Next-Generation Metrics
Responsible metrics and evaluation for open science.
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Responsible metrics and evaluation for open science.
Does the closing of @AxiosReview portend the end of independent peer review, or just the wrong business model?
Common underpinning problems with the scientific and data analytic practices and point to tools and behaviors that can be implemented to reduce the problems with published scientific results.
Efforts to get to grips with the problem have meant new ideas and technologies are now being brought to bear
As the European Research Council celebrates its 10-year anniversary, researchers reveal what more than €12bn of ERC funding has supported.
Similarities and differences in Open Data and Open Science policies between European nations.
A platform enabling scientists to create, share and control open and affordable lab automation tools.
A data set interrogation tool in the field of cell and molecular biology.
It’s not just about distributing credit where it’s due
Citation cartels are groups of researchers and journals that team up with the specific intent of affecting the number of citations their publications receive.
Trump’s pick for the US regulatory agency will bring experience and a clear vision — as well as ties to industry.
Today's robots and artificial intelligence look very different from the androids conceived by Isaac Asimov.
The Research Council of Norway has granted ten research groups status as Norwegian Centres of Excellence.
IVF technique uses DNA from three people to prevent genetic diseases being passed on, and could be offered by Newcastle clinic from this summer.
The study says DeepMind and the NHS shared data without patient consent. DeepMind says the published study has flaws
Diverse and controversial opinions are “a hallmark of MIT,” says director of MIT Media Lab.
A beautiful new way to create and share research figures.
How a seemingly innocent blog post led to serious doubts about Cornell’s famous food laboratory.
Last month I found myself sitting on a leather couch, my black dress smoothed over my knees, in a hushed wood-paneled room in Washington, D.C.
My uncle immigrated to the United States in 1956 with no assets, a brilliant mind, ambition, and a faith that America was a great country of opportunity. He escaped from Hungary, a country of communists, at the time a source of great fear among many US politicians. If the US President at his time were making policy similar to our President today, my uncle would’ve never been allowed in the US.
Who could object to calls for basing government regulations on the "best available science"? But in Washington, D.C., the phrase has become code for a contentious debate surrounding federal regulatory agencies.
New techniques being used to produce our food or shape the environment raise regulatory questions.