The Scout Report
November 28, 2014 -- Volume 20, Number 46
A Publication of Internet Scout
Computer Sciences Department, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Research and Education
Staging the Self: National Portrait GalleryGender Equality Data and Statistics
LIGO - Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory
Creative Time
About Art History
Dickens in Massachusetts Virtual Tour
Comparative Mammalian Brain Collections
Imperial War Museums
General Interest
NASA Astrobiology: Life in the UniverseLIS Cross-National Data Center in Luxemourg
Barnard & Gardner Civil War Photographs
Laogai Research Foundation
San Francisco Symphony - American Orchestra Forum Podcasts
Inspiring Science: Casting light on great ideas
G. E. E. Lindquist Native American Photographs
Network Tools
WazeAP Mobile
In the News
The National Book AwardsCopyright and subscription information appear at the end of the Scout Report. For more information on all services of Internet Scout, please visit our Website: https://scout.wisc.edu
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This issue:
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Feedback is always welcome: scout@scout.wisc.edu
Research and Education
http://www.npg.si.edu/exhibit/staging/index.html
Portraiture
Now:
Staging
the
Self
is
the
ninth
installation
of
the
"Portraiture
Now"
series
presented
at
the
Smithsonian
Institution's
National
Portrait
Gallery.
This
installation
features
the
work
of
six
contemporary
U.S.
Latino
artists
"who
present
identities
theatrically,
in
order
to
rid
portraiture
of
its
reassuring
tradition
that
fixes
a
person
in
space
and
time."
Instead,
the
portraits
on
this
site
are
dynamic,
fluid,
sometimes
even
jarring.
After
reading
the
brief,
contextualizing
introduction,
browse
the
site
by
artist.
Spanning
the
family
dynamics
of
Karen
Miranda
Rivadeneira,
the
internalized
landscapes
of
David
Antonio
Cruz,
and
the
gender
experimentation
of
Maria
Martinez-Canas,
viewers
may
find
themselves
delighted
and
challenged
in
equal
measures.
[CNH]
http://datatopics.worldbank.org/gender/
This
data
portal
is
a
virtual
goldmine
of
worldwide
statistics
on
gender,
based
on
data
sets
gathered
by
the
United
Nations
and
the
World
Bank.
Built
as
a
tool
for
the
assessment
of
World
Bank
funding
of
"gender-informed
activities,"
the
information
gathered
here
is
useful
for
researchers
of
all
kinds,
as
well
as
anyone
curious
about
how
global
resources
are
being
allocated
by
gender.
To
start,
click
the
Visualize
Gender
Equality
map
on
the
homepage,
which
visually
displays
the
shifting
landscape
of
labor
force
participation
between
1990
and
2012.
The
Data
Visualization
App
is
home
to
other
related
visual
aids.
Readers
can
peruse
statistics
and
articles
by
region
(e.g.?
East
Asia
&
Pacific,
Europe
&
Central
Asia,
etc.)
and
by
country.
Other
resources
include
Thematic
Data,
Microdata
for
Researchers,
and
World
Bank
Lending
Data.
[CNH]
http://www.ligo.caltech.edu
The
Laser
Interferometer
Gravitational-Wave
Observatory
(LIGO),
a
collaboration
between
Caltech
and
MIT,
is
a
facility
dedicated
to
the
detection
and
measurement
of
gravitational
waves.
Two
installations,
one
on
the
east
coast
and
one
on
the
west,
operate
as
a
single
simultaneous
unit
to
trace
the
effects
of
"ripples
in
the
fabric
of
space
and
time
produced
by
violent
events
in
the
distant
universe."
From
the
homepage
check
out
LIGO
News,
a
blog
that
reports
the
latest
from
the
laboratory.
The
Resources
for
Press
&
Media
section
leads
visitors
to
LIGO
photos,
LIGO
chronology,
and
a
LIGO
fact
sheet,
where
Frequently
Asked
Questions
are
answered.
LIGO
is
one
of
the
great
physics
labs
of
our
time,
and
this
web
site
provides
insight
into
the
groundbreaking
work
happening
there
every
day.
