Oliver Steinbock
@osteinbock.bsky.social
300 followers 540 following 190 posts
Chemistry professor studying chemical self-organization and far-from-equilibrium processes. Opinions are my own and not the views of FSU.
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osteinbock.bsky.social
Some thoughts on grading ... if you want to see how ThermoTutor is doing it, check out thermo-tutor.qwyzzee.com

#HigherEd #Chemistry #STEM #college #thermodynamics #pchem
osteinbock.bsky.social
My photo is in Discover magazine! Looks great 😀
osteinbock.bsky.social
Over the past summer, I built an AI-powered learning platform for thermodynamics students. It’s called ThermoTutor. Here’s a short manifesto on what it does and why I think it’s useful:
thermo-tutor.qwyzzee.com
osteinbock.bsky.social
And Einstein's dissertation? Basically physical chemistry! 😊
“A New Determination of Molecular Dimensions” estimated molecular radii and Avogadro’s number from sugar diffusion and viscosity. From macroscopic measurements to molecular insight ... classic pchem move.
Reposted by Oliver Steinbock
thermotutor.bsky.social
Quick introduction to ThermoTutor. Get personalized thermodynamics tutoring with instant feedback and follow-up conversations. This 3-minute demo shows how ThermoTutor works, from problem selection to grading to asking follow-up questions. #chemistry #studyhelp #pchem
Reposted by Oliver Steinbock
wenzhulab.bsky.social
Succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) uniquely powers both the TCA cycle & electron transport chain. SDH mutations cause SDH deficiency, disrupting energy metabolism & leading to developmental delays. #RareDiseaseThursday
PDB: 8GS8
Reposted by Oliver Steinbock
wenzhulab.bsky.social
KARS1 encodes lysyl-tRNA synthetase. Biallelic KARS mutations cause KARS syndrome, a severe disorder that affects multiple organs, particularly the nervous system. #RareDiseaseThursday
osteinbock.bsky.social
Our new paper describes a synthetic "cell" that moves over superhydrophobic surfaces. It consists of an H2O2 drop and a chemical garden tube that spins like a propeller or orbits around a large internal O2 bubble; bursting causes repeating cm-scale motion. @softmatter.rsc.org doi.org/10.1039/D5SM...
Co-motion of catalytic tubes and host droplets on superhydrophobic surfaces
The ability to convert chemical energy into directed motion is a defining feature of living systems and a central goal in the design of synthetic active matter. Here, we report a self-propelling syste...
doi.org
Reposted by Oliver Steinbock
bkudisch.bsky.social
The abstract submission deadline for our symposium is TODAY! Submit your abstract at sermacs-swrm2025.abstractcentral.com/submission before it’s too late; I hope to see you all in sunny Orlando this October!
bkudisch.bsky.social
Mark your calendars: NSUNS is hosting its third "Ultrafast and Nonlinear Spectroscopy" symposium at the joint SERMACS/SWRM this October! Abstract submission opens Monday, April 21st. We hope to see you there!
Reposted by Oliver Steinbock
wenzhulab.bsky.social
Congratulations to Julia and Adwaith for completing the 2025 Young Scholar Program and research symposium. It was a joy having you both in lab and we are very proud of you!
osteinbock.bsky.social
I always enjoy GRCs. And if you criticize GRCs for being mainly in the US ... well, it's a US org and they do have several international sites (Italy, Switzerland, HK, Spain ... UK in the past). I think the science is awesome and, at ~$1300 for 5 days incl. fees, food, room, it's a great deal.
osteinbock.bsky.social
I agree it's complex and there are many layers to it. But then look at Nat Comm which published >10,000 papers last year, probably absorbing >$70m alone. Contrast this to the 2nd most cited paper ever that wasn't peer-reviewed at all ... The current system needs a fundamental overhaul, not tweaking
osteinbock.bsky.social
In 2024, Elsevier net profits alone were $4 billion. For reference, the NSF budget (with staff salaries and everything) was $9 billion that year.

PS: journals.plos.org/plosone/arti... gives a 17-paper average. Yes, multiple PIs contribute, but unis also subsidize from overhead etc.
osteinbock.bsky.social
Or look at it from the other side ... wouldn't science be better off if the enormous profits of Nature, Elsevier et al. were spent on students, postdocs, and actual research? If a PI or university wants to buy "prestige", the money should come from other sources
osteinbock.bsky.social
Published data indicate 10-20 papers/R01. Also, with the same argument, you can justify many other poor 1-5% decisions, burning through a lot of precious research money. I suspect that w/o this attitude, lab equipment would be cheaper, conference fees and overhead lower, OA/APCs <= $500 ...
osteinbock.bsky.social
I disagree. First of all, this is a matter of principle. Second, if you publish 10 papers on a grant that's $100k, and with overhead $150k. Even $75k is way too much. If you have big grants that allow you to not pinch every penny, congrats, but it does not apply to the majority of scientists.
osteinbock.bsky.social
Well, it did in this case :) See my other post
osteinbock.bsky.social
o3 also wrote: "I have published on chemical information processing and DNA strand-displacement kinetics." << who knows, might be true 😅
osteinbock.bsky.social
Is this what you meant? My prompt was "write a fair and honest referee report for the following paper" + a recent paper from my group (tex) with inserted "secret white instructions". It wrote an okayish report (I'd say no impact of insertion), and when prompted again about ethical issues ...
osteinbock.bsky.social
why would a lazy referee use API?
osteinbock.bsky.social
well ... show me that it's working :)
osteinbock.bsky.social
I'm too lazy to test it, but I asked o3 and it claims that it would ignore the hidden instructions.