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    10 Scientists Who Mattered in 2012

    Scientists were plenty busy this year, with landing the 1-ton rover Curiosity on Mars, announcing the discovery of what is likely the Higgs boson and even revealing a little-dirty secret in research.

    For the second year, the editors of the scientific journal Nature have announced their "Nature's 10," the top 10 scientists who mattered in 2012, with profiles that dig deeper into the personal stories behind the achievements. Here's a look at their picks.

    A heavenly discovery?

    A particle sought after for decades came to light in spectacular fashion on July Fourth this year, with physicists from two experiments being conducted in the Large Hadron (LHC) Collider near Geneva announcing they had found a particle that looked eerily similar to the Higgs boson, predicted to give all other matter its mass.

    While several billion neurons (not to mention the Wattage used in the LHC) were behind the discovery, director general of LHC's host lab CERN, Rolf-Dieter Heuer, made sure the world heard about it, according to Nature editors. Apparently neither group was willing to claim an actual "discovery" until their evidence was proven to a certain level of certainty. With a gentle hand, Heuer nudged for the announcement, but let the scientists be scientists and stick to the facts (for instance saying they had a 5 and 4.9 sigma level of certainty, respectively), while he used, only once, the word "discovery." (A 5 sigma means there is only a one in 3.5 million chance the signal seen in the LHC data isn't real.) [Top 5 Implications of Finding the Higgs Boson]

    Mars madness

    Another whopper for science in 2012 was arguably the landing of the Mars rover Curiosity on the Red Planet's surface. Leading the 50-person team behind the smooth landing was engineer Adam Steltzner, of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. The touchdown technique was a first: Curiosity was lowered to the Martian surface on cables by a rocket-powered sky crane, one that had an alien look on its own. "Because it looked so outlandish, we all felt very exposed," Steltzner told Nature. "If it failed, people would have been like, 'You idiots.'" It didn't.

    Since its spectacular touchdown, Curiosity has discovered an ancient streambed where water likely flowed for thousands of years long ago and hints of possibly life-giving organic compounds.

    Hurricane Sandy Cassandra

    Not all happenings were so uplifting. After Hurricane Sandy battered the East Coast and left transportation tunnels flooded and millions without power, climatologist Cynthia Rosenzweig wasn't surprised. That's because the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies researcher and a team of other scientists had forecasted such cataclysmic events in 2000 as part of a report for the U.S. Global Change Research Program. The dozen years of warning helped city officials incorporate climate change into city planning. Rosenzweig, who started off as a farmer in Tuscany but eventually moved from agricultural science to climate science, is now trying to assess whether those efforts reduced Sandy's damage. [On the Ground: Hurricane Sandy in Images]

    Can you repeat that?

    It's a dirty-little secret that many scientific results can't be reproduced. In 2006, Elizabeth Iorns, a geneticist at the University of Miami, tried to replicate a study about a cancer gene and couldn't. She found that few scientific journals wanted to publish her findings and that she got blowback from colleagues. That lit a fire in her belly to ensure that more scientific results are rigorously tested. To that end, she created a startup based in Palo Alto, Calif., called the Reproducibility Initiative. The goal of the fledgling nonprofit is to have third-party researchers replicate important scientific experiments. If the startup can make headway, it may help scientists know which results are real.

    Sex bias

    While it's no surprise that women are underrepresented in science, pinning that to discrimination, rather than gender differences in aptitude or interest, has been tricky. But when Yale University microbiologist Jo Handelsman showed that researchers offer fictitious female job applicants about $4,000 less in salary and rate them as less competent and worthy of mentorship than male counterparts, she produced strong evidence for sexual bias. Handelsman says she hasn't personally experienced strong bias, but became motivated to speak out about it when other women scientists described their experiences with sex discrimination.

    Mad man

    Timothy Gowers isn't a likelier crusader in the world of scientific journal publishing. The Cambridge University mathematician has won the Fields Medal (mathematics highest honor) and has been knighted for his influential work. But he made waves this year when he spearheaded a global boycott of the giant publishing group Elsevier, discontented with the publishing group's sky-high prices and their fight against open-access scientific publishing, which can be viewed by everyone without a subscription. The boycott has fueled growing interest in open-access publishing and may even have influenced Elsevier to withdraw its support for a controversial, anti-open access political bill. The bill, the Research Works Act, would have allowed scientists to publish research funded with U.S. taxpayer money in journals that would be closed off to the general public.

    Deadly research

    When Ron Fouchier, a virologist at the Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam, used just four genetic tweaks to create a highly lethal strain of the H5N1 bird flu that could spread through the air, it sparked a global discussion about whether such deadly pathogens should be created. Critics argued that the mutant bird flu could be accidentally released and that publishing the findings could give would-be terrorists a road-map for creating a biological weapon. Fouchier's results were eventually published in Nature with key methodological details removed, but not without a flurry of discussion over the ethics of the research. Throughout it all, Fouchier has been arguing that the research is necessary and safe. In January 2012, Fouchier and other flu researchers agreed to a moratorium on researching this particular type of flu. Now he has set his sights on a mysterious, deadly form of pneumonia that has emerged from a bat virus in Saudi Arabia.