[CNH]
http://creativetime.org
In
September
2012,
Creative
Time,
in
collaboration
with
scientists
at
MIT,
launched
artwork
by
Trevor
Paglen
24,000
miles
into
space,
where
it
orbits
to
this
day
aboard
a
communications
satellite.
This
is
just
one
of
the
hundreds
of
far-out
projects
this
NYC
artists'
collective
has
commissioned
in
the
past
40
years.
(Another
example:
the
twin
beams
of
light
commemorating
the
twin
towers
after
9/11.)
The
group's
website
is
an
ever-changing
collage
of
photos,
paintings,
sculptures,
videos,
and
artistic
projects.
Must-see
areas
include
the
News
section
of
the
site,
sharing
happenings
in
New
York
City
and
around
the
world,
and
the
Projects
section,
providing
information
on
Creative
Time
projects
in
a
searchable
and
sortable
format.
These
projects
are
accompanied
by
detailed
information
about
the
project
itself
as
well
as
the
artist
behind
the
work.
[CNH]
http://arthistory.about.com
About
Art
History
is
a
great
starting
place
for
readers
interested
in
the
complex
field
of
art
history.
Curated
by
art
historians
and
museum
professionals
Alexander
J.
Noelle
and
Chelsea
Emelie
Kelly,
the
content
covers
essential
art
history
questions
via
accessible
but
nuanced
essays
and
entries.
The
site
may
be
browsed
by
Art
History
Categories
such
as
Artists
A
to
Z,
Art
History
101,
Timelines
of
Art
History,
and
many
more.
Readers
can
also
access
diverse
offerings,
such
as
"Leonardo
da
Vinci's
Lost
Masterpiece"
and
"Explore
the
World
of
Pop
Art!,"
directly
from
the
rotating
display
on
the
home
page.
Noelle
and
Kelly
also
edit
and
write
The
Art
History
Blog,
a
complementary
offering
that
is
accessible
from
the
bio
section
of
this
site.
[CNH]
http://library.uml.edu/dickens/exhibit/VirtualTour.html
Charles Dickens has been credited with everything from radicalizing class consciousness to inventing Christmas. Certainly, he was wildly famous by the standards of his day. This website from the University of Massachusetts at Lowell chronicles Dickens and Massachusetts: A Tale of Power and Transformation, a museum exhibit that ran in Lowell for half a year in 2012. Featuring over a dozen short videos shot on site at the museum and covering topics such as Dickens Finds His Power, Early Career, Married Life, and Dickens Arrives!, this site is packed with detailed information about the man, his work, and his trips to America. [CNH]
http://brainmuseum.org/index.html
The
University
of
Wisconsin,
the
University
of
Michigan,
and
the
National
Museum
of
Health
and
Medicine
have
come
together
to
assemble
one
of
the
world's
largest
collections
of
well-preserved
mammalian
brains.
Now
readers
can
access
photographs
of
the
brains
of
over
100
different
species
and
view
stained
sections
of
a
variety
of
brains,
including
those
of
humans,
sea
lions,
and
otters.
Readers
can
scout
the
site
by
the
List
of
Specimens,
which
is
organized
both
by
common
name
and
scientific
name
or
read
selections
about
Brain
Sections,
Brain
Evolution,
and
Brain
Development,
among
other
topics.
This
site
will
be
of
interest
to
biology
teachers
or
anyone
with
an
interest
in
the
fascinating
world
of
mammalian
brains.
[CNH]
http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections-research
The
collections
at
the
Imperial
War
Museum
cover
Britain's
engagements
in
armed
conflict
during
the
20th
and
21st
centuries
in
sympathetic
and
fascinating
detail.
The
aim
is
to
"record
the
toil
and
sacrifice
of
every
individual
affected
by
war,"
utilizing
film,
oral
history,
art,
large
objects,
and
personal
letters
and
diaries.
Perhaps
the
best
way
to
explore
this
site,
is
by
using
the
Collections
Search
feature.
Here,
readers
can
browse
through
the
over
600,000
items
housed
in
the
museum's
collections.
