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Study Examines How Media Around the World Frame Climate Change News

Study Examines How Media Around the World Frame Climate Change News

While richer countries tend to frame climate change coverage as a political issue, poorer countries more often frame it as an international issue that the world at large needs to address.

https://nplusonemag.com/issue-34/essays/sexism-in-the-academy/

https://nplusonemag.com/issue-34/essays/sexism-in-the-academy/

While there were significant gains during much of the 20th century, feminist progress in the academy has slowed and may have already come to a halt. Overarching essay provides many references.

The Science of Gun Violence

The Science of Gun Violence

A growing chorus of researchers wants to study gun violence in the U.S. as a public health issue, similar to the way they have tracked automobile or workplace safety for decades.

Preregistration Is Hard - And Worthwhile

Preregistration Is Hard - And Worthwhile

Making decisions before conducting analyses requires practice. Respecting both what was planned and what actually happened requires good judgment and humility in making claims. With the accelerating adoption of preregistration, we now face the challenge of figuring out how to use this methodology to its fullest potential.

Mind the Gap

A Landscape Analysis of Open Source Publishing Tools and Platforms catalogs and analyzes all available open-source software for publishing and warns that open publishing must grapple with the dual challenges of siloed development and organization of the community-owned ecosystem

In Departure for NIH, Cancer Moonshot Requires Grantees to Make Papers Immediately Free

In Departure for NIH, Cancer Moonshot Requires Grantees to Make Papers Immediately Free

The long-standing debate over open access to research results has been marked by a geographic divide - but the divide is starting to blur.

Chemists Make First-ever Ring of Pure Carbon

Chemists Make First-ever Ring of Pure Carbon

Long after most chemists had given up trying, a team of researchers has synthesized the first ring-shaped molecule of pure carbon — a circle of 18 atoms.

Actually, Gender-Neutral Pronouns Can Change a Culture

Actually, Gender-Neutral Pronouns Can Change a Culture

In 2012 a nongendered pronoun dropped into Swedish discourse. Today it's widely used-and it's nudging people to see the world a little differently.

DeepMind's Losses and the Future of Artificial Intelligence

DeepMind's Losses and the Future of Artificial Intelligence

Alphabet's DeepMind unit, conqueror of Go and other games, is losing lots of money. Continued deficits could imperil investments in AI.

Journals Retract More Than a Dozen Studies from China That May Have Used Executed Prisoners' Organs

Journals Retract More Than a Dozen Studies from China That May Have Used Executed Prisoners' Organs

In the past month, PLOS ONE and Transplantation have retracted fifteen studies by authors in China because of suspicions that the authors may have used organs from executed prisoners.

Ph.D. Students Resent Expectation That They Bring Food and Drinks to Their Thesis Defenses

Ph.D. Students Resent Expectation That They Bring Food and Drinks to Their Thesis Defenses

As it turns out, many Ph.D. students resent the expectation that they bring food and drinks to their thesis defenses. UCLA's psychology department just said they shouldn't do it.

Trump Administration Weakens Endangered Species Act

Trump Administration Weakens Endangered Species Act

Changes to the United States' landmark conservation law make it easier to strip threatened species of the strongest protections.

Equity is Possible: Forging Paths Toward Equity and Anti-Racism in Scholarly Publishing

Equity is Possible: Forging Paths Toward Equity and Anti-Racism in Scholarly Publishing

In this guest post, Gisela Fosado and Cathy Rimer-Surles of Duke UP share highlights and a video from their panel session on equity at the 2019 AUPresses Annual Meeting, plus helpful recommendations to help us achieve equity in scholarly communications.

E.P.A. Broke Rules in Shake-Up of Science Panels, Federal Watchdog Says

E.P.A. Broke Rules in Shake-Up of Science Panels, Federal Watchdog Says

The Government Accountability Office found that the administration "did not consistently ensure" that appointees to E.P.A. advisory boards met federal ethics requirements.

Research Outputs Find a Home at IndiaRxiv

Research Outputs Find a Home at IndiaRxiv

Open Access India partners with the Center for Open Science to launch IndiaRxiv on the eve of India’s 73rd Independence Day as the country joins the global march for open science.

SpringerOpen Pricing Trends 2018 - 2019

SpringerOpen Pricing Trends 2018 - 2019

Of the 215 active journals published by SpringerOpen, 54% charge APCs. The average APC was 1,212 EUR, an increase of 8% over the 2018 average, 6 times the EU inflation rate for June 2019 of 1.3%.

Medicine Ignored Women's Health for Years - That's Finally Changing

Medicine Ignored Women's Health for Years - That's Finally Changing

For decades, the medical field has dismissed female health concerns. Women have been told that they’re imagining signs of heart attacks and other life-threatening ailments and had few resources devoted to researching their medical problems, but, at last, that seems to be changing.

Criteria for Assessing Grant Applications: A Systematic Review

Criteria for Assessing Grant Applications: A Systematic Review

Identification and synthetisation of studies that examine grant peer review criteria in an empirical and inductive manner.

Filling in the Gaps: The Interpretation of Curricula Vitae in Peer Review

Filling in the Gaps: The Interpretation of Curricula Vitae in Peer Review

A study of the use of curricula vitae for competitive funding decisions in science suggests that bibliographic categories such as authorship of publications or performance metrics may themselves come to be problematized and reshaped in the process.

Finally, Some Good News About Ebola: Two New Treatments Dramatically Lower the Death Rate in a Trial

Finally, Some Good News About Ebola: Two New Treatments Dramatically Lower the Death Rate in a Trial

Experimental Ebola treatments carried out in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) have shown strong signs of being able to save patients’ lives.

The Endangered Species Act is Incredibly Popular and Effective. Trump is Weakening It Anyway.

The Endangered Species Act is Incredibly Popular and Effective. Trump is Weakening It Anyway.

A million species are threatened worldwide. This is how Trump responds.