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34 votes
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Wiley to shutter nineteen more journals, some tainted by fraud
20 votes -
A peer reviewed journal with nonsense AI images was just published
33 votes -
Keeping a commonplace book
I have tried and tried to write a daily journal/diary and always gave up after a while. My longest stretch was over the course of five years. It always devolves into a litany of banality, though,...
I have tried and tried to write a daily journal/diary and always gave up after a while. My longest stretch was over the course of five years. It always devolves into a litany of banality, though, and when I look back at it, invariably appears a bit cringy.
So I have decided to start keeping a commonplace book- a place to write down interesting thoughts, quotes, ideas I come across and so forth. Without the chronological format of a journal I feel less compelled to list down stuff for the sake of it and am actually listing down ideas I'd like to remember.
Do any of you do something similar?
17 votes -
Is the staggeringly profitable business of scientific publishing bad for science?
8 votes -
What are some of the best blogs, journals, e-magazines, etc. about programming or software development in general?
I'm a solo freelance programmer who codes on small to medium sized projects, and I realize that I can upskill myself a lot by keeping up with the industry trends, by listening to what the best in...
I'm a solo freelance programmer who codes on small to medium sized projects, and I realize that I can upskill myself a lot by keeping up with the industry trends, by listening to what the best in this field have to say. The problem is that there is just so much information overload everywhere, just so many youtube videos and articles that it seems overwhelming to differentiate the wheat from the chaff!
Since reading is my preferred medium of instruction, I want to know what are the blogs, journals, etc. on this topic with some street cred? And preferably individual experts and blogs, not companies. Company or corporate sites and blogs seem to be more hype than substance these days.
Which ones do you refer for keeping up to date?
8 votes -
‘Zombie papers’ just won’t die. Retracted papers by notorious fraudster still cited years later.
9 votes -
Dream journal thread
I don't know about you, but I love reading about other people's dreams and occasionally sharing my own. Let this be a place to share your dreams, whether they're super mundane or absolutely wild....
I don't know about you, but I love reading about other people's dreams and occasionally sharing my own.
Let this be a place to share your dreams, whether they're super mundane or absolutely wild. Reply any time you feel like sharing to your last comment, so we have a thread where each top level comment is a different individual.
13 votes -
What Sci-Hub’s latest court battle means for research
11 votes -
The top scientific journal retractions of 2021
9 votes -
It’s a good thing I don’t care what you think -- How reception shapes philosophy articles
3 votes -
Scientific American retracted pro-Palestine article without any factual errors
12 votes -
The rapid sharing of pandemic research shows there is a better way to filter good science from bad
7 votes -
Are journal articles getting too long?
8 votes -
Nature to join open-access Plan S, publisher says
10 votes -
ACM signs letter against open access publication of federally funded studies
@americanpublish: Proud to join 125+ other organizations to oppose a costly proposed Administration policy that would undermine scientific discovery, American jobs, & our global competitiveness. Read the coalition letter: https://t.co/Lm8gDO56MG @americanpublish @AmericanCancer @globalIPcenter
9 votes -
The top retractions of 2019
7 votes -
The war to free science: How librarians, pirates, and funders are liberating the world’s academic research from paywalls
17 votes -
Coca-Cola's contracts with researchers reserved the right to kill studies
15 votes -
Academic papers should be free
24 votes -
FTC hits "predatory" scientific publisher with a $50 million fine
13 votes -
How long does it take you to read an academic journal article?
I feel like I'm a bit slow, though I'm gaining practice. I cannot read two moderate or long-ish papers in one day. I guess part of that reason is that the field I'm mostly reading in is a field...
I feel like I'm a bit slow, though I'm gaining practice. I cannot read two moderate or long-ish papers in one day. I guess part of that reason is that the field I'm mostly reading in is a field I'm new to, though in accordance with that what I'm reading often is kindo-of introductory material (linguistics, and Linguistics Handbook ed. Aronoff, 2017). A chapter is around the size of an average paper (around 25-30 pages). Another factor may be that I'm not a native speaker of English, but I think I do have a quite decent command of it especially when reading, enough to read through ~60 A4 pages in five-six hours, but I just can't do it.
So I wonder if I'm too slow or maybe exaggerating it a bit? How long does it take for you, and how many can you read, without skimming/skipping, in a "day"?
11 votes -
Scientific publishing is a rip-off. We fund the research – it should be free
28 votes -
Top cancer researcher fails to disclose corporate financial ties in major research journals
9 votes -
European science funders ban grantees from publishing in paywalled journals
16 votes -
State of California funded research must be public within one year
15 votes -
Capitalism is ruining science
28 votes -
AI researchers boycotting Nature's new Machine Intelligence journal
10 votes