Are COVID Surges Becoming More Predictable? New Omicron Variants Offer a Hint
Omicron relatives called BA.4 and BA.5 are behind a fresh wave of COVID-19 in South Africa, and could be signs of a more predictable future for SARS-CoV-2.
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Omicron relatives called BA.4 and BA.5 are behind a fresh wave of COVID-19 in South Africa, and could be signs of a more predictable future for SARS-CoV-2.
Trying to understand what private data Elsevier collects; what private data Elsevier sells; and what to do about it.
The European Commission officially launched a €25 million direct aid package of Marie Skłodowska-Curie grants for researchers from Ukraine, as it announced a €562 million increase for the Horizon Europe budget in 2022.
In the light of CCCs acquisition of Ringgold last week, three Chefs, Phill Jones, Roger Schonfeld, and Todd Carpenter reflect on the motivations for the move and its implications for PIDs and organisational identifiers.
Exclusive: Oil and gas majors are planning scores of vast projects that threaten to shatter the 1.5C climate goal. If governments do not act, these firms will continue to cash in as the world burns
With the Russian army marching on his home city, a Ukrainian scholar must decide how to respond.
As she closes the door on her time in academia, a neuroscientist faces unexpected grief.
"It's a lesson I wish I'd learned before starting grad school."
It's time to decouple maternity from womanhood. Recent advances in fertility science are helping pave the way toward inclusivity.
This article explores how the rise of remote collaboration has shaped disruptive discoveries in science between 1961 and 2020.
The open science movement pushes for making scientific knowledge quickly accessible to all. But a new paper warns that speed can come at a cost.
Closed networks and ingrained biases can make women's collaborations a balancing act.
If everyone ate just 20 percent less beef, deforestation rates by 2050 could be half as bad.
Switzerland is currently considered a non-associated third country in Horizon Europe, the EU Framework Programme for Research and Innovation. On 4 May 2022, the Federal Council adopted extensive measures to bridge the gap arising from this situation.
Developers of artificial intelligence must learn to collaborate with social scientists and the people affected by its applications.
The BBC gets an exclusive look at a new project to help students deal with rising climate anxiety.
The Biden Administration is planning a campaign to attract Russian scientists and engineers to the US, in an effort to further weaken Russia's science and technology base. It also plans to help Russian physicists at the CERN nuclear lab continue working there, rather than return home when their normal visas expire, if they wish.
New measures to reward scholars in the Netherlands could widen gender inequality if they are not designed and implemented correctly, warn four academics.
How has the pandemic changed public access to journal articles?
The OSTP is without a leader in the wake of a scandal. It's time for the White House to think about getting a new kind of director.
EMBO will accept first author refereed preprints in applications for postdoctoral fellowships in a four-month trial.
Metadata for the (currently 26,000) grants that have been registered by our funder members is now available via the REST API. This is quite a milestone in our program to include funding in Crossref infrastructure and a step forward in our mission to connect all.the.things. This post gives you all the queries you might need to satisfy your curiosity and start to see what's possible with deeper analysis. So have the look and see what useful things you can discover.
Are 25 year olds really more random than 60 year olds?