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BashTheBug on the Zooniverse News

After the Zooniverse newsletter was sent

Two weeks ago exactly, I posted a small update on how we were doing; how classifications had been done by our volunteers etc. Then three days later, on Thu 9 August, the Zooniverse team sent a short email about BashTheBug to all the registered Zooniverse users.

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BashTheBug on the Zooniverse News

Focussing effort where it is needed

Until now we have simply sent all the images of each M. tuberculosis sample growing on each and every of the 14 antibiotics out to be classified by the citizen scientists. A while ago we realised that some images are “easy” in the sense that all the volunteers we show it to all give exactly the same answer. So, with a bit of work behind the scenes, we’ve written some computer code that can detect where the wells are in each image and then measure the amount of growth in each well. Now, it is isn’t perfect; it can be confused by small amounts of growth and artefacts like air bubbles and shadows, but it does mean we can confidently filter out the relatively easy images, thereby allowing us to only send the more challenging cases to you, our volunteers.

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BashTheBug on the Zooniverse News

August 2018 update

It has been a while since I updated everyone on how BashTheBug is going.

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BashTheBug on the Zooniverse News

OxfordSparks podcast

If you want to know about how BashTheBug is helping tackle tuberculosis and fits into the international CRyPTIC research project, listen to this podcast by OxfordSparks where you can hear interviews with Philip Fowler as well as the leading BashTheBug volunteer, ElisabethB.

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BashTheBug on the Zooniverse News

Tuberculosis inspired textiles!

Check out the work of my friend Lucy Turner who has created some textile designs based on various tuberculosis objects (if you look carefully you can see some based on the 96-well plates we classify).

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BashTheBug on the Zooniverse News

Tuberculosis: from Victorian fashion to citizen science

This public event comprised three talks, each about 15-25 minutes long. Videos of each talk can be found on YouTube, links below.

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BashTheBug on the Zooniverse News

Meet Samir

Pause for a moment and think about the 750,000+ classifications achieved by BashTheBug in its first year of existence: that is an enormous number. The next thought is usually who are the 10,000+ volunteers, the Citizen Scientists who contribute their time and energy to the project? We have not yet met any of you – until recently that is. Let me introduce you to Samir, who we met at a public engagement event.

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BashTheBug on the Zooniverse News

BashTheBug at ECCMID2018

BashTheBug has just got back from the recent European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases in Madrid, Spain. You can see some descriptive analysis of the first-dataset on this poster (free to access).

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Public Engagement Roundup April 2018

MMM Scientists have participated in a range of events, from science festivals and museum events, to art/science talks.

We attended the Oxford Brookes Science Festival and the Museum of Natural History Super Science Saturday, showcasing the award-winning crowdsourcing  Bash The Bug  project.

Bash The Bug goes from strength to strength

The ‘Bio Art and Bacteria’ Exhibition at the Museum of the History of Science, Oxford concluded this March, which showcased numerous artistic works created by Artist Anna Dumitriu with MMM Scientists.

MMM Scientists  contributed to a lecture series  associated with the event

We also assisted with a number of family events, aimed all age ranges with the world of bacteria and bio art!

At the Science Museum, London, the Superbugs Exhibition continues, featuring bacterial agar plates created by Anna Dumitriu with MMM Scientists

The ‘Antibiotic Resistance Quilt’, created by Dumitriu with MMM Scientists Kevin Cole and Nicola Fawcett has been displayed in the Science Museum, Dublin

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BashTheBug on the Zooniverse News

BashTheBug is one year old!

BashTheBug was officially launched one year ago today. Since then 10,213 people from all over the world have classified 735,070 images of M. tuberculosis growth, which is one every 43 seconds all year.

You’ve finished three datasets; an initial validation set from seven clinical laboratories from four continents and then two further datasets from two different Asian countries with a high burden of TB. (Well, we are 1,206 classifications short of the 121,305 we need to finish the second country, but you will probably finish that sometime tomorrow!)

BashTheBug has won an award and several of you have spotted artefacts in the plates (see here and here) that we missed.

Here’s to our second year and our first results, which we will share with you soon.