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Recent Claims Cast Doubt on Legitimacy of Behavioral Science

Recent Claims Cast Doubt on Legitimacy of Behavioral Science

Assessing allegations of data manipulation in psychological studies involving a Harvard Business School professor, Paul Eccleson asks whether we can trust research on behavioral science.

To Speed Scientific Progress, Do Away With Funding Delays

To Speed Scientific Progress, Do Away With Funding Delays

The National Science Foundation and National Institutes of Health are frequently described as the world’s gold standard for scientific funding. Operationally, however, they are not keeping pace with progress at the scientific frontier.

Why Does Impact Still Feel Like an Add-on to Research Designs?

Why Does Impact Still Feel Like an Add-on to Research Designs?

Reflecting on his role as an academic and member of a research funding organisation, Duncan Green, considers how impact has in some ways still not become embedded in research culture and is often treated a bureaucratic hurdle to overcome.

Among U.S. postdoc applicants, researchers of color often fare worst

Among U.S. postdoc applicants, researchers of color often fare worst

Many researchers of color are at a disadvantage when applying for postdoctoral positions. That’s one of the main findings of a new study of 22,098 applications for 769 scientific postdoc positions at nine U.S. universities. 

Bans, Flagships, and a Green Pivot: The State of EU-China Research Relations

Bans, Flagships, and a Green Pivot: The State of EU-China Research Relations

China's involvement in Horizon Europe is becoming increasingly restricted to environment-focused and basic research, but is still holding up despite geopolitical headwinds and the disruption to face-to-face contact caused by the pandemic.

Governance of AI in Bio: Harnessing the Benefits While Reducing the Risks

Governance of AI in Bio: Harnessing the Benefits While Reducing the Risks

To develop an overarching framework that includes addressing bio-related risks, Congress, federal agencies, and non-governmental AI stakeholders must work together.

Scientific Board to Advise UN on Breakthroughs in Science and Technology

Scientific Board to Advise UN on Breakthroughs in Science and Technology

UN Secretary-General António Guterres has announced the creation of a Scientific Advisory Board “to advise UN leaders on ... how to harness the benefits of these advances and mitigate potential risks.”

CERN and NASA Join Forces to Commit to a Research Future That is Open and Accessible for All

CERN and NASA Join Forces to Commit to a Research Future That is Open and Accessible for All

A summit, entitled “Accelerating the Adoption of Open Science”, took place at CERN from 10 to 14 July, bringing together representatives from 70 scientific institutions to discuss how to develop and implement open science policies across the globe.

Karl Popper on Falsification: Science Vs. Pseudoscience

Karl Popper on Falsification: Science Vs. Pseudoscience

What separates science from pseudoscience, and what should a scientist be like? Karl Popper believed that the notion of falsification could help answer these questions.

Shortage of Funding and Lack of Scale Are Holding Back EU Industrial Policy

Shortage of Funding and Lack of Scale Are Holding Back EU Industrial Policy

Since March 2020 the European Commission has been making moves to improve Europe’s industrial competitiveness. Experts say things are moving in the right direction, but warn there is not enough money or enough focus on scaling up.

Why Creativity in Science Matters and Three Ways to Achieve It

Why Creativity in Science Matters and Three Ways to Achieve It

Creativity is critical to the future of work. The Future of Jobs Report 2023 ranked analytical thinking and creative thinking as the first and second most important skills that workers will need to have in the future. 

Girls Have Overtaken Boys in Science Participation. In Workplaces, It's a Completely Different Story

Girls Have Overtaken Boys in Science Participation. In Workplaces, It's a Completely Different Story

Young women get better grades in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, but progress on jobs for women in these industries has been painfully slow.

Scientific Publishing Has a Language Problem

Scientific Publishing Has a Language Problem

Science is international, but scientific publishing is dominated by English-language publications. This disproportionately benefits native or fluent English speakers. Steps to address the imbalance this creates are taken, and new technology may help.

Commission acts to accelerate phasing out of animal testing in response to a European Citizens' Initiative

Commission acts to accelerate phasing out of animal testing in response to a European Citizens' Initiative

The Commission is responding to the European Citizens' Initiative (ECI) ‘Save Cruelty-free Cosmetics - Commit to a Europe without Animal Testing'. The response provides a comprehensive overview of the EU's legislative and policy framework relevant to the use of animals for testing purposes. It also proposes additional actions to further reduce animal testing.

Study Finds a Key Way to Build Trust in Science - And It's Not Education

Study Finds a Key Way to Build Trust in Science - And It's Not Education

Trust in the truth is a major talking point these days.

Quick Grants from Tech Billionaires Aim to Speed Up Science Research. But Not All Scientists Approve

Quick Grants from Tech Billionaires Aim to Speed Up Science Research. But Not All Scientists Approve

Fast Grants is one of many science improvement projects Silicon Valley billionaires launched or backed since the COVID-19 pandemic began.