opinion articles

Send us a link

Subscribe to our newsletter

EU must spend more on research and development

EU must spend more on research and development

Europe is already a world leader in areas from car and aerospace manufacturing to chemicals, and its focus on high-tech niches – which are less subject to low-cost competition – remains a source of strength.

A world digital library is coming true!

A world digital library is coming true!

In the scramble to gain market share in cyberspace, something is getting lost: the public interest. Libraries and laboratories-crucial nodes of the World Wide Web-are buckling under economic pressure, and the information they diffuse is being diverted away from the public sphere, where it can do most good.

A Longitude Prize for the twenty-first century

A Longitude Prize for the twenty-first century

The UK Government’s new prize for substantial innovation to address pressing societal problems should be welcomed, says Martin Rees.

Alternative modes of research funding: exceptions or growing trend?

Alternative modes of research funding: exceptions or growing trend?

Peer-review of projects dominates when it comes to decision on how to allocate funding for science. But is it really the best way?

Farce, then tragedy?

Farce, then tragedy?

Racist government policies hurt the higher education sector, says Kevin Fong, but the harm doesn't stop there I seem to recall that "education, education, education" was Tony Blair's battle cry in the run-up to the 1996 general election. (With hindsight, the title of the Kaiser Chiefs' latest album, Education, Education, Education and War, might have been closer to the mark.)

"Massenmeinungen gefährden die Wissenschaft"

"Massenmeinungen gefährden die Wissenschaft"

Auf Google hoch platzierte Publikationen hinterfragt kaum jemand, beklagt US-Soziologe James Evans. Gleichzeitig rät er Forschern, mehr Denkarbeit an Computer abzugeben.

Why do we still have journals?

Why do we still have journals?

The Web has greatly reduced the barriers to entry for new journals and other platforms for communicating scientific output, and the number of journals continues to multiply. This leaves readers and authors with the daunting cognitive challenge of navigating the literature and discerning contributions that are both relevant and significant.

This is important. You have £5.8 billion to spend on science things

This is important. You have £5.8 billion to spend on science things

How this money is invested could make a huge difference to our future, in the UK and to some extent beyond

Gather and use genetic data in health care

Gather and use genetic data in health care

An article on what is needed for personalized medicine to be reality. "Research into how genetic variants can guide successful treatments must become part of routine medical practice and records", says Geoffrey Ginsburg.

Science tools anyone can afford

Science tools anyone can afford

"Today people look at these extraordinary labs and forget that in the 1800s they could still do the exact same science." -- Manu Prakash

The cost of academic publishing

The cost of academic publishing

What could the UK academic community do with £14.5 million? That is what just 19 Universities in the UK are spending in total during a single year on journal subscriptions to a single publisher.

Tobacco industry-funded research, peer review, and nannying

Tobacco industry-funded research, peer review, and nannying

Aside from the occasional cigar (once every five years or so), I'm one of those smug "never smoked" gits. You then might think that I'm all for plain packaging, not publishing tobacco industry-funded research, and completely against the " normalization" of smoking via the evidently evil medium of e-cigarettes.

The sexiest job of the 21st century

The sexiest job of the 21st century

The sudden appearance of data scientists on the business scene reflects the fact that companies are now wrestling with information that comes in varieties and volumes never encountered before.

Eight (no, nine!) problems with big data

Eight (no, nine!) problems with big data

There is no doubt that big data is a valuable tool that has already had a critical impact in certain areas. But because of its popularity, we need to be levelheaded about what big data can and can’t do.

Evidence-based science policy

Evidence-based science policy

Anne Glover, Chief Scientific Adviser to the European Commission, discusses evidence-based policy and nurturing and supporting a European scientific culture.