Items
range
from
weapons
and
ammunition
to
propaganda
posters
to
soldiers'
shoes
and
are
accompanied
by
detailed
descriptions
and
full
catalog
records.
This
is
a
wonderful
site
for
exploring
the
largely
forgotten
experiences
of
soldiers
across
the
British
Empire
during
World
War
One
and
World
War
Two.
[CNH]
General Interest
https://astrobiology.nasa.gov
The
Harvard
physicist
Paul
Horowitz
once
said
in
an
interview
with
Time
Magazine,
"Intelligent
life
in
the
universe?
Guaranteed.
Intelligent
life
in
our
galaxy?
So
overwhelmingly
likely
that
I'd
give
you
almost
any
odds
you'd
like."
As
yet,
however,
scientists
haven't
found
it,
but
NASA's
Astrobiology
Program
is
certainly
looking.
This
site
gives
readers
insight
into
the
search
for
life
on
other
planets,
as
well
as
our
current
understanding
of
how
life
developed
here
on
Earth.
The
About
Astrobiology
section
provides
an
erudite
overview
of
the
field,
and
the
frequently
updated
articles
on
the
homepage
are
likely
to
inspire
curiosity.
One
of
the
really
unique
offerings
of
the
site
is
the
section
entitled,
Ask
an
Astrobiologist.
Here,
readers
can
Submit
a
Question
to
astrobiology
experts
or
peruse
previously
Answered
Questions.
[CNH]
http://www.lisdatacenter.org
The
Cross-National
Data
Center
in
Luxembourg
(LIS)
has
attracted
some
big
names
in
economics
over
the
past
few
years,
including
the
income
inequality
scholar
Branko
Milanovic
and,
most
recently,
Nobel
Prize
winner
and
New
York
Times
columnist
Paul
Krugman.
What's
the
draw?
Huge,
globally
relevant
income
data
sets.
Data
fans
can
register
to
gain
access
to
these
data
sets
themselves
and
the
Working
Papers
provide
a
great
way
for
readers
to
explore
LIS-based
research.
Abstracts
and
full
texts
of
all
submissions
are
available
here
and
the
Working
Papers
Search
Engine
allows
for
an
easy
search
of
the
LIS
database
by
author,
year,
or
keyword.
The
News
&
Events
section
highlights
recent
happenings
at
LIS,
including
Workshops,
Lectures,
and
published
studies.
Additionally,
visitors
to
the
site
will
find
an
informative
30-minute
documentary
about
this
important
economics
think
tank
in
the
About
LIS
section
of
the
site.
[CNH]
http://library.duke.edu/digitalcollections/rubenstein_barnardgardner/
The
American
Civil
War,
a
conflict
that
claimed
approximately
620,000
American
lives
(more
than
the
American
casualties
of
WWI
and
WWII
combined),
was
the
first
of
the
world's
wars
to
be
widely
photographed.
Most
of
those
pictures
were
taken
by
just
two
men:
Alexander
Gardner
and
George
N.
Barnard.
Gardner,
a
Scottish
immigrant
born
in
1821,
shot
battlefield
scenes,
as
well
as
iconic
images
of
Abraham
Lincoln.
Barnard,
who
was
born
in
Connecticut,
continued
to
capture
the
devastation
of
the
War
well
after
its
end.
Dozens
of
images
from
both
of
these
quintessentially
American
artists
are
now
available
online
through
Duke
University's
Digital
Collections.
The
collection
is
easily
searchable
and
selecting
any
of
the
photographs
listed
in
the
Contents
section
of
the
homepage
will
open
up
descriptive
titles
and
Full
Catalog
Records
for
each
one.
[CNH]
http://laogai.org
Stuart
Foster,
an
American
Sociology
professor
who
pleaded
guilty
to
stealing
money
from
an
associate
while
teaching
at
Guangdong
University
of
Foreign
Studies,
spent
the
better
part
of
a
year
in
a
forced
labor
prison
in
southern
China.
The
stories
he
told
about
his
experience,
which
included
assembling
Christmas
lights
for
export
to
American
markets
and
sleeping
on
a
concrete
floor
with
dozens
of
inmates
in
a
single
room,
simply
confirmed
what
the
international
community
has
long
suspected
about
China's
prison
system.
