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29 votes
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Turns out, bonobos ‘talk’ a lot like humans
25 votes -
Inside arXiv — the most transformative platform in all of science
22 votes -
World’s first gene-edited spider produces red fluorescent silk
15 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 -
Researchers are on a tight deadline to save San Francisco Bay's only marine lab before San Francisco State University shuts it down
12 votes -
Researchers have created a new battery using aluminum
15 votes -
When Rob Barrett surveyed one of Norway's largest seabird colonies in the '70s there were too many birds to count – stark before and after photographs reveal sharp decline
13 votes -
Researchers make mouse skin transparent using a common food dye
24 votes -
The Marshmallow Test and other predictors of success have bias built in, researchers say
28 votes -
Stephen Hawking Archive made available to historians and researchers
17 votes -
Researchers solve 2,000-year-old mystery of the shipworm
5 votes -
UNM researchers find microplastics in canine and human testicular tissue
23 votes -
The complex question of screen influence on youth
14 votes -
Exploring the mysterious alphabet of sperm whales
10 votes -
Safer Sunscreen: Stanford researchers explore novel approach to sustainable sun protection
13 votes -
Human brains and fruit fly brains are built similarly – visualizing how helps researchers better understand how both work
7 votes -
Researchers map how the brain regulates emotions
1 vote -
Researchers show that introduced tardigrade proteins can slow metabolism in human cells
11 votes -
Researchers find response to ketamine depends on opioid pathways, but varies by sex
10 votes -
Researchers were able to isolate the brain from the rest of the body of a pig, and kept it alive and functioning for five hours
59 votes -
Reindeer combine sleeping and digesting, Norwegian researchers found after extracting reindeer brain data
9 votes -
Researchers develop new mechanism to create water-repellent surfaces
7 votes -
Mutations matter
5 votes -
The world inside you
11 votes -
Anti-COVID drug may have led to virus mutations: study
10 votes -
Recent neuroscience research suggests that popular strategies to control dopamine are based on an overly narrow view of how it functions
17 votes -
Ig Nobel Prize winner Higashiyama Atsuki and the “Between-Legs Effect” mystery
40 votes -
Researchers engineer bacteria that can detect tumor DNA (in mice)
6 votes -
Charles Henry Turner’s insights into animal behavior were a century ahead of their time
4 votes -
By selectively breeding forty generations of silver fox over the course of sixty years, researchers managed to make them as friendly as dogs
64 votes -
The coolest library on Earth: At the University of Copenhagen, researchers store ice cores that hold the keys to Earth’s climate past and future
15 votes -
I interviewed the researcher behind the Misinformation Susceptibility Test
https://youtu.be/vodNabH5qoM But some important context: Earlier this month I saw a post regarding a Misinformation Susceptibility Test and was curious how 20 binary questions could be an...
https://youtu.be/vodNabH5qoM
But some important context:Earlier this month I saw a post regarding a Misinformation Susceptibility Test and was curious how 20 binary questions could be an indicator of someones media biases.
I started digging into the related paper and while the methods and analysis was interesting, there was still a lot of questions. So I reached out to Dr Rakoen Maertens who headed the study and we agreed to a discussion on the assessment and his experiences in social psychology.
The video above is an unlisted, unedited cut of the interview and I'd love to get some feedback:
Firstly: I have offered the Dr a tildes invite and he may engage with any questions or discussion. Time was limited and there were a lot of topics that was only briefly touched on or overlooked. Here is the original paper and supplementary resources if you want to see some of the language model work and bigger 100 question tests.
Secondly: I am going to do a more through edit and posting this on a dedicated channel. Since cutting off reddit, twitter and tiktoc; I've sort of rediscovered a love learning and investigations. I'd like to know if people like this form of engagement and discussions. No fancy production, just simply engaging with the research and academics behind topical and interesting ideas.
I'm already reading into fandom psychology, UV reflective paint, children's TV and CO2 scrubbing technology.
72 votes -
Crows and magpies using anti-bird spikes to build nests, researchers find
50 votes -
Johnson & Johnson sues US researchers who linked talc to cancer
38 votes -
Over-reliance on English hinders cognitive science
4 votes -
Researchers successfully prevent peanut allergic reactions in mice, blocking onset in its tracks
5 votes -
Researchers look a dinosaur in its remarkably preserved face
12 votes -
Finnish research and technology organisation VTT connected the quantum computer HELMI with the pan-European supercomputer LUMI to enable a hybrid service for researchers
3 votes -
Svante Pääbo deserves his accolade – palaeogenetics is an expanding field that tells us who we are
5 votes -
Swedish researcher Svante Pääbo has won this year's Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his research into how human beings evolved
12 votes -
A stereo movie created by NASA researchers shows the altitude of the Tonga plume during the eruption
5 votes -
Researchers shrink camera to the size of a salt grain
6 votes -
African researchers say they face bias in the world of science. Here's one solution.
6 votes -
UCSF researchers achieve the ability to interpret neurological signals into speech
10 votes -
Researchers develop weight loss device using powerful magnets to keep your mouth closed
6 votes -
Cornell researchers see atoms at record resolution
9 votes -
Only two and a half billion tyrannosaurus rex inhabited the planet in total, researchers say
14 votes -
Researchers levitated a small tray using nothing but light
8 votes