Science's Data Secrecy Problem
A surprising amount of publicly funded research data stays private. How could that change?
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A surprising amount of publicly funded research data stays private. How could that change?
Les Hatton and Gregory Warr give their two-pronged solution to the problems of peer review
The Good Pharma Scorecard finds some big pharmaceutical companies are meeting legal standards for disclosing results—but many studies still go unreported.
Proposing and testing a new indicator, the Mantel-Haenszel quotient.
How the Swiss education system (re)produces inequalities between women and men.
Some scholars add authors to their research papers or grant proposals even when those individuals contribute nothing to the research effort.
Everipedia, a two-year-old online encyclopedia, will become a decentralized, peer-to-peer, user-owned resource.
Opinion pieces that “represent the viewpoint of an individual” and offer hypotheses without testing them are the opposite of science.
"…cultural change rests with individual scientists, teams, and professional societies."
AI tools could help us turn information gleaned from genetic sequencing into life-saving therapies.
Scholars push for free access to online citation data, saying they need and deserve access to the reference data they helped create.
We wish to answer this question: If you observe a ‘significant’ p -value after doing a single unbiased experiment, what is the probability that your result is a false positive?
In trying to thwart predators, the government is penalizing researchers who publish in genuine open-access journals.
A push to reverse its brain drain is providing the expertise to tackle its domestic problems.
We might hope for a better future where everyone acts professionally, but we should be realistic about the flaws of our human nature. Opinion piece by Stephen Curry.
Negotiations to reduce journal prices and promote open access are progressing slowly.
Algorithms made him a Wall Street billionaire. His new research center helps scientists mine data for the common good.
As a new president takes office, scientists in the country and beyond should urge the administration to make science a priority, says Dexter Tagwireyi.
Arxiv Vanity renders academic papers from arXiv as responsive web pages so you don’t have to squint at a PDF.
In an open letter scientometricians make a call to scholarly publishers to make the reference lists of the articles they publish openly available.
Leonard Freedman, president of the Global Biological Standards Institute, discusses the causes of irreproducible science and his latest effort to spread best practices.