This
website,
from
the
Laogai
Research
Foundation
(LRF),
documents
the
system's
many
human
rights
abuses.
Start
with
the
homepage,
where
you
can
view
News
&
Views,
LRF
Commentaries,
and
LRF
Events.
Next
read
the
excellent
overview
What
is
Laogai,
which
provides
a
history
of
the
Chinese
prison
system
up
to
the
present
day.
[CNH]
http://www.sfsymphony.org/Watch-Listen-Learn/Podcasts-and-Music/American-Orchestra-Forum-Podcasts
Founded
in
1911
in
the
wake
of
the
devastating
1906
earthquake
and
fire,
the
San
Francisco
Symphony
has
flourished
for
over
one
hundred
years,
winning
eleven
Grammy
Awards
and
performing
around
the
globe.
Now,
with
the
symphony's
freely
available
podcasts,
listeners
can
engage
with
this
epic
institution's
culture
and
creativity
from
the
comfort
of
their
homes.
The
seven
chapters
of
Talking
About
American
Orchestras
is
a
great
place
to
start.
Listeners
can
learn
about
the
Historic
Context
of
the
American
Orchestra,
Orchestral
Creativity,
On
the
Stage,
and
others.
Next,
From
the
Archives
provides
the
chance
to
meet
the
orchestra
in
the
context
of
each
conductor
who
has
taken
the
podium.
Especially
exciting
for
classical
music
lovers
is
the
section
SF
Symphony
Concerts
Streaming
on
KDFC.org,
where
full
performances
of
some
of
the
world's
greatest
soloists
are
featured.
[CNH]
http://inspiringscience.net/category/series/
Inspiring
Science,
a
blog
by
a
science
enthusiast
with
degrees
in
plant
genetics
and
evolutionary
biology,
seeks
to
make
science
accessible
and
exciting
to
a
lay
audience.
It
often
succeeds.
Words
of
Science
is
an
especially
captivating
column.
For
instance,
have
you
ever
wondered
what
alluvium,
petrichor,
nychthemeron,
or
interstitial
mean?
These
entries
define
and
elaborate
on
scientific
vocabulary
in
ways
that
not
only
clarify
specific
concepts,
but
also
illuminate
the
way
scientists
attempt
to
understand
the
world.
Other
columns,
such
as
Discussions,
Foraging,
and
Natural
Selection
continue
the
trend,
with
explanations,
ideas,
and
ponderings.
For
science
writers,
the
QM
Workshop
series
features
the
author's
account
of
a
weeklong
quantum
mechanics
workshop.
[CNH]
http://lindquist.cul.columbia.edu/
The
Burke
Library
&
Archives
at
Columbia
University
in
New
York
City
put
together
this
digitized
collection
of
images
in
2012.
Selected
from
the
papers
of
missionary
G.
E.
E.
Lindquist
(1886-1967),
the
digital
collection
includes
"1,322
photographs,
124
postcards,
388
negatives,
and
34
glass
plate
negatives/lantern
slides"
dating
from
1909
to
1953.
One
interesting
feature
of
the
collection
is
Explore
Faces.
Software
was
used
to
recognize
the
faces
in
the
digitized
images,
extract,
and
collage
them.
The
result
is
84
pages
of
browsable
faces,
any
of
which
can
be
clicked
on
to
see
the
full
image.
The
images
in
the
collection
are
fully
cataloged,
which
means
that
it
is
also
possible
to
select
from
lists
of
names,
topics,
and
places
drawn
from
the
individual
image
descriptions.
In
addition,
the
website
is
mobile-friendly.
