naively, that's 15% less research that gets done. One can hope that, being a pillar of academia, the intelligent folks over at Yale can figure out how to spend 15% less on research, so the same amount of research gets done with fewer dollars. Or, better yet, they can put more effort into finding and cutting the rising levels of fraud amongst academic researchers[1].
I think 15% might be too drastic, but at the end of the day, things can't always progress up and to the right, all day every day. If you don't want waste, you sometimes have to cut things, or at the very least apply pressure to them. This mindset of "any cut is bad!" prevents necessary cuts, especially when coupled with this "everyone gets a voice" mindset, simply because you can always find someone to speak up in protection of anything--even fraud! I'd say you'd be surprised by how vigorously people protest their own innocence when they're clearly participating in bad behavior, but like... _gestures at everything_
Don't get me wrong, I think this administration is going about this in mostly the wrong ways, but the problem is, they're doing something those in the affected academic organizations refused to do, namely: applying sufficient adversity to the system to keep it strong.[2] The fact that fraud among scientific research is increasing over time is ample evidence that they're not doing enough to self-police. I don't know how rigorously studied the phenomenon is, but I've certainly seen an increase in popular science coverage of various frauds and scandals in all kinds of scientific fields over the years. Should we really continue paying and promoting the people who are perpetrating this fraud? (As an aside, I wonder how much money is given back to the government when fraud like this is exposed before the grant is fully filled? Or does it usually escape detection until after the grant has been paid out? Anyone know this?)
When you depend on someone else funding your studies, but don't do sufficient legwork to keep things operating smoothly, why is it a seemingly the end of the world for the organization providing the funding to decide to cut it? This is essentially the ruling demographic says: "we think you're wasting our money, so we're going to give you less of it until we see you do better". I think this is a personally reasonable ask! I think the definition of "do better" is troubling in some cases, but this sort of thing should be happening all the time. I don't understand why you and seemingly so many others seem to think that the government shouldn't ever be cutting funding to research programs, especially when the level of waste just keeps going up? You and others constantly hyperbolize a (admittedly large) cut into "oh no it's the end of the world". But it really isn't, and it's not even really an insurmountable challenge. Run a few plagiarism/LLM checks, fire/expel the worst offenders, and you've already saved a significant fraction of the newfound deficit! Yeah, you might destroy some "promising" careers, but look: attempting to deceive the entire world for personal gain (even if just to maintain a basic standard of living!) probably should come with a pretty stiff penalty. The kind of person who would falsify data for personal gain is only promising to do more of the same for their whole career. They're exactly the kind of people that academia should be vigorously expelling.
To look at it from another angle: Academic research needs to be built on a foundation of trust. There will also always be adversaries in the system, and how hard they have to work to stay hidden is dependent on how much oversight there is. If the oversight is lax, adversaries can thrive, which ultimately erodes trust both within the system and without. If academia (as a nebulous whole) is not doing enough internal oversight to keep adversaries in check, then it falls to those outside academia to try affect this oversight. Given the current capitalistic nature of our society, this tends to come in the form of withholding or cutting funding. The more the trust erodes, the stronger the external response, which is what I think we're seeing today. But while a 15% cut might be "too far" or "too much" or "too inaccurate in allocation", consider that part of the reason these cuts are happening is because those "outside the system" have lost trust in the academic system in this country. In response, they did what they could: elected adversaries of the system as it exists today.
And why have the people who support these cuts lost trust in the academic system? Abstractly, I think this boils down to the contrast between this apparent lack of internal oversight and the nature of academia itself: the pursuit of knowledge. Academia literally exists to discover new truths and present them to the rest of the world. It asks the rest of the world to subsidize this learning in various ways, with the promise that the newfound knowledge will vastly repay the subsidy. But when the knowledge the academic system is putting out is increasingly found to actually be bullshit, it repeatedly breaks this promise.
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Anyway, that's a lot of words to say I think your opinion is wildly hyperbolic and immature. I'm getting tired of folks defending an obviously imperfect system as if every small attack on it is "the end of democracy!" It's not helpful, and it just reinforces the image that folks who hold the same beliefs as yourself are also likely to be equally hyperbolic and immature. It's not a good look.
[1] https://retractionwatch.com/2024/09/24/1-in-7-scientific-pap... unsure the quality of this source, but fraud in research is definitely a thing I've been hearing more and more about, especially with generative AI getting let loose on it by folks with... looser morals
It is a lot more than 15% cuts. The latest numbers I saw about grant approvals were something like only half of the number of approved grants compared to the same timeframe last year. On top of that you have the cap of indirect costs at 15%, which is alone more than what you describe. And on top of that are the other ways they are interfering with research, e.g. by the draconic spending limits on credit cards and other arbitrary ways they are blocking money from getting spent.
