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Young scientists provide advice to a researcher, who feels left behind after a difficult pandemic experience.
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Young scientists provide advice to a researcher, who feels left behind after a difficult pandemic experience.
How can libraries help to prevent tracking in science, thereby protecting the data of the researchers and, in an idealistic sense, scientific freedom?
Born 200 years ago in Germany, the adventurer-archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann was obsessed with finding the kingdom of Troy described in Homer's "Iliad."
The SNSF's National Research Council decides whether or not to fund applications. The 89 evaluation panels handle the preparatory work on which it bases its decisions, assessing several thousand applications each year.
Billionaires in space, an end-date for deforestation, facing up to racial bias in healthcare - we asked scientists to share the most important developments of 2021.
Universities see room for reasonable new legal restraints on foreign-funded scientists but fear overreach as final deal comes into shape.
The last few years have been a period of rapid market consolidation in scholarly publishing. Here, a look at the ongoing demise of the independent research society publisher, as more and more continue to sign on with larger publishing partners.
As Switzerland celebrates and commemorates the 50th anniversary of the federal referendum on women’s suffrage, the Swiss Science Council takes the opportunity to look back at its own history.
UK faces a grim winter if vaccines offer poor overall protection, but if the virus has weak powers to evade immunity, hospital cases can be contained.
The intense secrecy and security of the world of nuclear science has been used to minimize or overlook the work of its women scientists.
In 2016, five Swiss institutions of higher education and three universities in the Global South received seed funding to work on sustainable development through education and research in contexts affected by conflict. Looking back at more than four years of coordinating this university network, here are some lessons learned from challenging situations.
If you've been away from academia for a few years, you may have forgotten how to write in a way that's suitable for higher education. Not to worry...!
A previously unknown hominid species may have left its marks in muddy ash about 3.66 million years ago in what is now East Africa.
Nature highlights three key infographics from the week in science and research.
Employers need to do more to improve workplace diversity, equity and inclusion, a Nature survey finds.
Two often overlooked, inspiring stories of women scientists.
How to tread a little more lightly on your holiday journeys.
After analyzing numerous department handbooks, Catalysts for Science Policy members offer five recommendations for improving them in ways that build a healthier, more productive environment.
A look at the NASIG Digital Preservation Policy and a request for comments.
When people entertain transporting to the past, 19th-century Berlin, say, they don't often imagine a dramatic shift in smellscape.
Is the director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy off-message?
Survey of 3,500 supervisors lifts the lid on the demands of overseeing junior researchers - and the impacts of the pandemic.
Surveys show that women, parents of young children and people of colour are most affected by pandemic-related disruptions and need more support.