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10 Key LERU Messages for Horizon Europe

10 Key LERU Messages for Horizon Europe

Despite the good work by Carlos Moedas and his team, there are still a number of aspects of the proposal that could be improved.

Academic writes 270 Wikipedia pages in a year to get female scientists noticed

Academic writes 270 Wikipedia pages in a year to get female scientists noticed

Researcher Jess Wade says efforts to attract girls into science are not evidence-based – and are not working.

Academia Is the Alternative Career Path

Academia Is the Alternative Career Path

All graduate students should be planning their post-PhD employment from year one. Supported and nurtured by their institutions and their supervisors. There is a catch for supervisors: they are themselves academics, and so will understandably have little clue about what might constitute useful training for the current job market. The onus must so fall on broader shoulders, of the institutions and funders.

Living Science - The Voice of Evidence

Living Science - The Voice of Evidence

In an era in which evidence is being disregarded, scientists need to speak up in support of the pursuit for truth.  If we do not successively train our youth to distinguish between truth and falsehood, we are at risk of raising a new generation unused to recognizing truth as derived from evidence.

 

 

New Report Says Individual Research Results Should Be Shared With Participants More Often

New Report Says Individual Research Results Should Be Shared With Participants More Often

When conducting research involving the testing of human biospecimens, investigators and their institutions should routinely consider whether and how to return individual research results on a study-specific basis through an informed decision-making process, says a new report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.

The Preprint Dilemma: Good for Science, Bad for the Public? A Discussion Paper for the Scientific Community

The Preprint Dilemma: Good for Science, Bad for the Public? A Discussion Paper for the Scientific Community

This essay is an appeal to the scientific community - researchers, publishers and communicators - to take stock and engage in a discussion of the wider impacts of preprint.

Usage Statistics Launched

Usage Statistics Launched

On the research data repository Zenodo you can now view the number of views and downloads on record pages, and you can sort search results by most viewed.

Illuminating Women's Hidden Contribution to the Foundation of Theoretical Population Genetics

Illuminating Women's Hidden Contribution to the Foundation of Theoretical Population Genetics

A study documenting acknowledgment sections and identified "acknowledged programmers" in Theoretical Population Biology articles published between 1970 and 1990. While only 7% of authors were women, 43% of acknowledged programmers were women.

Track the Fate of Postdocs to Help the next Generation of Scientists

Track the Fate of Postdocs to Help the next Generation of Scientists

Data on the career paths of young researchers would help to guide the lost generation.

An Open Science Future - Europe Leads the Way

An Open Science Future - Europe Leads the Way

An outline of Hindawi's submitted proposal in response to the European Commission’s tender to launch a new publishing platform.

Generation R: Forming Open Scientists and Shaping Science Systems

Generation R: Forming Open Scientists and Shaping Science Systems

Generation R is a new editorial platform based on themes, blogposts and learning resources. Its editor, Simon Worthington, answers questions concerning its scope and organization.

How to Retool Graduate STEM Education

How to Retool Graduate STEM Education

The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine recently released a report outlining key recommendations for graduate programs and the science enterprise. It highlights the need for employers in all sectors to provide financial support for internships and other types of career experiences to students and recent graduates.

Data Management Checklist

Data Management Checklist

Are you looking after your research data? This simple graphic provides a checklist of the key activities and requirements for making sure your research data is well managed.

NSF Wants to Know What You Think It Should Fund

NSF Wants to Know What You Think It Should Fund

Got an idea that could transform the world? NSF is launching a new contest offers prizes for "biggest" research ideas. On 31 August NSF will begin accepting online entries for the contest. Anyone can submit an idea - from individual scientists to professional societies to a high school science class.

Global Educational Inequality Fuels the Demand for Open Science

Global Educational Inequality Fuels the Demand for Open Science

Despite the expansion of global Internet coverage and open access journals, research from outside of the United States and Europe is underrepresented.

High Cost of Bias: Diminishing Marginal Returns on NIH Grant Funding to Institutions

High Cost of Bias: Diminishing Marginal Returns on NIH Grant Funding to Institutions

A study suggesting that implicit biases and social prestige mechanisms (e.g., the Matthew effect) have a powerful impact on where NIH grant dollars go and the net return on taxpayers investments. They support evidence-based changes in funding policy geared towards a more equitable, more diverse and more productive distribution of federal support for scientific research.

‘Look happy dear, you’ve just made a discovery’ - Physics World

‘Look happy dear, you’ve just made a discovery’ - Physics World

Sarah Tesh and Jess Wade describe Jocelyn Bell Burnell’s highs and lows, as revealed in her recent IOP President’s Medal lecture.

Peer Review Has Some Problems - but the Science Community Is Working on It

Peer Review Has Some Problems - but the Science Community Is Working on It

Key areas of focus for tweaking peer review include making journal editors more directive in the process, rewarding reviewers, and improving accountability of editors, reviewers and authors.

DOI Restricts Scientists From Attending Scientific Conferences

DOI Restricts Scientists From Attending Scientific Conferences

The Department of Interior (DOI) and two agencies under the DOI have carried out policies that block or restrain federal scientists from attending or presenting at scientific conferences.