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11 votes
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A scientific fraud. An investigation. A lab in recovery.
20 votes -
Scores of papers by Eliezer Masliah, prominent neuroscientist and top NIH official, fall under suspicion
25 votes -
Scientific rigor proponents retract paper on benefits of scientific rigor
13 votes -
Academic publishers face class action over ‘peer review’ pay, other restrictions
34 votes -
Academic authors 'shocked' after Taylor & Francis sells access to their research to Microsoft AI
42 votes -
The unexpected poetry of PhD acknowledgements
29 votes -
The misplaced incentives in academic publishing
21 votes -
How much research is being written by large language models?
14 votes -
Wiley to shutter nineteen more journals, some tainted by fraud
20 votes -
[Columbia University president] Minouche Shafik: Universities must engage in serious soul searching on protests
4 votes -
MIT scraps diversity statements in faculty-hiring process
14 votes -
Canadian science gets biggest boost to PhD and postdoc pay in twenty years
7 votes -
Norway's health minister resigned Friday, the second Norwegian government member to step down this year amid allegations they plagiarized academic works
17 votes -
How to succeed in a cramming-based academic system?
I'm an intuitive learner. I learn by constantly asking questions, the answers to which i can then effortlessly remember. By messing around and seeing what happens, and then asking why. Lecturers...
I'm an intuitive learner. I learn by constantly asking questions, the answers to which i can then effortlessly remember. By messing around and seeing what happens, and then asking why. Lecturers have been enthusiastic about my approach but said I'm going to struggle because the school system in my country wasn't designed for people who learn like this. I want to kill myself.
The way I see myself learning stuff:
- Here's a fresh store-bought kombucha scoby
- Here's a scoby from the same store that I've been growing for 6 weeks
- If I sequenced the DNA from equivalent cells in each of these scobys, would I find any differences? Why?
Same with my latest interest: Law. I've watched a few (mock) court cases and researched whatever questions I came up with, to get an understanding of how courts worked, and had a look at the cited laws.In physics tests I end up running out of time because whenever I forget an equation I need, I try to intuit/derive it, which I would manage given enough time.
The way we are actually expected to learn stuff:
- Listening to a lecturer talk for 12×2 hours, and/or reading the referenced literature. Anything mentioned could be on the test.
I have been trying to do it the mainstream way anyway, but I am getting such bad grades that I've had to re-take a year. Even if I found strategies to help me focus I'd still clearly have a competitive disadvantage to people to whom this approach comes naturally. This feels unfair since I know there is a way that I could learn about my field as effortlessly as other people do listening to these lectures.
How does someone like me succeed in academia instead of just scraping through?
I understand that my prefered methpd which I outlined is what you do at PhD level. I'm afraid that by force-feeding my brain all this information that it currently sees as irrelevant, I will kill my curiousity, which I don't want to do because it's the thing that's allowed me to get this far with practically no effort (I went through the archetypal Smart Kid thing in middle school).
For context, I'm in 1st year bachelor's biochemistry (repeating the year). Although I think that at least in my country, all university courses have the format I described.
Since I am also struggling with ADHD I honestly feel like giving up on Uni and going for some sort of apprentiship-style thing. I would like to have a degree though because it's sort of a requirement nowadays and I am genuinely interested in my subject area. Alternatively, what kind of professions seek my method of inquisitively deep-diving into stuff, as I described?
19 votes -
Argentina president Javier Milei’s actions after taking office have research institutions facing shutdown. Scientists protest.
18 votes -
UK academic’s Wikipedia project raises profile of women around the world
15 votes -
A university professor reflects about time management
7 votes -
A peer reviewed journal with nonsense AI images was just published
33 votes -
Citation cartels help some mathematicians—and their universities—climb the rankings
8 votes -
Science sleuths are using technology to find fakery and plagiarism in published research
16 votes -
Specter of academic plagiarism has now reached the heart of Norwegian politics, toppling one government minister and leaving a second fighting for her political career
10 votes -
Before I reach my enemy, bring me some heads
12 votes -
Why this math professor objects to diversity statements
46 votes -
Scientist cited [by Christopher Rufo to make allegations of plagiarism] in push to oust Harvard’s Claudine Gay has links to eugenicists
10 votes -
Bill Ackman and the crusade against free speech
16 votes -
Despite support from corporation, Harvard president Claudine Gay under fire over plagiarism allegations
18 votes -
What is a math department worth?