[DS]
Network Tools
https://www.waze.com
Phone based navigation systems are one of the great innovations of the early 21st century. But they have their drawbacks - like when they take you down a road dead-ended by construction. Waze seeks to improve on the greatness by tapping into real drivers driving real roads. Put simply, it's a community-based navigation and traffic app. So when a waze user sees traffic or other obstacles, they tell the app, and the app tells all the other drivers. It's a fluid, continually self-updating account of the roads as they actually are. Available for Apple devices (iOS 5.0 and up) and Android (2.2 and up). [CNH]
http://www.ap.org/apmobile/
The Associated Press, the multinational nonprofit news agency that publishes and republishes in about 1,700 newspapers worldwide, has its own award-winning news app. AP Mobile sports a clean, intuitive layout, beautiful photos, and rich content. It is available for iOS 7.0+ and Android 2.3.3+. [CNH]
In the News
2014 National Book Awards
http://www.nationalbook.org/nba2014.html#.VHOik764l9s
Redeployment by Phil Klay review
http://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/mar/26/redeployment-phil-klay-review-incendiary-stories-of-war
Review: 'Age of Ambition: Chasing Fortune, Truth, and Faith in the New China' by Evan Osnos
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/review-age-of-ambition-chasing-fortune-truth-and-faith-in-the-new-china-by-evan-osnos/2014/05/16/9b122786-cef0-11e3-937f-d3026234b51c_story.html
Acquainted With the Dark: Louise Gluck's 'Faithful and Virtuous Night'
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/28/books/review/louise-glcks-faithful-and-virtuous-night.html?_r=0
Review of the Day: brown girl dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson
http://blogs.slj.com/afuse8production/2014/06/02/review-of-the-day-brown-girl-dreaming-by-jacqueline-woodson/#_
Book News: Ursula K. Le Guin Steals The Show At the National Book Awards
http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2014/11/20/365434149/book-news-ursula-k-le-guin-steals-the-show-at-the-national-book-awards
The
National
Book
Awards
have
been
recognizing
the
achievements
of
great
writers
since
the
first
awards
were
distributed
in
the
early
spring
of
1950.
While
the
winners
have
sometimes
been
controversial,
(in
1962,
the
publishing
world
balked
when
an
obscure
novelist,
Walker
Percy,
beat
out
both
Catch-22
and
Revolutionary
Road
and
in
1987,
Toni
Morrison's
Beloved
lost
to
Paco's
Story),
in
the
end
the
National
Book
Awards
are
always
about
exceptional
writing.
This
year's
winners
represented
the
cream
of
the
American
literary
crop,
including
a
book
of
war
stories
by
an
ex-marine
who
had
served
in
Iraq,
an
expose
of
contemporary
China,
a
book
of
poems
both
elegiac
and
clear-sighted,
and
a
young
adult
memoir
composed
entirely
in
blank
verse.
If
members
of
the
literati
harbored
concerns
about
the
state
of
American
letters,
these
winners
should
put
their
hearts
and
minds
at
ease.
Each,
in
its
singularity,
frames
pressing,
perhaps
even
universal,
issues
in
the
most
humane
and
generous
ways.
[CNH]
The
first
link
takes
readers
to
the
National
Book
Awards
homepage,
where
they
may
watch
videos
of
the
awards
in
categories,
such
as
Fiction,
Nonfiction,
Poetry,
and
Young
People's
Literature.
The
second,
third,
fourth,
and
fifth
links
navigate
to
reviews
of
the
books.
In
the
Guardian,
Edward
Docx
praises
Redeployment,
by
Phil
Klay,
as
"a
daisy
chain
of
incendiary
fictional
accounts
of
frontline
military
experience."
Writing
for
the
Washington
Post,
John
Pomfrett
calls
Evan
Osnos'
Age
of
Ambition
a
"compelling
and
accessible
investigation."
The
New
York
Times's
review
of
Louise
Gluck's
new
book,
Faithful
and
Virtuous
Night,
is
especially
enthralling
for
its
direct
quotes
of
the
author's
poems,
the
School
Library
Journal's
review
of
Jacqueline
Woodson's
new
work
goes
so
far
as
to
compare
brown
girl
dreaming
to
"a
young
person's
version
of
Song
of
Solomon."
After
the
reviews,
readers
can
click
the
sixth
link
to
connect
to
an
NPR
article
about
Ursula
K.
Le
Guin's
acceptance
of
an
award
for
distinguished
contribution
to
American
letters
in
which
she
"stole
the
show."
Together,
this
collection
is
sure
to
inspire
budding
and
veteran
wordsmiths
alike.
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