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24 votes
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How a flawed idea is teaching millions of kids to be poor readers
64 votes -
Epstein-Barr virus appears to be trigger of lupus disease
29 votes -
New protein-based gel repairs tooth enamel
32 votes -
Iceland's glaciers and the disappearance of a frozen world – ‘last chance tourism’ brings economic benefits but puts pressure on local communities in an increasingly fragile landscape
7 votes -
James Watson, dead at 97, was a scientific legend and a pariah among his peers
30 votes -
How Bill Gates is reframing the climate change debate
34 votes -
Companies are crafting new ways to grow cocoa and chocolate alternatives
24 votes -
Mosquitoes have been found in Iceland for the first time as global heating makes the country more hospitable for insects
28 votes -
The Icelandic volcanic island of Surtsey emerged in the 1960s, and scientists say studying its development offers hope for damaged ecosystems worldwide
9 votes -
Scientists say they have solved the mystery of what killed more than five billion sea stars
28 votes -
Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2025 for the development of a new type of molecular architecture – metal–organic frameworks
12 votes -
Scientists make most authentic kidney replicas so far
4 votes -
Ask not why would you work in biology, but rather: why wouldn't you?
16 votes -
The Nobel Prize winners will be announced next week – what to know about the prestigious awards
11 votes -
The rise of 'conspiracy physics'
27 votes -
Scientists unlock secret to Venus flytrap’s hair-trigger response
9 votes -
A review of the book "The War on Science"
17 votes -
Why do some gamers invert their controls? Scientists now have answers, but they’re not what you think.
36 votes -
A NASA food scientist tackled the problem of how to feed astronauts. Now, his idea fuels first responders and mothers of infants.
12 votes -
After ten years of black hole science, Stephen Hawking is proven right
23 votes -
He knew Greenland's melting ice better than anyone. Then he disappeared into it.
13 votes -
Scientists reversed memory loss in mice due to faulty mitochondria
11 votes -
Two geologists who found a meteorite that had fallen onto a plot of land outside Enköping are entitled to the stone, the Swedish Supreme Court rules
15 votes -
Scientists uncover 75,000-year-old Arctic animal remains in Norwegian cave
9 votes -
New mRNA vaccine shows promise in malaria prevention
13 votes -
Troubling scenes from an Arctic in full-tilt crisis. The heat that hit Svalbard in February was so intense that scientists could dig into the ground with spoons, "like it was soft ice cream."
41 votes -
Full-body scans of 100,000 people could change way diseases are detected and treated
26 votes -
Sight of someone potentially infectious causes immune response, research suggests
19 votes -
Air pollution raises risk of dementia, say Cambridge scientists
16 votes -
Unique 1.5m year-old ice to be melted to unlock mystery
16 votes -
Scientists estimate European heatwave caused 2,300 deaths last week
32 votes -
Scientists built a canoe using only prehistoric tools. Then they sailed the dangerous 140-mile route early humans traveled 30,000 years ago.
32 votes -
'Positive review only': Researchers hide AI prompts in papers to influence automated review
29 votes -
Finding Peter Putnam
15 votes -
In war zones, a race to save key seeds needed to feed the world
12 votes -
‘Dragon prince’ dinosaur discovery 'rewrites' T.rex family tree
15 votes -
Wernher von Braun’s record on civil rights
11 votes -
The strange (pre-tectonics) hypothesis of Earth expanding like a balloon
6 votes -
Seeing infrared: scientists create contact lenses that grant ‘super-vision’
18 votes -
Adolescents' screen time displaces multiple sleep pathways and elevates depressive symptoms over twelve months, Swedish study finds
30 votes -
Scientists reveal how DMT alters brain activity and consciousness by lowering control energy
23 votes -
Scientists developed a questionnaire to find out if your cat is a psychopath
20 votes -
Is dark energy weakening over time? Why some cosmologists aren’t sure.
19 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 -
No, it’s not the incentives—it’s you
26 votes -
A nonsense phrase has been occurring in scientific papers, suggesting artificial intelligence data contamination
53 votes -
Norway has launched a new scheme to lure top international researchers amid growing pressure on academic freedom in the US
11 votes -
In 2024, the warmest year on record in Europe according to the EU's Copernicus system, Swedish and Norwegian glaciers melted by an average of 1.8 metres
9 votes