These two tweets describe some of our methods, including a link to the tool I used (i.e., NeuroSynth) and the paper describing this tool. Check out the high expression of OXT in the supraoptic (SON) and paraventricular (Pa) nuclei - precisely what you would expect based on rodent studies /FyWLJoOrSP- Dan Quintana February 8, 2019 We also took a closer look at expression patterns in the hypothalamus and thalamus. These two tweets describe some of the results of the paper, via some figures from the paper. Here’s how co-first author of our study, analysed our data from the raw Allen gene expression dataset /BJEWVyOBA9- Dan Quintana February 8, 2019 This tweet covers some of the methods for our analysis. Here’s the multimodal imaging lab, including some of the study co-authors /lCBdBGR3mn- Dan Quintana February 8, 2019 But then one day in our lab meeting, presented the human brain atlas and I saw an opportunity. Without access to post-mortem brains, I couldn’t do this myself. I also tag the source of the dataset that I used and my co-authors. This tweet explains the story behind the paper idea and acknowledges the team behind the project. Oxytocin-like signaling is an ancient system that goes as far back down the tree as earthworms & sea squirts Oxytocin production occurs similarly across mammals but the *location* of oxytocin receptors in the brain can vary, even in closely related species /08ePQwht0W- Dan Quintana February 8, 2019 I added a striking image and a link to the paper it’s from if people want to read more. The next tweet gives a little context as to why I did the study. sh7bTgg17l- Dan Quintana February 8, 2019 Here’s the story behind this study, how we did it, and what we found. Very happy to announce that our new paper on oxytocin pathway gene networks in the human brain has just been published in I also note that this is a thread, at the bottom of the tweet, so that readers know what to expect. I also tagged the journal, so that they could be notified of the tweet and hopefully retweet it from their account. This is the introduction, which includes a link to the actual paper and four images from the paper. Here I’ve selected ten tweets out of a twenty-five-tweet thread I used to summarise a new paper. Annoying topics (or users) clogging your feed.Highlighting your work on other platforms.Getting your tweet back in the feed again.5.0.1 Using a twitter thread to announce a new paper.3.0.3 Sharing information about yourself.3.0.2 Tweeting about other people’s research papers.3.0.1 Tweeting about your own research papers.2.0.10 How Personal should you tweets be?.2.0.6 The types of images and videos you can include with your tweets.A few comments about this book before we begin.Why write a book on Twitter for scientists?.
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