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Discrimination Drives LGBT+ Scientists to Think About Quitting

Discrimination Drives LGBT+ Scientists to Think About Quitting

Despite progress, many physical scientists from sexual and gender minorities experience exclusion or harassment at work, finds UK survey.

UKRI Signs San Francisco Declaration of Research Assessment - UK Research and Innovation

UKRI Signs San Francisco Declaration of Research Assessment - UK Research and Innovation

UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) has signed the international declaration aimed at strengthening and promoting best practice in the way research is assessed.

Open Humans: A Platform for Participant-centered Research and Personal Data Exploration

Open Humans: A Platform for Participant-centered Research and Personal Data Exploration

Open Humans highlights how a community-centric ecosystem can be used to aggregate personal data from various sources, as well as how these data can be used by academic and citizen scientists through practical, iterative approaches to sharing that strive to balance considerations with participant autonomy, inclusion, and privacy.

The Problem with Tech People Who Want to Solve Problems

The Problem with Tech People Who Want to Solve Problems

On the latest Recode Decode, MIT Media Lab director Joi Ito says we need to resist the urge to oversimplify the problems we're solving.

Learned Societies, the Key to Realising an Open Access Future?

Learned Societies, the Key to Realising an Open Access Future?

Plan S will also influence how learned societies, the organisations tasked with representing academics in particular disciplines, operate, as many currently depend on revenues from journal subscriptions to cross-subsidise their activities. 

Next in Reproducibility: Standards, Policies, Infrastructure, and Human Factors

Next in Reproducibility: Standards, Policies, Infrastructure, and Human Factors

What is next for reproducibility? Research communities will need to develop standards of practice, institutions will adopt formal policies, and funding agencies may look to support more infrastructure and tools to enable reproducibility. 

Journals' Plagiarism Detectors May Flag Papers in Error

Journals' Plagiarism Detectors May Flag Papers in Error

One recent case, in which a scientist claims his submitted manuscript was rejected despite a lack of actual plagiarism, highlights the limitations of automated tools.

News & Views: Analyzing the DOAJ

News & Views: Analyzing the DOAJ

The Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) is increasingly being used as a benchmark to determine whether a journal is fully OA, most notably as part of both the original and recently revised Plan S guidelines. This month we take a look at the DOAJ and consider how it compares to other sources for evaluating fully OA status.

Regarding a Delta Think Blog Post Analysing the DOAJ

Regarding a Delta Think Blog Post Analysing the DOAJ

In its series Open Access News & Views, Delta Think recently published an analysis of the DOAJ. DOAJ very much enjoyed the piece and found it to be one of the most well-informed articles written about them. They now comment on a few of the issues raised in the article.

Launching the #FailTales Science Communication Competition - Digital Science

Launching the #FailTales Science Communication Competition - Digital Science

Creatively convey your best research-related #FailTales and win a year's subscription to Dimensions Analytics, a Science Communication mentoring session with one of our judges, and a swag bag of our awesome merchandise!

Had I Been Editor in Chief

Had I Been Editor in Chief

i recently applied for the editor in chief position at Psychological Science. i didn't get it, but i got far enough to be asked to write a vision statement, responding to eight prompts.

Self Promotion for Introverts: Getting Your Research Message Out There While You Stay in

Self Promotion for Introverts: Getting Your Research Message Out There While You Stay in

The University of Melbourne’s Visualise Your Thesis competition (VYT) challenges graduate researchers to come up with an “elevator pitch”, in the form of a succinct and attractive audio-visual, digital object to distil the central theme of their research.

Distributed Models for Open Access Publishing: Q&A with Martin Eve

Distributed Models for Open Access Publishing: Q&A with Martin Eve

The Open Library of Humanities has demonstrated a model for high-quality open access publishing, without Article Processing Charges. We asked Chief Executive Officer Martin Eve whether the Library could serve as inspiration for Learned Societies in a post-Plan S world.

We Tried to Publish a Replication of a Science Paper in Science. The Journal Refused

We Tried to Publish a Replication of a Science Paper in Science. The Journal Refused

Our research suggests that the theory that conservatives and liberals respond differently to threats isn't actually true.

Rejected Article Tracking with the CrossRef API

Rejected Article Tracking with the CrossRef API

Nothing burdens the heart of a journal editor more than rejecting an article. Partly, this is because you know you're giving someone…

Open Science Graphs for FAIR Data IG

Open Science Graphs for FAIR Data IG

The goal of the Open Science Graphs Interest Group (OSG IG) is to build on the outcomes and broaden the challenges of the Data Description Registry Interoperability (DDRI) and Scholarly Link Exchange (Scholix) RDA Working Groups to investigate the open issues and identify solutions towards achieving interoperability between services and information models of Open Science Graph initiatives.

Universities Earned Just $75 Million from IP in 2017, but Spent $5.7 Billion on R&D

Universities Earned Just $75 Million from IP in 2017, but Spent $5.7 Billion on R&D

Canada’s top universities and research institutes spent $5.7 billion on research and development (R&D), but generated less than $75 million from licensing their innovations in 2017. That’s an average return on investment of 1.3 per cent.