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Increasing Your Research's Exposure on Figshare Using the FAIR Data Principles

Increasing Your Research's Exposure on Figshare Using the FAIR Data Principles

The FAIR principles were published in 2016 in a Scientific Data article titled 'FAIR Guiding Principles for scientific data management and stewardship'. These were developed to aid in the discovery and reuse of research data.FAIR stands for Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable. Data that meet these principles are more optimal for reuse and discoverability and in turn increase your research's exposure.Here's how your data is more FAIR when it's on Figshare.Illustration by Jason McDermott of RedPenBlackPen.

Vaccine Candidates for Poor Nations Are Going to Waste

Vaccine Candidates for Poor Nations Are Going to Waste

Promising immunizations for diseases that affect mostly people in low- and middle-income countries need help getting to market.

When Open Access to Research Becomes Personal

When Open Access to Research Becomes Personal

I’m not the first to come up with a personal story about the importance of open access and I’m not going to tell my story right now. I want to tell two other stories from the past couple of weeks that have reinforced for me why I do what I do every day in advocating for full and immediate open access to research.

The Nobel Prize for Climate Catastrophe

The Nobel Prize for Climate Catastrophe

The economist William Nordhaus will receive his profession's highest honor for research on global warming that's been hugely influential - and entirely misguided.

Postdocs Trying to Transition to Non-academic Careers Should Be Offered More Support by Their Supervisors and Universities

Postdocs Trying to Transition to Non-academic Careers Should Be Offered More Support by Their Supervisors and Universities

Despite the position being billed as a stepping stone on the way to tenure-track academic employment, many postdocs, discouraged by their poor prospects, are questioning their career choices and instead looking to non-academic jobs as an alternative. However, as Chris Hayter and Marla A. Parker reveal, making this transition is not as easy as it might first appear.

What a Massive Database of Retracted Papers Reveals About Science Publishing's 'death Penalty'

What a Massive Database of Retracted Papers Reveals About Science Publishing's 'death Penalty'

Better editorial oversight, not more flawed papers, might explain flood of retractions

On the Value of Preprints: an Early Career Researcher Perspective

On the Value of Preprints: an Early Career Researcher Perspective

A perspective from an interdisciplinary group of early career researchers on the value of preprints, advocating the wide adoption of preprints to advance knowledge and facilitate career development.

Gender and Quality Create Conflict when Hiring Academics

Gender and Quality Create Conflict when Hiring Academics

Many believe it is difficult to reconcile demands for gender equality and measures such as moderate quotas with academia's conception of quality. This is according to a new master's thesis on assessments and gender in hiring processes for senior-level positions.

Margaret Heffernan: 'The More Academics Compete, the Fewer Ideas They Share'

Margaret Heffernan: 'The More Academics Compete, the Fewer Ideas They Share'

The entrepreneur and author on how universities can create a healthy working culture

How to Keep Up to Date with the Literature but Avoid Information Overload

How to Keep Up to Date with the Literature but Avoid Information Overload

Getting the most out of your Google Scholar profile, creating some old-fashioned table of contents alerts, and simply setting aside time to periodically review key journal titles will ensure you rarely miss out on important research.

Let's Focus on the Research Process, Not the Outputs

Let's Focus on the Research Process, Not the Outputs

Ensuring we focus our definition of success around valuable contributions - instead of around the final output - would recognise and reward good research and researchers.

Time to Break Academic Publishing's Stranglehold on Research

Time to Break Academic Publishing's Stranglehold on Research

Science journals are laughing all the way to the bank, locking the results of publicly funded research behind exorbitant paywalls. A campaign to make content free must succeed

Do You Have Concerns About Plan S? Then You Must Be an Irresponsible, Privileged, Conspiratorial Hypocrite

Do You Have Concerns About Plan S? Then You Must Be an Irresponsible, Privileged, Conspiratorial Hypocrite

Over 1,200 researchers signed an open letter expressing concern about Plan S. Then Twitter came for them -- and, more particularly, for the woman who organized the letter.

Do We Need an Open Science Coalition?

Do We Need an Open Science Coalition?

What exactly is Open Science? Its lack of an appropriate common definition has meant Open Science can be a variety of things; a social justice issue, part of a political capitalist regime, or a form of traditional science. But this lack of consensus leaves room for Open Science to be co-opted and even exploited.

British Public Proud of the UK's Universities, New Poll Reveals

British Public Proud of the UK's Universities, New Poll Reveals

There is a myth that the public are sceptical about the merits of universities. In fact, as this research shows, the opposite is true. The public are hugely positive towards universities and see the benefits of a university education.