The fraud issues you mention are real and pressing... They're also completely disconnected from blanket cuts to NIH funding. There seems to be some kind of grasping for a positive in heavy cuts to essential research here. Put another way, there is zero selective pressure for 'less fraudulent' research to be cut. If anything, this applies selective pressure on publish or perish, false positive, press release style research. Harsh cuts in funding always penalise blue sky research, controversial work and anything that isn't guaranteed to bring press to the funding institution.
> Run a few plagiarism/LLM checks, fire/expel the worst offenders, and you've already saved a significant fraction of the newfound deficit!
This is absurdly reductive, and doesn't connect with the genuine issues at play incentivising good research and detecting fraud.
I want to be careful about what I write given the context of what's going on, and the personal ramifications that can have.
Suffice to say, it's worth considering whether the cost of a decision can be interpreted solely as how much money there is vs the wider ecosystem level consequences of said decision.
In any other industry, a 15% cut would be Bad News, and people would be talking about ripple effects, they would call it a "shock" and talk about the long-term consequences.
One grant started in 1987 and has extensions running into 2027 for dozens of different sub-projects. Total award so far has been $13.1m. The other grant is for up to $800k over 5 years for 5 student positions ostensibly worth $32k per year. The YCRC seems to be funded directly by Yale.
Hot take; however, perhaps the energy put into this ideological signalling could be better spent on working to solve what is a relatively small problem.
Researchers will seek other opportunities, there are other non-US grants and support structures. While studying in EU, I knew quite a few PhDs who secured substantial financial aid from the industry directly, on their own. Yes, it will get trickier, and will steer the research in a certain direction. But I won’t call it the dark ages.
> "The authors acknowledge support from NIH Training Grant No. T32GM145452 (A.T.G., C.S.O., and Z.L.), NIH Training Grant No. T15LM007056-37 (J.A.L.), and the High Performance Computing facilities operated by Yale's Center for Research Computing."
Well, NIH training grants aren't going anywhere, so far as I know, and the high-performance computing facilities may or may not be affected by a cut in indirects. If they are affected, one reasonably has to ask: what line items made it past the cut? It's a more productive framing of the question.
Either way, you can't just leap to the conclusion that everything you like will be gone.
> especially if they don't sing ideologically pure songs for dear Leader.
The research direction has gone off track—it's overly fixated on proteins "chasing fireworks" (metaphorically trivial pursuits), while mitochondrial and other molecular pathways represent a far more substantial and impactful frontier. The academic world is mired in stagnation and decay, demanding external pressure to break its complacency.
It comes across borderline comical when a man gets asked for his sources while he is clearly stating his formed opinion based on his impressions.
It is hard to think of an example without sounding like I am exaggerating. Imagine if you shared on a thread that Rust has a great ecosystem but it is a little bit too overhyped and someone so cleverly asked for you to cite sources.
Do you really rely on academic studies to form any impression of anything? Is your chain of thought full of citations?
I have this screw I want to undo but Schonenberg et. al. has demonstrated that a Philips screw should be used for this situation. Unable to find any citations on the feasibility of a blunt knife in this situation. Further research needed.
There was a thread on HN semi-recently where I observed that if you think about classifying complexities ("big-O of n squared") by polynomial degree (so we think of O(n^2) as "2"), the logarithm function gives you a literally infinitesimal value.
I was then asked about sources for what amounts to an easy homework problem.
Why is the packing fraction 55% maximum (in globular proteins)? "The answer seems to be that the packing fraction stops increasing when the protein cores jam or rigidify." Ok, so ...
> "That is, the individual amino acids that make up the protein core couldn't compress any further when the protein folded"
So they can't pack any further because they 'jam'? Ohhh, from the abstract of the paper:
> "... However, important developments in the physics of jamming in particulate systems can shed light on the packing of protein cores. ... Then, we develop an all-atom model for proteins and find that, above ∼0.55, protein cores undergo a jamming-like transition"
Possibly this is related to the need for protein cores to remain relatively 'liquid', as enzymes (for example) need to be somewhat flexible when binding/releasing substrates. A fully 'jammed'/packed core would lead to an inflexible structure with lower ability to ... er... move, bind stuff (I'm handwaving here :) )
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