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Researching the research

Researching the research

By Horacio Pérez-Sánchez

A podcast about research and researchers; outbreaking discoveries, academic and industrial research and everything around; from idea conception to its publication, patent or company, how to apply to grant calls and raise funding, interviews to researchers to understand their lives and motivations, and more! Contact me at: Horacio-ps.com
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12. How can you be more productive in your research using consolidated apps: Akiflow

Researching the researchDec 17, 2021

00:00
20:12
13. The Archaeology of Language: Place Names and Endangered Languages in the Search for the Origins

13. The Archaeology of Language: Place Names and Endangered Languages in the Search for the Origins

In today's episode, historical linguists and language documentarists Francesco Perono Cacciafoco (Associate Professor at Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University, https://www.xjtlu.edu.cn/en/study/departments/school-of-humanities-and-social-sciences/department-of-applied-linguistics/department-staff/academic-staff/staff/francesco-perono) and Shiyue Wu (Linguistics' major at Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University) discuss their research on Historical Linguistics and endangered and undocumented languages. Francesco provides us with background on his work reconstructing, documenting, and analyzing place names (toponyms) in languages from all over the world. He explains how place names can give insights into prehistoric languages, since they are more stable over time than other words. His recent book "Place Names: Approaches and Perspectives in Toponymy and Toponomastics", published by the Cambridge University Press (https://bit.ly/3NZc2I2), aims to be a comprehensive guide to toponymic research, the first academic handbook on Toponymy ever published in single volume.

The process of analyzing place names involves documentary research and etymological reconstruction, comparing toponyms among related languages, belonging to the same language families, recovering possible earlier 'proto-forms', and giving back to those special names their often long-forgotten morphological roots and original meanings. Challenges include to deal with unsolvable prehistoric / ancient place names and with toponyms connected with 'itinerant' and undocumented oral traditions and language contact in Aboriginal contexts.

Shiyue shares how she conducts her Language Documentation fieldwork, interacting with indigenous speakers to understand and record words, names, grammatical elements, concepts, and cognitive processes behind their languages. She is, currently, studying number systems and counting among the Abui, Kula, and Sawila peoples from Alor Island (Southeastern Indonesia), documenting and safeguarding their languages and discovering cultural connections, naming processes, and oral traditions.

The two linguists explain also the use of computational tools in their attempts to better understand and, ultimately, decipher undeciphered ancient writing systems, discovering the languages that they 'hide'. Their work focuses on Linear A, a Bronze Age script from the island of Crete, in the Aegean Sea, 'concealing' the so-called (unknown) Minoan language, and on the writing system of the Singapore Stone, a puzzling, fragmentary epigraph from the Lion City, in Southeastern Asia, which carries a script that is unique in the world (never found in any other inscription).

Shiyue's and Francesco's main goals are the reconstruction of prehistoric languages, following the 'dream' of 'giving back the voice' to our ancient ancestors who had not the technology of writing yet, and to document endangered and undocumented languages and cultures from around the world, to prevent their (often very high) risk of extinction and disappearance and to safeguard them for the future generations.

Overall, the episode provides an insightful look at the linguistic detective work involved in reconstructing, analyzing, and documenting place names, oral traditions, and endangered indigenous languages and, ultimately, at what Historical Linguistics and Language Documentation are. The researchers aim to preserve linguistic diversity and study how language evolves over time and intersects with culture, history, and thought.

Shiyue and Francesco can be contacted at Shiyue.Wu21@student.xjtlu.edu.cn and Francesco.Perono@xjtlu.edu.cn.

Links to some of the commented papers:

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0024384116301784

https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/9/7/211

https://geografie.uvt.ro/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/08_III_CAC_2.pdf

https://brill.com/view/journals/ow/1/1/article-p1_1.xml?language=en


Jul 16, 202301:01:01
12. How can you be more productive in your research using consolidated apps: Akiflow

12. How can you be more productive in your research using consolidated apps: Akiflow

If you want to go far in your research it is crucial to be productive and nowadays there are many interesting productivity apps and systems that you can use for that. But the problem is that there are many! And it is very difficult to find one that suits all your needs. Another problem in this regard is that when you collaborate with other researchers they will probably use other productivity applications, so at the end you spend a lot of time switching between productivity and time management applications.


Today's interviewee has a solution for this! Nunzio Martinello:


https://www.linkedin.com/in/nunziomartinello/?originalSubdomain=in


is the CEO of Akiflow, and they developed Akiflow proposing the idea of consolidated apps. Akiflow allows you to have a central dashboard  with calendar which allows you to integrate and sync tasks from many different systems such as gmail, Trello, Todoist, etc, and Zapier, which allows you an even higher number of integrations.


