World's smallest gadgets bag Nobel
Laureates developed basic building blocks for molecular machines
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Laureates developed basic building blocks for molecular machines
People no longer take science advice on trust, and science advisers need to provide evidence for their recommendations, according to Carlos Moedas, European Commissioner for Science, Research and Innovation.
‘Academic capitalism’ contributed to the mishandling of the Macchiarini case by officials at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden, argues Olof Hallonsten.
With advanced math, the laureates helped understand unusual phases of matter such as superconductors, superfluids, and thin magnetic fields.
Nature Physics now requires its published papers to include information on whether and how their underlying data are accessible to others.
Upbeat presentation and right-sized asks appear to improve chance of success
Scientists are turning to a software–development site to share data and code.
Iris is an Artificial Intelligence that starts out as a Science Assistant; helping you find the science you need. Over time she will learn, slowly but surely becoming a Scientist herself.
This study investigates whether bias with single-blind review is greatest in a setting of author or institutional prestige.
Cell biologist Yoshinori Ohsumi becomes sole winner of the 2016 Nobel Prize in Phsyiology or Medicine for his work on autophagy
Women and men applying for geoscience postdocs receive very different letters of support from their mentors.
PubPeer users went from discussing papers to hunting down fraud—and have embroiled the site in the most important internet privacy case you've never heard of.
Academic social networks may get users hooked on them, like addicted academics, transforming what should only be a means into an end in itself.
A place for academics to review the publishing process at peer-reviewed journals.
A collection of case studies on various aspects of interdisciplinarity in science.
A voluntary commitment to the values of openness and transparency in science.
Saul Perlmutter tells that there is a ‘fundamental misunderstanding’ of the purpose of research
Science's quality control processes are under question. Scientists should think about changing the rules and extending their peer communities.
The Nobel Prize epitomizes the winner-takes-all economics of credit allocation and distorts the history of science by personalizing discoveries that are truly made by groups of individuals.
A Cross-Sectional Study
Data sharing rules are vague and institution-specific and permit researchers to erect obstacles that give them effective veto power over use of their data.