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Geoffrey Hinton, the 'godfather' of deep learning, on AlphaGo

Geoffrey Hinton, the 'godfather' of deep learning, on AlphaGo

The scientist who helped develop the neural networks behind Google's AlphaGo, which beat grandmaster Lee Sedol, on the past, present and future of AI

“Academics can publish journals of the highest quality without a commercial entity”

“Academics can publish journals of the highest quality without a commercial entity”

Fields Medal-winning Cambridge mathematician Sir Timothy Gowers and a team of colleagues have recently launched a new editor-owned Open Access (OA) journal for mathematics.

On pastrami and the business of PLOS

On pastrami and the business of PLOS

Last week my friend Andy Kern (a population geneticist at Rutgers) went on a bit of a bender on Twitter prompted by his discovery of PLOS’s IRS Form 990 – the annual required financial filing of non-profit corporations in the United States.

After years of growth, female first authorship in top medical journals has stalled

After years of growth, female first authorship in top medical journals has stalled

Female first authorship has increased since 1994 but plateaued from 2009 to 2014

Would the preprint movement revolutionize the life sciences for better or worse?

Would the preprint movement revolutionize the life sciences for better or worse?

Many in the scientific community praise preprints as a means of overcoming the high costs and lengthy peer review process of elite journals, which some argue thwart progress.

As Women Take Over a Male-Dominated Field, the Pay Drops

As Women Take Over a Male-Dominated Field, the Pay Drops

Women’s median annual earnings stubbornly remain about 20 percent below men’s. Why is progress stalling?

Say again? NSF massages grant titles with eye on critics in Congress

Say again? NSF massages grant titles with eye on critics in Congress

Survey finds that 24% of research projects get new titles, up from 10% in 2012

Science infrastructure still a problem for UK policy makers

Science infrastructure still a problem for UK policy makers

This week’s budget contained the usual announcements about new research facilities. But behind the welcome news, concerns continue to mount

"Evidence-based medicine has been hijacked:" A confession from John Ioannidis

"Evidence-based medicine has been hijacked:" A confession from John Ioannidis

John Ioannidis is perhaps best known for a 2005 paper “Why Most Published Research Findings Are False.” One of the most highly cited researchers in the world, Ioannidis, a professor at Stanford, has built a career in the field of meta-research.

New interactive visualizations of SNSF data

New interactive visualizations of SNSF data

It is now easier to obtain a clear and transparent overview of the thousands of scientific research projects funded by the SNSF. Its P3 database has been redesigned to display information interactively.

Beyond today's crowdsourced science to tomorrow's citizen science cyborgs

Beyond today's crowdsourced science to tomorrow's citizen science cyborgs

Computers are getting better and better at the jobs that previously made sense for researchers to outsource to citizen scientists. But don't worry: there's still a role for people in these projects.

The elephant in the room we can’t ignore

The elephant in the room we can’t ignore

If Donald Trump were to trigger a crisis in Western democracy, scientists would need to look at their part in its downfall, says Colin Macilwain.