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A newsletter and curated collection of 14973 articles on science policy
Supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation
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News
Big Data
UK

British Heart Foundation £10m Data Science Centre Set in Train

web
Big Data
UK

British Heart Foundation £10m Data Science Centre Set in Train

The British Heart Foundation (BHF) and Health Data Research UK have set up a £10m data science centre

web
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Publications
Open Access

The Future of OA: A Large-scale Analysis Projecting Open Access Publication and Readership

biorxiv
Open Access

The Future of OA: A Large-scale Analysis Projecting Open Access Publication and Readership

This study analyses OA papers over time. Given existing trends, the authors estimate that by 2025, the declining relevance of closed access articles is likely to change the landscape of scholarly communication in the years to come.

biorxiv
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Web
Climate

Climate Change Activists Are Focused on All the Wrong Solutions

web
Climate

Climate Change Activists Are Focused on All the Wrong Solutions

Individual actions, such as ditching meat and not flying, won't make a substantial difference to our planet - and such demands divert attention away from the solutions that are needed.

web
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Web
Science Journalism

Medicine and the Media: Medical Experts' Problems and Solutions While Working with Journalists

plosone
Science Journalism

Medicine and the Media: Medical Experts' Problems and Solutions While Working with Journalists

Medical experts are one of the main sources used by journalists in reporting on medical science. This study aims to identify problems that medical experts encounter in contacts with the media representatives, elucidate their attitudes about interactions with journalists and reflect on solutions that could improve the quality of medical journalism.

plosone
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Opinion
Open Access

Scholarship Has Bigger Fish to Fry Than Access

web
Open Access

Scholarship Has Bigger Fish to Fry Than Access

Around the globe, there are initiatives and organizations devoted to bring "Open Access" to the world, i.e., the public availability of scholarly research works, free of charge. However, the current debate seems to largely miss the point.

web
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Web
Awards
Economy

'Randomistas' Who Used Controlled Trials to Fight Poverty Win Economics Nobel

nature
Awards
Economy

'Randomistas' Who Used Controlled Trials to Fight Poverty Win Economics Nobel

Abhijit Banerjee, Esther Duflo and Michael Kremer have been awarded the prize for their experimental approach to alleviating poverty.

nature
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Web
Open Data

Two Competing Visions for Research Data Sharing

scholarlykitchen
Open Data

Two Competing Visions for Research Data Sharing

In a crowded and confusing landscape for research data preservation and sharing, two fundamentally competing visions are emerging. Which will win?

scholarlykitchen
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Web
Peer Review
Funding

Thousands of Grant Peer Reviewers Share Concerns in Global Survey

nature
Peer Review
Funding

Thousands of Grant Peer Reviewers Share Concerns in Global Survey

Peer review process helps funders make decisions, but researchers say it is lacks transparency and takes up too much of their time.

nature
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News
Science Culture
AI
Integrity

How Photos of Your Kids Are Powering Surveillance Technology

nytimes
Science Culture
AI
Integrity

How Photos of Your Kids Are Powering Surveillance Technology

Millions of Flickr images were sucked into a database called MegaFace. Now some of those faces may have the ability to sue.

nytimes
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News
AI

Google Will Not Renew Pentagon Contract That Upset Employees

nytimes
AI

Google Will Not Renew Pentagon Contract That Upset Employees

Diane Greene, the head of Google's Cloud business, is said to have told employees that it was backing away from the A.I. work with the military.

nytimes
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News
Brexit
Science

Brexit Hits UK Science Funding and Workforce

bbc
Brexit
Science

Brexit Hits UK Science Funding and Workforce

The first figures emerge demonstrating that Brexit uncertainty has adversely affected UK research.

bbc
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Web
Preprints

The Second Wave of Preprint Servers: How Can Publishers Keep Afloat?

scholarlykitchen
Preprints

The Second Wave of Preprint Servers: How Can Publishers Keep Afloat?

