It's Time to Put an End to Mentee Abuse in Academia
NIH data hint at the extent of bullying and emotional abuse, but barriers to tackling the issue remain high, says Joanna Buscemi.
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NIH data hint at the extent of bullying and emotional abuse, but barriers to tackling the issue remain high, says Joanna Buscemi.
In unprecedented comments ahead of federal elections in September, Anja Karliczek applauds university that shuttered its institute.
Meredith Adinolfi (Cell Press) and Ann Michael (DeltaThink) discuss some of the more complex aspects of the OA landscape, such as funder mandates, Plan S, and transformative agreements.
Conservators seek ways to stop cultural artifacts from oozing and crumbling to dust.
But critics worry the metrics remain prone to misuse.
There are many possible pathways towards a carbon-neutral future — and achieving it by 2050 is possible but requires urgent action.
Science, and especially social sciences and humanities, have always had a broad range of impacts on society — impacts which are not easily measured using traditional academic indicators.
Studies are skewed towards resilient places and people: improve data, metrics, inclusion and more.
By adopting the Open Research Data (ORD) Strategy, swissuniversities has taken a further step towards Open Science and follows on the existing Open Access strategy.
Lots of things are wrong with paying for peer review.
The Black in X network mobilized last summer to bring attention to racism in STEM. This week, they're holding their first conference to talk about what's next.
The world's first flying race car, the Airspeeder Mk3, has completed its maiden flight and is on track to compete in a first-of-its-kind racing series later in 2021.
Separate collisions of a neutron star and a black hole are detected in a short space of time.
To help planners adapt to a warming world, find ways to make predictions practical.
Policy makers and lobbyists in Brussels want to explicitly limit access for scientists in countries that flout academic freedom and intellectual property rights.
I found job satisfaction and exciting opportunities in supporting other academics - but it's a career path that many don't consider. Try it.
Six weeks ago, a reporter published what seemed to be a blockbuster story, one that, if true, would expose the greatest scandal in recent history.
A new study of grants awarded to early-career researchers by Europe's premier science agency is reviving an old controversy over the way governments decide which scientists get research money, and which do not.
Instead of flying in, collecting samples and leaving, scientists should treat local people as partners, and think fair instead of charitable when it comes to authorship.
AAAS continues its commitment to the subscription model to praise from cOAlition S. Are there lessons for other publishers?
Using Emma as an example, the career path of an early career researcher whose PhD was financed by an SNSF project is profiled. To this end, data from the Federal Statistical Office (FSO) and the SNSF was combined and analysed.
Too few resources exist to help early-career scientists deal with the stresses encountered in today's 'publish or perish' culture.
Women represent nearly 50% of active scientific authors in Portugal. Over the past two decades, the country achieved the largest percentage increase in the EU in women's representation - an impressive nine percentage points, putting Portugal at the leading edge of closing the gender gap in research.