ScienceOnline2010 - introducing the participants

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As you know you can see everyone who's registered for the conference, but I highlight 4-6 participants every day as this may be an easier way for you to digest the list. You can also look at the Program so see who is doing what.

Walter Jessen is a cancer biologist and bioinformatician. He is the editor at Highlight HEALTH and Next Generation Science. And he tweets. At the conference, Walter will lead the session on Medicine 2.0 and Science 2.0--where do they intersect? and the session on Medical journalism.

Sabine Vollmer, former science reporter for Raleigh News and Observer, now writes and tweets for Science in the Triangle

Sarah Crespi is a writer and editor and is currently the Mutlimedia Science Communication Specialist at the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. And she tweets.

Shanawa Richardson works in the Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center.

Sarah Jeong is the Science Librarian at the Z. Smith Reynolds Library at Wake Forest University.

Danielle Baldwin runs Sociia Internet Communications and is on Twitter.

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Below the fold, you'll find a complete listing of all tweets from #SMWUSC, in reverse chronological order.
I'll try doing this now and then, maybe regularly, to gather the more notable tweets I get in my twitter feed.
A couple of weeks ago, there was a flurry of tweets, tagged with #sci140 hashtag on Twitter. What was that about? People were trying to summarize scientific papers in 140 characters or less.
You can now see what happens when you tweet something. Twitter has a web page that tells you how many "impressions" a tweet has, how many "Engagements" (any kind of click on your tweet) and, for convenience, the percentage of tweets with which your tweeps engaged.