Row over proposed biomedical centre intensifies
Document submitted to the Italian Senate criticizes institute that will oversee a €1.5-billion project.
Send us a link
Document submitted to the Italian Senate criticizes institute that will oversee a €1.5-billion project.
Open competitions bring new minds, skills and collaborations to problems in biomedical research.
What do the world’s six most reputed universities have in common?
The open source physics site arXiv is turning 25, and it's going to get a makeover. But what does that mean for its principles of data transparency?
The seven excuses for not doing so are all invalid.
An opinon on the article "Merck Wants Its Money Back if University Research Is Wrong"
Today the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) will remove approximately 3300 journals for failure to submit a valid reapplication before the communicated deadline.
Team finalists receive $80,000 each to develop products to overcome hurdles in big data access and usage.
Science "deserves better than to be twisted out of proportion and turned into morning show gossip."
Women only got top billing in 37 percent of medical studies published in leading journals over the past two decades.
Notes on Open Science from the Barcamp Science 2.0 and the Science 2.0 Conference.
John Oliver discusses how and why media outlets so often report untrue or incomplete information as science.
How can interdisciplinary research proposals be more effectively assessed through peer review?
Royal Society's President, Sir Venki Ramakrishnan, on the key principles to guide the future of UK's research.
Interview with Daniel Lakens, Assistant Professor in Applied Cognitive Psychology at the Eindhoven University of Technology
A study released on Thursday found that many Ph.D. students pursue post-docs as a “default” option after graduate school, or as part of a “holding pattern” until the job they want is available.
Complex, diverse rationales require nuanced policies: evidence suggests a need for increased attention to career planning among students, their mentors, graduate schools, and funders
Survey responses reveal that beyond lack of journal access, convenience and antipathy toward publishers are key motivations for turning to paper repository
The current incentives structure — mostly based on publishing in prestigious journals — discourages sharing, replication, and, some argue, careful science.
Crossref will enable members to register preprints in order to clarify the scholarly citation record and better support the changing publishing models of its members.
The symposium “Personalized Health in the Digitial Age” brings together some of the world's thought leaders in the ongoing revolution in personalized and digital health.
Canadian scientists are now allowed to speak out about their work — and the government policy that had restricted communications.
The problem of bias in published research must be tackled in a consistent and comprehensive fashion, says Adam G. Dunn.
Following their February breakthrough, Kip Thorne, Rainer Weiss, Ronald Drever and nearly 1,000 LIGO scientists will share the Silicon Valley-backed prize.