There Is No Ban on Words at the CDC. But What’s Actually Happening to Science Is Scarier.
There Is No Ban on Words at the CDC. But What’s Actually Happening to Science Is Scarier.
They’re not hiding behind language - they’re acting in plain sight.
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They’re not hiding behind language - they’re acting in plain sight.
Towards a fully-fledged policy proposal, including issues of cost and fairness.
Ensuring appropriate credit and recognition in increasingly collaborative research involving multiple investigators and research groups.
Lucy Patterson reports back from Science Hack Day Berlin.
Initiatives are in place to keep early-career investigators in the biomedical system, but more support is needed.
Scientists and career experts reveal how to take your job to the next level.
Thomas Bayes had the right idea: Even scientific laws can benefit from an update.
The stigma has a punitive effect on citations for prior collaborators of fraudulent researchers.
The National Institutes of Health will again fund research that makes viruses more dangerous.
This advice is both hyperbolic and not nearly as crazy as it sounds.
ERCcOMICS is a creative and ambitious project which exploits the power of visual storytelling to innovate the way European science is communicated.
The news that lifted our existential dread.
A statistical look back at the year in The Scholarly Kitchen.
A 30 page paper panning the Commission’s copyright plans on press publishers written by JRC never saw the light of the day.
But final deal on a 2018 budget could bring substantial spending increases.
Elizabeth Blackburn cuts short her tenure at Salk amid gender discrimination lawsuits, which have also led Inder Verma to take leave of absence from editor-in-chief of PNAS
As someone who often finds himself explaining machine learning to non-experts.
Incentives for “Open”, perception as additional work and lack of training, and diversity and inclusivity.