The new central dogma
Posts by Selene FeRNAndez
I just published Donβt Perish! A Step-by-Step Guide to Writing a Scientific Paper (2026 edition)
Great science deserves to be readβnot buried under unclear writing. This is the updated 2026 edition of your favorite guide to writing scientific papers.
medium.com/p/dont-peris...
The face behind the data -> PhD student Xingyu Yan, showing off her recently acquired notebook (thanks to Corning Inc).
#ProudPI
First fully Aussie made NGS #RegRNALab dataset is here!!!
Rebuilding a lab is hard but seeing things moving forward is priceless π±
@unswrna.bsky.social @unswbabs.bsky.social
RSVP & abstracts using the link below: docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1F...
Also looking for motivated ECRs to join the organising committee. Come chat on the day or reach out directly.
Hope to see you there!!!
#RNASky #ECR #CareerDevelopment #UNSW #Sydney @unswrna.bsky.social @unswbabs.bsky.social
The afternoon has two parts:
π€ Short talks on any aspect of RNA biology β abstract submissions open until Mon 13 April, 5 pm. Priority given to students & ECRs!
πͺ Expert roundtables with senior researchers from UNSW, USYD, UTS & VCCRI. Ask questions to those who have walked the walk!
π’ Sydney #RNA scientists: our next #SydneyRNASalon event is coming up! 𧬠ECR, student, or just RNA-curious? This one's for you!
π
Thu 30 April Β· 2:10β4:30pm
π Room G07, Biosciences Building D26 UNSW
π₯ Refreshments sponsored by @rnasociety.bsky.social, Lexogen & @ramacgenomics.bsky.social
Typo note - the best thing to do with a *community* is to really listen.
His advice for #SMP2026 attendees: identify the problem, work out a solution, work out cost π΅, who pays for it, and who needs the solution. Talk to the people who really need it and the politics will follow. Also, there's always more benefit that you may realise - share that story - and follow up!
Closing #SMP2026 with a conversation with Prof Hon Bill Shorten. He highlights that it is important to create safe spaces for true discussion to happen between people who disagree, without necessarily having to destroy each other. Considers that Universities could play that role.
AH mentions that from a genomics perspective she would like to see more sustained funding, particularly for data structures that hold and keep community genomic data safe. JJ feels strongly about enhancing collaboration and relationships with community.
AH mentions that the best thing to do with a communication is to really listen. If you can demonstrate you are there for the right reasons you can build that trust and start a long term relationship with the community. JJ advises that the research lead should engage in person with the community.
JJ would like to see more streamlined processes for ethics to work with Indigenous communities, as well as for elders and other members of the community to be included as authors in publications to acknowledge their contributions. AH mentions community engagement can be funded as part of a grant.
AH asks scientists that wish to engage with Indigenous communities to consider if their research will actually be of priority and beneficial to the community. Also, budget for the work requested from community members to achieve research goals and avoid having in kind contributions.
JJ mentions that working with communities should be seen as a synergistic relationship when both parties are learning from each other, not just a one way street. The goal is to have first nations-led businesses that arise from traditional plant knowledge.
AH highlights that the benefit to communities can go well beyond advancing knowledge and generating research outcomes, but it may also include capacity building, increasing skills and employability. It's key to listen openly to what communities actually want.
We are now in the Collaborating with Community session at #SMP2026. Listening to the insights from Prof Joanne Jamie and A/Prof @azurehermes.bsky.social on their work engaging with Indigenous communities to design and conduct research relevant to them.
Now at #SMP2026, panel flags clean energy, supply chain resilience, and plastic pollution as some of the key priorities under the #AmbitiousAustralia R&D framework.
Building coalitions and trust in science is crucial to creating sustained influence networks that can drive real impact.
Summary thread π§΅ on this morning's Parliamentary Forum at #SMP2026, an informative discussion with π¦πΊ MPs (Mascarenhas, Webster, Faruqi) & Senators (Pocock, Kovacic) on what Science means to them and their party. Discussion chaired by Prof @renaeryan.bsky.social
Did you know that kelp forests cover 1/3 of the π's coastlines & support millions π£? Did you know they are disappearing?
Dr Aaron Eger from @unswbees.bsky.social, tells us about his advocacy and research work to understand and protect kelp forests at #SMP2026
Find out more: kelpforestalliance.com
The panel also discusses how diversity increases resilience in different contexts and that can go beyond gender or cultural background - diversity of skills in government is also needed. A call for scientists to consider stepping into government roles. What each of us does matters.
#SMP2026
Substantial concern about algorithms seeding social division & misinformation. We need to communicate to the wider public why science is important & why investing in STEM is worthwhile. The panel is also discussing how to bridge the innovation gap via β¬οΈstructural support β¬οΈundue regulation
#SMP2026
In order to change the status quo we need to be bold and courageous to advocate for an idea that might be important yet not popular. It's easy to just do 'same old' but hard to strive for true innovation. We are called to be more visible in social media in an effort to fight disinformation
#SMP2026
As scientists, we should strive to communicate how research investment will create a return for Australia. Every dollar invested in R&D, results in an average return of $9, with 70% of that return via an increase in productivity. Another key challenge is fighting misinformation.
#SMP2026
The panel advices to be willing to step up and advocate for the issue you are tackling or the idea you have. Become advocates, be activists, be persistent. Communicating effectively with politicians involves making the effort of conveying your point compellingly and succinctly.
#SMP2026
The panel also advises to take people on a scientific journey, do not assume they know what you are talking about. Also be able to relate your expertise to the issues faced by a representative's electorate. Present visual, accurate and easy to interpret visual data to convey your point
#SMP2026
Starting Day 2 of #SMP2026 with a call to scientists to become involved in guiding government priorities. Also, lots of discussion on π¦πΊ's dependency on supply chains and how STEM can help reduce dependency & increase resilience. Panel aware such advancements require adequate funding & less admin.
Scientists gathered in a room in Parliament during Science Meets Parliament 2026
We are now getting a refresher on π¦πΊ's Parliamentary and Government structures
Parliamentary inquiry submissions can be made as part of an institution but ANY individual can make a personal submission! This means we can all contribute & help inform bills related to our scientific expertise
#SMP2026
- Have scientifically literate execs in the boardroom
- Understand how stakeholders understand the world and what they value
- Find not the scientific questions you are interested in, but the right questions to answer that matter to stakeholders
#SMP2026
Our first panel is Science Meets the Economy - Bench to Boardroom.
Key messages:
- Who needs the answers doesn't know the answers exist - find them & engage with them
- The future is deeply uncertain, one way to approach it is to create it -> opportunity in Blue Sky research
#SMP2026