So today we had Nunzio in the podcast and he gave some very interesting explanations about Akiflow and answered our questions. We really recommend you to use it:


https://akiflow.com


If you want to continue discussion about this episode and in general about the themes we talk in our podcast (how research is made, how to do it more efficiently, interviews to researchers, etc) then join our discord community at:


https://discord.gg/3dN7pQNWAk


PS: Background music "Let the sunshine" from "Keep Calm and Podcast":


https://pod.co/keep-calm-and-podcast


Dec 17, 202120:12
11. Making it Rain: Cloud-Based Molecular Simulations for Everyone with Pablo Arantes in our Journal Club

11. Making it Rain: Cloud-Based Molecular Simulations for Everyone with Pablo Arantes in our Journal Club

First journal club episode from our Structural Bioinformatics and High Performance Computing (BIO-HPC) community which you can joint at:


https://discord.gg/fZyNYTsT7k


where we discussed about the paper "Making it Rain: Cloud-Based Molecular Simulations for Everyone":


https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acs.jcim.1c00998


with its first author, Pablo Arantes from University of California Riverside:


https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Pablo-Arantes


It would be great to have you in our next Journal Club!



PS: Background music "Let the sunshine" from "Keep Calm and Podcast":


https://pod.co/keep-calm-and-podcast

Dec 05, 202101:09:35
10. Molecular Dynamics with Hugo Verli from UFRGS, Brazil

10. Molecular Dynamics with Hugo Verli from UFRGS, Brazil

In this episode we focus around the computer simulation technique Molecular Dynamics (MD), which allows the study of the dynamics of systems of biological relevance. For such purpose we have the pleasure to interview Prof. Hugo Verli from UFRGS, Brazil:


https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=fB-31L4AAAAJ&hl=es


and you can contact via email in case of questions at:


hverli@cbiot.ufrgs.br 


or 


hugoverli@gmail.com


We also talked about his research career, his views about the research process and many other interesting topics.


If you want to continue discussion about this episode then join our discord community at:


https://discord.gg/3dN7pQNWAk

Nov 26, 202139:42
9. Nanotechnology and research in graphene with Romain Danneau from Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

9. Nanotechnology and research in graphene with Romain Danneau from Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

Interview with key topics in nanotechnology and graphene research with Romain Danneau from Karlsruhe Institute of Technology:


https://www.int.kit.edu/1244_romain.danneau.php


you can contact him directly through his email address (link below) if you have questions about his very interesting research.


We also talked about his research career, his views about the research process and how to manage a research group.


If you want to continue discussion about this episode then join our discord community at:


https://discord.gg/3dN7pQNWAk

Nov 20, 202159:45
8. Why multitasking can be efficient (I): multiple difficult projects or creative processes
Oct 19, 202115:06
7. Research groups vs startups
Oct 12, 202119:32
6. Modeling water in biomolecular systems with Maria Bzówka from Tunneling group, Silesian University of Technology

6. Modeling water in biomolecular systems with Maria Bzówka from Tunneling group, Silesian University of Technology

Sep 30, 202101:03:18
5. How to explore research ideas just recording a podcast episode
Sep 20, 202115:33
4. How to (we) perform computational drug discovery (I): Blind docking
Sep 12, 202136:50
3. How the apps installed on your smartphone can influence your productivity as researcher
Aug 25, 202114:33
2. Intro to research grants calls
Aug 19, 202126:23
1. Structural bioinformatics, scientific career path and advice for PhD students

1. Structural bioinformatics, scientific career path and advice for PhD students

In this episode I was recently interviewed by Eva Lantsoght and Rico Massa in their podcast PhD Talk:


https://www.evalantsoght.com/podcast.html


where we talked about:


  • My scientific career
  • How structural bioinformatics and supercomputing works
  • Advice for PhD students
  • General productivity tips


You can contact me at horacio (at) horacio-ps.com 


and you can engage in further discussions about the podcast episodes in our public Telegram group at:


https://t.me/researching_research 


Thanks for listening! 




Aug 06, 202139:40
Introduction and podcast trailer

Introduction and podcast trailer

First and introductory episode of the podcast in which I briefly explain what the podcast is about and what I think you can expect from it, how it will be recorded, produced and organised, and how to you can give feedback and engage in further discussions.

Aug 06, 202107:15