Egyptian Researchers Rally Around Science Advocate
Ismail Serageldin, founding director of the Library of Alexandria, has appealed a 3.5-year prison term
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Ismail Serageldin, founding director of the Library of Alexandria, has appealed a 3.5-year prison term
Don't be taken in by the memo’s faux-reasonable tone.
Scholarly work cited in patent literature and the value of the patents as perceived by the applicants of 200 leading global research institutions.
Researchers planted a working hacker "exploit" in a physical strand of DNA.
Oxford researchers are advised that the University’s Research Committee has approved a revised policy for allocating funds from the RCUK Open Access block grant.
Greater collaboration leading to the growing informal use and exchange of free material between researchers.
Researchers planted a working hacker "exploit" in a physical strand of DNA.
Malware can be encoded into a gene and used to take over a computer program.
A paper on conformal algebra has recently caused a stir on social media. Not because of the science, but rather the heartfelt plea in the acknowledgements.
Aarhus University has signed up companies to fund fundamental research in what it calls a ‘patent-free playground’.
Community-driven network will allow scientists to share ideas and post pre-peer review papers.
It’s very far from perfect, but major changes for the better are underway.
Scientists are required to communicate science and research not only to other experts in the field, but also to scientists and experts from other fields, as well as to the public and policymakers. One fundamental suggestion when communicating with non-experts is to avoid professional jargon.
Emojis, smartphone technologies and revamped guidelines would boost transparency at scientific meetings, say Shai D. Silberberg and colleagues.
A recent book took aim at accelerating administrative demands and the internalized expectation of measurable productivity that have eroded the quality of academic life and work. Is there a corollary for scholarly publishing?
The pipeline of women pursuing mathematics and physics is still dreadfully leaky.
For years university researchers have complained that the publishing giant has driven up the costs of journals. Now, as data-sharing becomes more valuable, the company’s shifting focus is raising new concerns.
Budgetary cuts in funding, pseudoscience and growing religious bigotry have left the scientific community worried.
It’s a dirty open secret in academia. Scholars work very hard to prove their work is worth taxpayers’ money, but then publish it in journals that are prohibitively expensive—not just for taxpayers but academics themselves.
As a new French report highlights, early-career researchers face significant challenges landing permanent academic positions—but there may also be some rays of hope.
A new project to convert PDF to XML with high accuracy by complementing existing tools with computer vision technology.
We propose to use an approach that yields a simple numerical measure of veracity, the R-factor, by summarizing the outcomes of already published studies that have attempted to test a claim.
Support for the Google ‘manifesto’ on gender difference recalls the rationale of eugenics.
The infographic shows how to achieve 100% Open Access for free and legally.
U.S. adults see scientists as intelligent, but not always warm. This is a problem because people's perceptions of scientists' warmth influence their trust in scientific information. Could scientists be improving trust via social media?