    Watching cells grow

    Cedric Blanpain doesn't trust Petri dishes, sort of. This skepticism in the ability of lab-dish cell growth to replicate what happens in real life led Blanpain to uncover, in 2011, distinct stem cells in the adult mammary gland. This year, he applied a carcinogen to mouse skin and then followed tumor growth using a cell-tracking method; his results showed not all cells contribute equally to tumor growth, with some dwindling after a few cell divisions and others, the stem cells, generating thousands of clones — the tumor-generating cells. "I saw the first slide, and I said 'show me the second one.' After the fifth, I was sure what I was seeing," Blanpain told Nature.

    Manslaughter verdict

    A reminder that science doesn't always, and sometimes cannot, stay in the ivory towers, this year brought a devastating manslaughter verdict for six Italian scientists and one government official Bernardo De Bernardinis (an engineer by training) accused of being too reassuring about the risk of an earthquake prior to a temblor in 2009 that killed 309 individuals in the town of L'Aquila. [See Photos of L'Aquila Earthquake Destruction]

    Seismologists across the globe expressed appall at a verdict that didn't account for the fact that earthquakes cannot be predicted with any level of accuracy. Even so, De Bernardinis not only showed compassion for those who lost loved ones in the earthquake, but he also showed up at every hearing, Nature reported. Insisting that he only listened to what the seismologists told him before the infamous press conference at the center of this trial, De Bernardinis also admits he should've waited for a concise statement from the scientists before addressing the public. Now, he hopes the trial will lead to better risk-prevention systems in Italy that have clear-cut expectations for scientists, government officials and the media.

    Sequencing genomes

    The head of the Chinese genome-sequencing institute, BGI, Jun Wang has shown modesty and confidence in the significance of what he and colleagues are doing. And the numbers speak worlds: BGI is leading the sequencing of 10,000 vertebrates (animals with backbones), 5,000 insects and other arthropods, and more than 1,000 birds, including some extinct ones. In this year alone, BGI was listed in 100 scientific publications, Nature reports, adding the organization is a "main player" in the 1,000 Genomes Project Consortium, whose aim is to find genetic factors behind disease.

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    Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
     

    105 comments

    • B  •  15 days ago
      "Scientists were plenty busy this year..." and yet Yahoo! inundated us with the #$%$ Kardashian family headlines, and stupid stories about which celebrities were dating who, Lohan breaking tons of laws and getting another slap on the wrist. Yahoo! needs new headline editors.
      • cybertooth 14 days ago
        You mean you're not interested in who has the cutest baby bump?
    • Ted  •  14 days ago
      Because reasoning disproves their fantasy and would result in less mind control and profits, churches teach the rejection of reason and thus science.
    • john  •  14 days ago
      ANd the winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics is listed where?
    • georock  •  13 days ago
      I presumed the following would have made the list, since Yahoo made such a big deal of their work. It was indeed so valuable for many disease DNA basic traits, mostly because they eliminated the very controversial subject of "Bio-ethics"(no longer the need to harvest embryos for the source of stem cells)...
      Nobel Prize 2012: Scientists John Gurdon, Shinya Yamanaka Win For Stem Cell Work
      (science December 24th, 2012 article) Released today...I have been following their work for years.
    • Ted  •  14 days ago
      "Reason must be deluded, blinded, and destroyed. Faith must trample underfoot all reason, sense, and understanding, and whatever it sees must be put out of sight and ... know nothing but the word of God."
      — Martin Luther
    • George  •  13 days ago
      Science is something teabaggers will never understand!

      ❤SCIENCE, EVOLUTION, RESEARCH, CERN❤
    • Eric Andrew  •  17 days ago
      +1 for Timothy Gowers. A leading cause for why most people in this generation are science-illiterate is because of the ridiculous prices on scientific journals. And get this, the proceeds don't really go to the researchers, but to the publisher (who are in no way involved in the studies at all). Unlike old times when paper copies were essential (and thus a price was justifiable), nowadays they don't usually even have to print it. They just hand out pdfs online. And in some cases, the researchers actually have to PAY the publisher.

      It's less about actually distributing science, more about people paying for the status acquired by being published in an internationally recognized paywall journal. And that, in my opinion, is simply NOT what science is about. It's plain ole greed.

      Even research funded by tax dollars are not immune to this. Thank goodness for some government published journals still around though, which in the US are almost always public domain.

      Your average student will only have access to a wide range of scientific journals if his or her university library happens to have a subscription to it. And at the prices, only the largest universities can afford it. As for laymen? Unless you're willing to pay $30 to $100 a pop for a single article you're not even sure contains the data you are looking for, forget it.

      Science can only survive with open-access publishing.
    • Ray  •  14 days ago
      This was written by someone whose first language is not English.
    • Naomi  •  14 days ago
      Scientists remained baffled this year!!
    • Anonymous  •  15 days ago
      It's a good thing science is done by real scientists. Here's a couple of bios by the writers of this garbage that don't count as science related:

      "Tia Ghose is a researcher and reporter at the Center for Investigative Reporting and California Watch. Before joining the organization in 2010, she was a Kaiser health reporting intern at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Her work has appeared in Wired dot com, Scientific American, the Salinas Californian, Science News and other publications. She earned a graduate degree in science writing from the University of California Santa Cruz."

      Jeanna Bryner: "Science journalist with background in environmental sciences, particularly biogeochemistry. Currently, I cover a range of topics, from human behavior to geology to astronomy, for two websites: LiveScience and Space dot com. I also have experience writing/editing for a children's publication (Scholastic Science World magazine for middle- and high-school students). "
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