A discussion of the findings of a research study into the recent growth of preprint servers and exploration of how publishers might respond.

scholarlykitchen
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Opinion
Science Culture
Early Career Researchers

Funders and Journals, Not Students, Should Lead on Standards for Research Rigour

nature
Science Culture
Early Career Researchers

Funders and Journals, Not Students, Should Lead on Standards for Research Rigour

The efforts of young researchers to fight the perverse incentives that dominate science right now are all the more impressive because these scientists are at the most vulnerable point of their careers.

nature
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Publications
Peer Review

The Limitations to Our Understanding of Peer Review

web
Peer Review

The Limitations to Our Understanding of Peer Review

Peer review is embedded in the core of our scholarly knowledge generation systems, conferring legitimacy on research while distributing academic capital and prestige on individuals. Despite its critical importance, it curiously remains poorly understood in a number of dimensions.

web
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News
US
Integrity
Science Politics

Scientific Integrity Bill Advances in U.S. House with Bipartisan Support

aaas
US
Integrity
Science Politics

Scientific Integrity Bill Advances in U.S. House with Bipartisan Support

Democrats drop some provisions to gain Republican backing and improve chances of final passage of the scientific integrity bill.

aaas
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News
Awards
Gender

Boosting Inclusivity in the Nobels

nature
Awards
Gender

Boosting Inclusivity in the Nobels

After the euphoria of 2018, this year's Nobel prizes in chemistry, medicine and physics have again all been awarded to men. Here are three ways to encourage change.

nature
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Opinion
Science Politics

What’s Lost When Research Is Driven Primarily by Funding

scientificamerican
Science Politics

What’s Lost When Research Is Driven Primarily by Funding

Science today is facing what seem to be unrelated crises, issues and problems with the public. We tend to see science in terms of the science of the past, and its great achievements, whereas the way science is done, evaluated and made accountable, no longer fits its historical image.

scientificamerican
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News
Brexit
Funding
Horizon Europe

Brexit Uncertainty Sees UK Share of EU Research Funding Drop from 16% to 11%

sciencebusiness
Brexit
Funding
Horizon Europe

Brexit Uncertainty Sees UK Share of EU Research Funding Drop from 16% to 11%

The UK's share of EU research funding has fallen dramatically because of Brexit uncertainty, with the country's take home from the EU Horizon 2020 programme cut by almost €500 million since 2015, according an analysis by the Royal Society.

sciencebusiness
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Publications
Latin America
Open Access
Plan S

Plan S in Latin America: Primum Non Nocere

zenodo
Latin America
Open Access
Plan S

Plan S in Latin America: Primum Non Nocere

zenodo
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Opinion
Gender

The Metaphorical Power of NASA's First All-women Spacewalk

qz
Gender

The Metaphorical Power of NASA's First All-women Spacewalk

The story of the first female spacewalk doubles as a metaphor for what it's like to be a woman full of ambition in 2019.

qz
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Publications
Open Science
Open Access

Contextualizing Openness: Situating Open Science | IDRC - International Development Research Centre

web
Open Science
Open Access

Contextualizing Openness: Situating Open Science | IDRC - International Development Research Centre

web
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Publications
Meta-research

Which Academic Search Systems are Suitable for Systematic Reviews or Meta‐Analyses?

wiley
Meta-research

Which Academic Search Systems are Suitable for Systematic Reviews or Meta‐Analyses?

This study investigates and compares the systematic search qualities of 28 widely used academic search systems, including Google Scholar, PubMed and Web of Science.

wiley
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Publications
Grants

The Increasing Importance of Fellowships and Career Development Awards in the Careers of Early-stage Biomedical Academic Researchers

plosone
Grants

The Increasing Importance of Fellowships and Career Development Awards in the Careers of Early-stage Biomedical Academic Researchers

Grants are becoming a more common component of a faculty candidate’s resume for biomedical faculty positions.

plosone
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Publications
Output
Evaluation
Funding
Rankings

Scientific Output Scales with Resources. A Comparison of US and European Universities

plosone
Output
Evaluation
Funding
Rankings

Scientific Output Scales with Resources. A Comparison of US and European Universities

A recent study finds a strong correlation between university revenues and their volume of publications and (field-normalized) citations. These results demonstrate empirically that international rankings are by and large richness measures and, therefore, can be interpreted only by introducing a measure of resources.

plosone
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Publications
Gender
Higher Education

Regional, Institutional, and Departmental Factors Associated with Gender Diversity Among BS-level Chemical and Electrical Engineering Graduates

plosone
Gender
Higher Education

Regional, Institutional, and Departmental Factors Associated with Gender Diversity Among BS-level Chemical and Electrical Engineering Graduates

