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66 votes
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In the last decade, extensive fungal growth has developed in Danish museums parallel to climate change, challenging occupational health and heritage preservation
22 votes -
Researchers secretly ran a massive, unauthorized AI persuasion experiment on Reddit users
64 votes -
Nearly a century of happiness research indicates that social interactions are most significant
13 votes -
Meet the death metal singers changing vocal health research
28 votes -
How do you keep up with the research in your field?
Do you have a weekly or daily routine? A preferred application? For context, I’m an ecologist that focuses on statistics and modeling and I work in a few different ecosystems. I’ve always...
Do you have a weekly or daily routine? A preferred application?
For context, I’m an ecologist that focuses on statistics and modeling and I work in a few different ecosystems. I’ve always struggled to feel like I have a good understanding of the literature and I think there are a few main reasons.
- Quantity: It’s overwhelming. There is so. Much. Research. And there’s more literally every day that is or might be relevant.
- Sources: Relatedly, there are so many journals to try to keep up with. And certainly more that I should be keeping up with that I’m not even aware of.
- Method: I haven’t found an interface that really works for me. I end up ignoring emails with journal table of contents. Scrolling through RSS feeds on Zotero or Mendeley is awful. Going to the journal websites is even worse.
- Scheduling: I block out time in my calendar, but there’s always something else I’d rather work on. It’s hard to force myself to focus on it.
- Workflow: The exploration-exploitation trade off. If I skim through all the titles of a bunch of different journals, I end up just spending the whole time downloading papers which then sit in my Zotero library without getting read. If I stop to look in more detail, I don’t get through much of the article list.
- Retention: It’s hard to read something over and really retain it. I’ve taken notes (digitally and on paper) but that adds to the time it takes to skim titles and abstracts, which reduces the number I can cover.
One of the downsides of everything being digital is that I also find it harder to skim an article and get the gist of it. Flipping through a magazine lets you skim the titles and figures to easily get the main idea. Online, I need to read the title, click in a new tab if it seems interesting, scroll around to skim the abstract, and scroll and/or click to the figures. Flipping back and forth to the abstract or different sections is also harder.
What I’d really like is something kind of like a forum or link aggregator where I could skim titles and click an expander to view the abstract and figures.
16 votes -
Norway has launched a new scheme to lure top international researchers amid growing pressure on academic freedom in the US
11 votes -
Sci-Net: A new social network platform to request and share research articles
24 votes -
Those dire wolves aren’t an amazing scientific breakthrough. They’re a disturbing symbol of where we’re heading.
35 votes -
The scientists who leave little trace at the world's northernmost laboratory in Ny-Ålesund in Norway's Arctic
8 votes -
Microsoft launches generative AI-powered, Quake II “inspired” tech demo
19 votes -
32-bit RISC-V processor made using molybdenum disulfide instead of silicon
13 votes -
New plastic dissolves in the ocean overnight, leaving no microplastics
35 votes -
How population stratification led to a decade of sensationally false genetic findings
15 votes -
Tracing the thoughts of a large language model
10 votes -
Combining machine learning and homomorphic encryption in the Apple ecosystem
9 votes -
Next.js and the corrupt middleware: the authorizing artifact
20 votes -
Virologists are still bringing dangerous, novel pathogens in from the wild
11 votes -
How ‘talk pedometers’ are transforming education in Birmingham, US classrooms
18 votes -
Scientists have bred "Woolly Mice" on their journey to bring back the mammoth
40 votes -
DARPA research show that a single person can effectively manage a swarm of more than 100 autonomous robots at once
16 votes -
Minimally actuated reconfigurable continuous track robot
6 votes -
Why has bisexual identity doubled in Stockholm – and what does it tell us about global trends?
10 votes -
Find my hacker: How Apple's network can be a potential tracking tool
16 votes -
Mean World Syndrome - moderate to heavy exposure to violence-related content in mass media may cause people to perceive the world to be more dangerous than it is
36 votes -
US private equity tied to 21% of healthcare bankruptcies for second consecutive year
26 votes -
8 million requests later, we made the SolarWinds supply chain attack look amateur
10 votes -
Education Recovery Scorecard February 2025 report
5 votes -
Cozy video games can be an antidote to stress and anxiety
46 votes -
Slush flows can be more deadly than avalanches – Norwegian scientists are racing to help predict this hidden hazard
5 votes -
US-developed drug formulation could eliminate cold storage for vaccines
11 votes -
US CIA now favors lab leak theory to explain Covid’s origins
33 votes -
Why gen Z is drinking less
37 votes -
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