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37 votes
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South Korean researchers convert cancer cells back into normal cells
27 votes -
How much growth is required to achieve good lives for all? Insights from needs-based analysis.
25 votes -
The Walmart effect
23 votes -
Willow - Google's latest quantum chip
14 votes -
Revisiting stereotype threat
6 votes -
CCTV cameras are everywhere — and they’re changing how your brain responds
7 votes -
Medicare for all would save 68,000 US lives per year and reduce costs by $450 billion
78 votes -
Study: essay graders rarely detect AI, give higher grades
22 votes -
‘Unprecedented risk’ to life on Earth: Scientists call for halt on ‘mirror life’ microbe research
55 votes -
Climate change and more resilient grapes are helping Denmark and Sweden build a winemaking sector
8 votes -
Someone made a dataset of one million Bluesky posts for 'machine learning research'
20 votes -
The Business-School research scandal that just keeps getting bigger
11 votes -
Turtle genomes fold in a special way
6 votes -
Re-evaluating the impact of unconditional cash transfers
16 votes -
Better know a bird: The wild and kinky mating rituals of the crested auklet
16 votes -
World’s first successful aerospike rocket flight test, seventy years in the making
15 votes -
Giant rats in tiny vests trained to sniff out illegally trafficked wildlife
21 votes -
Rebound effects make car sharing and second-hand phones not as green as they seem
15 votes -
Scientists and archivists worry Epic Games' control of the 3D model market will 'destroy' cultural heritage
35 votes -
Longi Green Energy sets world record for crystalline silicon solar module efficiency at 25.4%
13 votes -
Declaration of Helsinki turns sixty – how this foundational document of medical ethics has stood the test of time
8 votes -
New research uncovers why our brains are effective at quickly processing short messages
14 votes -
Archaeologists are investigating the possibility Vikings used shortcuts over land to help them move warships and smaller boats around Scotland's west coast
12 votes -
Using Dungeons and Dragons as a group therapy tool
12 votes -
Iceland has been the backdrop for generations of astronaut training missions – we look at what makes the Arctic island nation so crucial for Moon research
4 votes -
Botanists identify thirty-three global ‘dark spots’ with thousands of unknown plants
16 votes -
The Vikings were part of a global network trading in ivory from Greenland
7 votes -
Scores of papers by Eliezer Masliah, prominent US neuroscientist and top National Institutes of Health official, fall under suspicion
25 votes -
Scientific rigor proponents retract paper on benefits of scientific rigor
13 votes -
Dogs bring loads of joy but also perils on a leash
25 votes -
Scientists receive Ig Nobel Prize for discovering mammals can breathe through anuses
43 votes -
Greenhouse gas emissions in US beef production can be reduced by up to 30% with the adoption of selected mitigation measures
18 votes -
r/science user about long-term unemployment
29 votes -
The Marshmallow Test and other predictors of success have bias built in, researchers say
28 votes -
Microplastics are infiltrating brain tissue, studies show
51 votes -
Scientists research man missing 90% of his brain who leads a normal life
27 votes -
Does anyone have experience working as an independent researcher?
Ive been working in engineering for a few years now. Ive gotten pretty good at my job, and Ive learned a lot. But it was never really my intention to work at a big corporation my whole life. When...
Ive been working in engineering for a few years now. Ive gotten pretty good at my job, and Ive learned a lot. But it was never really my intention to work at a big corporation my whole life.
When I was a kid, on TV there were all these scientists and researchers who just had money to do research somehow. They didnt go to an office or go to meetings, they just had funding somehow to go do science stuff. There was often a big lab built right into their home so they could just wake up and tinker around with stuff. That was the dream for me growing up.
I could always just keep working where I am now, but I cant really do the kind of research I want within the normal structured environment that big companies want me to work in. I want to work on a difficult problem that I would expect to take years of experimentation before I would even hope of making any big breakthroughs.
Im wondering if anyone here has ever done any kind of work as an independent researcher. Like, living off grant money or something like that. Ive been looking at SBIR/STTR grants as a possible first step, but that would only get me 3 years, and after that Id need to find a continued income source.
17 votes -
Activision and Call of Duty have published a paper detailing skill based matchmaking and how its presence or absence affects enjoyment of games
56 votes -
Engineers develop a recipe for zero-emissions fuel: soda cans (aluminium), seawater and caffeine
34 votes -
Maglev titanium heart now whirs inside the chest of a live patient
24 votes -
Amid a growing awareness of youth mental health, twenty schools in Denmark have pushed back their start times following a two-year trial
23 votes -
Pig transplant research yields pork safe for some with red meat allergy caused by lone star tick
20 votes -
Academic authors 'shocked' after Taylor & Francis sells access to their research to Microsoft AI
42 votes -
‘Goldmine’ collection of wheat from 100 years ago may help feed the world, scientists say
25 votes -
Why don’t we know how antidepressants work yet?
30 votes -
Genomic prediction of IQ is modern snake oil
11 votes -
How AI revolutionized protein science, but didn’t end it
16 votes -
For many Olympic medalists, silver stings more than bronze
14 votes -
Researchers describe how to tell if ChatGPT is confabulating
24 votes