Pressure to Publish in Journals Drives Too Much Cookie-Cutter Research
Evaluating academic performance on the basis of journal publications is skewing research priorities. This does our public funders a disservice.
Send us a link
Evaluating academic performance on the basis of journal publications is skewing research priorities. This does our public funders a disservice.
Berlin Universities demand fair prices and free access to information.
A simulation-based evaluation of statistical tests on publication bias.
Linked Open Data may sound good and noble, but it’s the wrong way around.
The ‘trainee’ designation has broad implications, noted speakers at the Future of Biomedical Graduate and Postdoctoral Training meeting earlier this month.
Crispr inventor Jennifer Doudna talks about discovering the gene-editing tool, the split with her collaborator and the complex ethics of genetic manipulation.
The British Academy and the Royal Society are carrying out a project examining new uses of data and their implications, and reviewing the data governance landscape.
Fed up with the relentless pressure to produce reams of jazzed-up findings, a group of junior researchers at the University of Cambridge are fighting back with a campaign called Bullied into Bad Science.
Musicians and moviemakers are not the only ones to suffer from internet piracy.
A group of junior researchers at Cambridge have established a campaign against the damaging pressure to produce 'sexier' results
A time-limited exercise in which academics from many disciplines and from all over the world were brought together virtually to produce an academic article.
Exploring research career transitions and shaping research culture in the UK.
New procedures give president final say in academy's elections.
The number of researchers who work on basic science questions has dropped precipitously.
There are probably much better reasons for creating a diverse team and organization than boosting creativity.
Interview with Alexandra Elbakyan, creator of the site Sci-Hub.
Low salaries, excessive bureaucracy and poorly defined research policies add to region’s woes.
The recent long read about scientific publishing in the Guardian is fantastic. It depicts a very telling story of the research publishing landscape.
5–8 September 2017, Bern, Switzerland
David Spiegelhalter, president of Royal Statistical Society, says sloppy attitude to statistics leads to misleading claims and draws parallels to rise of fake news
Stanford professor says $15 million lawsuit victory will not engender sympathy for publishing giant
The journal published guidelines on Thursday aimed at reducing scientific misconduct and at making studies easier to check and replicate.