25 votes -
Australian academics apologise for false AI-generated allegations against big four consultancy firms
10 votes -
'Not of faculty quality': How Penn mistreated Katalin Karikó, the Nobel Prize winner of 2023
25 votes -
Why do public intellectuals condescend to their readers?
19 votes -
In defense of the beleaguered academic book review
3 votes -
For the first time in the United States, research with cephalopods might require approval by an ethics committee
21 votes -
Why you should divide your life into semesters, even when you’re not in school
19 votes -
What does any of this have to do with physics?
41 votes -
Are there politics in mathematics?
Curious if there are movements within the governance or research pertaining to the field that act to promote or suppress certain ideas? Was watching the “Infinity explained in 5 different levels”...
Curious if there are movements within the governance or research pertaining to the field that act to promote or suppress certain ideas? Was watching the “Infinity explained in 5 different levels” and thought… maybe there are trends for or against interpretations and/or abstractions that get a rise in people…
33 votes -
There’s far more scientific fraud than anyone wants to admit
28 votes -
Researchers, how do you take notes on the papers which you read?
I've been struggling with finding a good workflow for taking notes on the journal articles which I read. I collate articles using Zotero, yet its in-built notetaking features (and comment scraping...
I've been struggling with finding a good workflow for taking notes on the journal articles which I read. I collate articles using Zotero, yet its in-built notetaking features (and comment scraping from PDFs) is quite poor. So, my alternative so far has been to write up notes by hand, but this is pretty cumbersome and makes it take some time to refer to my notes. My approach is clearly not effective!
How do you take notes on the papers which you read? Do you prefer to use written notes, or do you type your notes? In any case, what is your preferred means of storing and categorising your notes? And are there particular software which you use, if you opt for typed notes? (At present, I use an A5 notebook. Yet, this is not alphabetised or organised by topic, which compounds my struggles.)
25 votes -
Stanford University president resigns over manipulated research, will retract at least three papers
47 votes -
Abortion laws are driving academics out of some US states—and keeping others from coming
29 votes -
Specimens are deteriorating at the Florida State Collection of Arthropods; this neglect could interfere with research
https://undark.org/2023/07/05/neglect-of-a-museums-collection-could-cause-scientific-setbacks/ IN A DUSTY ROOM in central Florida, countless millipedes, centipedes, and other creepy-crawlies sit...
https://undark.org/2023/07/05/neglect-of-a-museums-collection-could-cause-scientific-setbacks/
IN A DUSTY ROOM in central Florida, countless millipedes, centipedes, and other creepy-crawlies sit in specimen jars, rotting. The invertebrates are part of the Florida State Collection of Arthropods in Gainesville, which totals more than 12 million insects and other arthropod specimens, and are used by expert curators to identify pest species that threaten Florida’s native and agricultural plants.
However, not all specimens at the facility are treated equally, according to two people who have seen the collection firsthand. They say non-insect samples, like shrimp and millipedes, that are stored in ethanol have been neglected to the point of being irreversibly damaged or lost completely.
When it comes to how the FSCA stacks up with other collections she’s worked in, Ann Dunn, a former curatorial assistant, is blunt: “This is the worst I’ve ever seen.”
Experts say the loss of such specimens — even uncharismatic ones such as centipedes — is a setback for science. Particularly invaluable are holotypes, which are the example specimens that determine the description for an entire species. In fact, the variety of holotypes a collection has is often more important than its size, since those specimens are actively used for research, said Ainsley Seago, an associate curator of invertebrate zoology at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh.
A paper published in March 2023 highlighted the importance of museum specimens more generally, for addressing urgent issues like climate change and wildlife conservation, with 73 of the world’s largest natural history museums estimating their total collections to exceed 1.1 billion specimens. “This global collection,” the authors write, “is the physical basis for our understanding of the natural world and our place in it.”
9 votes -
Neglect of a museum’s collection could cause scientific setbacks at Florida State
12 votes -
How scientific conferences are responding to US abortion bans and anti-LGBTQ+ laws
32 votes -
Independent journalist uncovers a ring dedicated to publishing low quality articles and increasing publishing credits
35 votes -
Is the staggeringly profitable business of scientific publishing bad for science?
8 votes -
Over-reliance on English hinders cognitive science
4 votes -
N=1: Single-subject research
3 votes -
Finnish astronomers acquitted in defamation case related to protesting harassment – astrophysicist Christian Ott argued protests cost him postdoc position
5 votes -
Science has a nasty Photoshopping problem
7 votes -
Security services in Norway say they have arrested a university lecturer accused of working for Russia as a spy
5 votes