Five Reasons Blog Posts Sre of Higher Scientific Quality than Journal Articles
In this blog, I will examine the hypothesis that blogs are, on average, of higher quality than journal articles.
Send us a link
In this blog, I will examine the hypothesis that blogs are, on average, of higher quality than journal articles.
An approach that may be tried in the Netherlands would do away with peer review and just let researchers give each other money.
Feeling a bit queasy these days? Small wonder. We are awash in disruption. Clearly, the d-word has long since become a trend in its own right.
Open data, code, materials and other reasons make blog posts score better on some core scientific values.
The hypercompetitive world of biomedical research occasionally drives scientists to cheat. More often, scientists make decisions that undercut their results. That can lead colleagues astray.
A matched-control analysis of papers containing problematic image duplications.
The disparity between the rich and everyone else is larger than ever in the United States and increasing in much of Europe. Why?
Venture capitalists are bright, clannish and almost exclusively male
You might see science as splashy headlines and a barrage of new results—but in the background are people with emotions and ambitions, politics, and a system that promotes publishing novel findings above all. A new paper on eel navigation highlights some of these systemic troubles.
As researchers prepare for the science march, it's worth noting that the flip-side of Trump's anti-science is a sort of alt-science appeasement on the left.
The growing need for collaboration among young scientists is more essential now than ever before, with careers in research becoming more uncertain and perilous.
Bulgaria is set to lose millions of euros in EU funding aimed at modernising the country’s research infrastructure and stimulating its innovation potential, apparently due to its inability to select independent evaluators.
Linguists, anthropologists and political scientists take to Capitol Hill to defend their research.
Male scientists in the United Kingdom report teaching less than their female counterparts, while women and minorities tend to feel disadvantaged in their careers.
The science and engineering workforce has aged rapidly, both absolutely and relative to the workforce, which is a concern if the large number of older scientists crowds out younger scientists.
Significance thresholds and the crisis of unreplicable research
A new Council of Graduate Schools report that highlights the lack of career development support at many institutions also offers some useful resources.
A message from eLife early career group made up of graduate students, post docs, and junior group leaders of the eLife early-career advisory board.
Some lessons from the health community’s long battle with misinformation.
Without data on how artificial intelligence is affecting jobs, policymakers will fly blind into the next industrial revolution, warn Tom Mitchell and Erik Brynjolfsson.
Philosopher and cognitive scientist David Chalmers warns about an AI-dominated future world without consciousness at a recent conference on artificial intelligence that also included Elon Musk, Ray Kurzweil, Sam Harris, Demis Hassabis and others.
Learn about the open access publishing model in Latin America which helps disseminate scientific knowledge without restrictions.
As per a new open access policy, all academic research from Dutch scientists should be made available under gold open access by 2024.
The process for correcting a published article can be needlessly burdensome. So some researchers have decided to take matters into their own hands.
A systematic approach to identifying and analyzing scientists on Twitter.
Post-publication peer review emerged in response to increased calls for continuous moderation of the published research literature.
Consider biomedical preclinical and clinical research, in which the trusted service involves the exchange of papers, data, software, reagents, and so on.
Brain drain to Western nations has apparently left researchers in Eastern Europe with fewer foreign co-authors.