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11 votes
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Scientists uncover 75,000-year-old Arctic animal remains in Norwegian cave
9 votes -
'Positive review only': Researchers hide AI prompts in papers to influence automated review
29 votes -
Finding Peter Putnam
15 votes -
‘Dragon prince’ dinosaur discovery 'rewrites' T.rex family tree
15 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 -
Scientists reveal how DMT alters brain activity and consciousness by lowering control energy
23 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 -
Norway has launched a new scheme to lure top international researchers amid growing pressure on academic freedom in the US
11 votes -
Scientists capture first confirmed footage of a colossal squid in the deep
24 votes -
Scientists fill knowledge gaps in immune system functions responsible for fighting bacteria
13 votes -
Scientists have bred "Woolly Mice" on their journey to bring back the mammoth
40 votes -
Under Donald Trump, US government scientists told they need clearance to meet with Canadian counterparts
23 votes -
Scientists induce endosymbiosis for first time in lab, a crucial step necessary for complex life
10 votes -
How easy is it for Norway's international seed bank to navigate politics and secure our future food supply?
6 votes -
‘Unprecedented risk’ to life on Earth: Scientists call for halt on ‘mirror life’ microbe research
55 votes -
Inside the hidden history of secretaries and stenographers at Princeton
5 votes -
A ‘yoga pill’ to end anxiety? Scientists find a brain circuit that instantly deflates stress.
15 votes -
The sham legacy of Richard Feynman
28 votes -
Digging into the first work of modern ecology
6 votes -
This spider scientist wants us to appreciate the world's eight-legged wonders
6 votes -
Thirty-year species reintroduction experiment shows evolution unfolding in slow motion
15 votes -
A scientific fraud. An investigation. A lab in recovery.
20 votes -
Botanists identify thirty-three global ‘dark spots’ with thousands of unknown plants
16 votes -
Scores of papers by Eliezer Masliah, prominent US neuroscientist and top National Institutes of Health official, fall under suspicion
25 votes -
Patent law is broken (USA) and EU (sort of)
24 votes -
Ig Nobel prizes 2024: The unexpected science that won this year
14 votes -
Scientists receive Ig Nobel Prize for discovering mammals can breathe through anuses
43 votes -
Meet the winners of the 2024 Ig Nobel Prizes
26 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 -
Scientists research man missing 90% of his brain who leads a normal life
27 votes -
"Dark oxygen" production defies knowledge of the deep ocean, potentially upends standard model for discovering life on other planets
31 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 -
Collecting sex-crazed zombie cicadas on speed: Scientists track a bug-controlling super-sized fungus
24 votes -
Neutrinos: The inscrutable “ghost particles” driving scientists crazy
20 votes -
Scientists figured out why orcas have been sinking boats for the last four years [turns out it's juveniles just having fun]
47 votes -
Those who read a lot of fiction shown to have improved cognitive abilities
24 votes -
Argentine scientists find speedy ninety-million-year-old herbivore dinosaur
12 votes -
Nobel Prize-winning phycisist Peter Higgs died at 94. About sixty years ago he proposed the Higgs Boson, an elememtary particle essential in describing mass in the Standard Model of particle physics.
28 votes -
Peter Higgs, physicist who proposed Higgs boson, dies aged 94
27 votes -
Scientists studied how cicadas pee. Their insights could shed light on fluid dynamics.
7 votes -
Colorado Bureau of Investigation finds DNA scientist manipulated data in hundreds of cases over decades
31 votes -
Helium discovery in northern Minnesota may be biggest ever in North America
28 votes -
Efficiency asymmetry: Scientists report fundamental asymmetry between heating and cooling
17 votes -
Why scientists are making transparent wood
28 votes -
Deep in the Arctic permafrost, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault is protecting Africa's food supply
12 votes -
What causes fainting? Scientists finally have an answer.
22 votes