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The academic world urges publishers to enter a brave new world

The academic world urges publishers to enter a brave new world

The Chair and Secretary-General of LERU present the signatures to the LERU Statement on Open Access to Commissioner Carlos Moedas and Dutch Secretary of State Sander Dekker.

Montreal institute going 'open' to accelerate science

Montreal institute going 'open' to accelerate science

The Montreal Neurological Institute plans to free up its findings, including data that point to connections between brain regions communicating at different neural rhythms.

Controversial CRISPR history sets off an online firestorm

Controversial CRISPR history sets off an online firestorm

Eric Lander's CRISPR history could determine the outcome of a bitter patent fight, but the author failed to disclose conflicts of interest, critics say.

Don't let transparency damage science

Don't let transparency damage science

Stephan Lewandowsky and Dorothy Bishop explain how the research community should protect its members from harassment, while encouraging the openness that has become essential to science.

High Impact, Fast Decisions and Reasonable Rejection Rates

High Impact, Fast Decisions and Reasonable Rejection Rates

Rejection rates in Frontiers journals are around ~27%, most manuscripts are published within 3 months, and yet, Frontiers’ citations rates are amongst the very highest.

How scientists are doing a bait-and-switch with medical data

How scientists are doing a bait-and-switch with medical data

Researchers are “choosing their lottery numbers after seeing the draw”, making medicine less reliable - and respected journals are letting them do it.

Insider's view of faculty search kicks off discussion online

Insider's view of faculty search kicks off discussion online

A Harvard professor reveals how his hiring committee whittles down the pile of job applications.

Selecting for impact: new data debunks old beliefs

Selecting for impact: new data debunks old beliefs

One of the strongest beliefs in scholarly publishing is that journals seeking a high impact factor should be highly selective. There is evidence showing this is wrong.

Why the referees' reports I receive as an editor are so much better than the reports I receive as an author?

Why the referees' reports I receive as an editor are so much better than the reports I receive as an author?

Authors tend to attribute manuscript acceptance to their own ability to write quality papers and simultaneously to blame rejections on negative bias in peer review, displaying a self-serving attributional bias.

Public data archiving in ecology and evolution

Public data archiving in ecology and evolution

This paper highlights key guidelines to help authors increase their data’s reuse potential and compliance with journal data policies.

Wikiometrics: a new, wikipedia-based ranking system

Wikiometrics: a new, wikipedia-based ranking system

This paper presents Wikiometrics: the derivation of metrics and indicators from Wikipedia.

Repetitive flaws

Repetitive flaws

Scientists who submit grant applications to the NIH will be required to explain the scientific premise behind their proposals and defend the quality of their experimental designs.

Media coverage and journal press releases associated with high-impact medical journals

Media coverage and journal press releases associated with high-impact medical journals

The design of clinical studies whose results are published in high-impact medical journals is not associated with the likelihood or amount of ensuing news coverage.

Journals to solve 'John Smith' common name problem by requiring author IDs

Journals to solve 'John Smith' common name problem by requiring author IDs

In an open letter some of the largest academic publishers and scientific societies are announcing that they will not just encourage, but ultimately require, researchers to sign up with ORCID.

The 5-minute journal submission

The 5-minute journal submission

Pathogens & Immunity promises a quick submission procedure, since it provides a reasonable flexibility about the length of the papers and authors are welcome to include reviews from other journals and their responses.

Coupling pre-prints and post-publication peer review for fast, cheap, fair, and effective science publishing

Coupling pre-prints and post-publication peer review for fast, cheap, fair, and effective science publishing

A white paper written by Leslie Vosshall and Michael Eisen aimed at promoting pre-print use in biomedicine.

Seven actionable strategies for advancing women in Science, Engineering, and Medicine

Seven actionable strategies for advancing women in Science, Engineering, and Medicine

A shortlist of recommendations to promote gender equality in science and stimulate future efforts to level the field.