Engineering remains the least gender diverse of the science, technology, engineering and mathematics fields. Chemical engineering (ChE) and electrical engineering (EE) are exemplars of relatively high and low gender diversity, respectively. Here, we investigate departmental, institutional, and regional factors associated with gender diversity among BS graduates within the US, 2010-2016. For both fields, gender diversity was significantly higher at private institutions (p < 1x10-6) and at historically black institutions (p < 1x10-5). No significant association was observed with gender diversity among tenure-track faculty, PhD-granting status, and variations in departmental name beyond the standard "chemical engineering" or "electrical engineering". Gender diversity among EE graduates was significantly decreased (p = 8x10-5) when a distinct degree in computer engineering was available; no such association was observed between ChE gender diversity and the presence of biology-associated degrees. States with a highly gender diverse ChE workforce had a significantly higher degree of gender diversity among BS graduates (p = 3x10-5), but a significant association was not observed for EE. State variation in funding of support services for K-12 pupils significantly impacted gender diversity of graduates in both fields (p < 1x10-3), particularly in regards to instructional staff support (p < 5x10-4). Nationwide, gender diversity could not be concluded to be either significantly increasing or significantly decreasing for either field.

plosone
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Publications
International

Economic Sanctions and Academia: Overlooked Impact and Long-term Consequences

plosone
International

Economic Sanctions and Academia: Overlooked Impact and Long-term Consequences

Sanctions place "invisible barriers" for research by limiting access to necessary resources and curtailing their effective use. This paper presents a national survey of Sudanese academics focused on the impact of 20 years of economic sanctions. It identifies key areas that have been impacted by international sanctions, and highlights how the impact on academia is likely to persist long after they are formally lifted.

plosone
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Publications
Clinical Trials
Industry

Associations Between Industry Involvement and Study Characteristics at the Time of Trial Registration in Biomedical Research

plosone
Clinical Trials
Industry

Associations Between Industry Involvement and Study Characteristics at the Time of Trial Registration in Biomedical Research

Study investigates whether industry involvement in biomedical research affects trial design. A reduced use of active controls (such as alternate treatment or standard care) was found in trials with industry involvement, which can have the side effect of making results look more favourable than they actually are.

plosone
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Publications
Funding

Assessing the Impact of a Research Funder's Recommendation to Consider Core Outcome Sets

plosone
Funding

Assessing the Impact of a Research Funder's Recommendation to Consider Core Outcome Sets

Background Core outcome sets (COS) have the potential to reduce waste in research by improving the consistency of outcomes measured in trials of the same health condition. However, this reduction in waste will only be realised through the uptake of COS by clinical trialists. Without uptake, the continued development of COS that are not implemented may add to waste in research. Funders of clinical trials have the potential to have an impact on COS uptake by recommending their use to those applying for funding. The aim of our study was to assess the extent to which applicants followed the National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment (NIHR HTA) programme's recommendation to search for a COS to include in their clinical trial. Methods and findings We examined the outcomes section and detailed project descriptions of all 95 researcher-led primary research applications submitted to the NIHR HTA between January 2012, when the recommendation to search for a COS was included in the guidance for applicants, and December 2015 for evidence that a search for a COS had taken place and rationale for outcome choice in the absence of COS. A survey of applicants was conducted to further explore their use of COS and choice of outcomes with a response rate of 49%. Nine out of 95 applicants (10%) stated in their application that they had searched the COMET (Core Outcome Measures for Effectiveness Trials) Initiative database for a COS and another nine referred to searching for a COS using another method, e.g. a review of the literature. Of the 77 (81%) applicants that did not mention COMET or COS in their application, eight stated in the survey that they had searched the COMET database and ten carried out a search using another method. Some applicants who did not search for a COS gave reasons for their choice of outcomes including taking advice from patients and the public and choosing outcomes used in previous trials. Conclusion A funding body can have an impact on COS uptake by encouraging trialists to search for a COS. Funders could take further steps by putting processes in place to prompt applicants to be explicit about searching for COS in their application and notifying the funding board if a search has not taken place. The sources of information used by trialists to make decisions about outcomes in the absence of COS may suggest methods of dissemination for COS.

plosone
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News
Diversity

What's Behind The Research Funding Gap For Black Scientists?

npr
Diversity

What's Behind The Research Funding Gap For Black Scientists?

Racial disparities in funding may be partly caused by topic choice, study finds.

npr
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News
Switzerland

Swiss Elections: Landslide Green Gains Tip Parliament to the Left

swissinfo
Switzerland

Swiss Elections: Landslide Green Gains Tip Parliament to the Left

Green parties have made major gains at the expense of parties across the political spectrum in elections to the Swiss parliament, where environmental concerns dominated campaigns in the run-up to Sunday's vote.

swissinfo
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