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43 votes
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Study finds people are consistently and confidently wrong about those with opposing views
37 votes -
What happens when you touch a Pickle to an AM radio tower?
36 votes -
Meet the winners of the 2024 Ig Nobel Prizes
26 votes -
The theory that men evolved to hunt and women evolved to gather is wrong
58 votes -
Synthetic diamonds are now purer, more beautiful, and vastly cheaper than mined diamonds. Beating nature took decades of hard graft and millions of pounds of pressure.
63 votes -
Statistics are still misunderstood in the courtroom
16 votes -
Cognitive behavioral therapy enhances brain circuits to relieve depression in subset of depression patients
7 votes -
AI for bio: State of the field
2 votes -
Did Sandia use a thermonuclear secondary in a product logo?
41 votes -
Is accidentally stumbling across the unknown a key part of science?
7 votes -
Researchers make mouse skin transparent using a common food dye
24 votes -
The asteroid-in-spring hypothesis - Two paleontologists have turned on each other, each claiming to have found new evidence about the worst day on Earth
8 votes -
The Marshmallow Test and other predictors of success have bias built in, researchers say
28 votes -
No, intelligence is not like height
31 votes -
New nanogenerators achieve 140-fold power density gain, could rival solar cells
17 votes -
Nuclear breakthrough (laser excitation of nuclei) could improve clocks/measurement and detect variance in currently-believed fundamental constants
23 votes -
Eight basic rules for causal inference
9 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 -
Scientists find humans age dramatically in two bursts – at 44, then 60
32 votes -
This innovative device allows South American paleontologists to share fossils with the world
11 votes -
How rediscovering Neanderthals primed us for the search for extraterrestrial life
3 votes -
The impact of auditors’ gender on the quality of financial reporting: a comparative study of auditors with accounting expertise
8 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 -
"Dark oxygen" production defies knowledge of the deep ocean, potentially upends standard model for discovering life on other planets
31 votes -
You don't descend from all your ancestors
21 votes -
Discovery of a new primitive microcontinent between Greenland and Canada could help scientists understand how microcontinents form
14 votes -
Stephen Hawking Archive made available to historians and researchers
17 votes -
The unexpected poetry of PhD acknowledgements
29 votes -
Maps distort how we see the world
23 votes -
Why don’t we know how antidepressants work yet?
30 votes -
Genomic prediction of IQ is modern snake oil
11 votes -
Denmark's Museum of Evolution displays a rare, 97% complete skeleton of a Camarasaurus Grandis, a sauropod discovered in Wyoming
12 votes -
How AI revolutionized protein science, but didn’t end it
16 votes -
This is the first animal ever found that doesn't need oxygen to survive
48 votes -
The misplaced incentives in academic publishing
21 votes -
Breakthrough in nuclear spectroscopy would lead to more accurate clocks
20 votes -
Paul Meehl’s philosophical psychology
5 votes -
Ozempic and Wegovy linked to rare blindness risk, study finds
27 votes -
High-altitude cave used by Tibetan Buddhists yields a Denisovan fossil
14 votes -
Smiling robot face is made from living human skin cells
20 votes -
For many Olympic medalists, silver stings more than bronze
14 votes -
Deriving mammalian DNA methylation predictors for maximum life span, gestation time and age at sexual maturity
6 votes -
Collecting sex-crazed zombie cicadas on speed: Scientists track a bug-controlling super-sized fungus
24 votes -
Texas abortion ban linked to 13% increase in infant and newborn deaths
54 votes -
Second Canadian scientist alleges brain illness investigation was shut down
35 votes -
Ahmes, the first known maths author
4 votes -
Gilead shot prevents all HIV cases in trial of African women
29 votes