Brian Cox is wrong: blogging your research is not a recipe for disaster - 0 views
Research 2.0.3: The future of research communication : Soapbox Science - 0 views
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Open Access has led directly to an increase in usage of platforms that make is easy for researchers to comply with this mandate by depositing open access versions of their papers. Examples of companies in this space are Academia.edu, ResearchGate.net and Mendeley. Open Access also means that anyone can contribute to the post-publication evaluation of research articles.
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There are a number of initiatives focused on improving the process of peer review. Post-publication peer review, in which journals publish papers after minimal vetting and then encourage commentary from the scientific community, has been explored by several publishers, but has run into difficulties incentivizing sufficient numbers of experts to participate. Initiatives like Faculty of 1000 have tried to overcome this by corralling experts as part of post-publication review boards. And sometimes, as in the case of arsenic-based life, the blogosphere has taken peer review into its own hands.
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Traditionally the number of first and senior author publications, and the journal(s) in which those publications appear, has been the key criteria for assessing the quality of a researcher’s work. This is used by funding agencies to determine whether to award research grants to conduct their future work, as well as by academic research institutions to inform hiring and career progression decisions. However, this is actually a very poor measure of a researcher’s true impact since a) it only captures a fraction of a researcher’s contribution and b) since more than 70% of published research cannot be reproduced, the publication based system rewards researchers for the wrong thing (the publication of novel research, rather than the production of robust research).
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RRResearch - 0 views
Science in the Open " Blog Archive " Network Enabled Research: Maximise scale and conne... - 0 views
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Prior to all the nonsense with the Research Works Act, I had been having a discussion with Heather Morrison about licenses and Open Access and peripherally the principle of requiring specific licenses of authors. I realized then that I needed to lay out the background thinking that leads me to where I am.
Dexy for Data Scientists | blog.dexy.it - 1 views
8 reasons why researchers should blog « Losing and Finding a Home - 1 views
How to write a good research blog post - 1 views
Annotators of the World Unite! | Open Knowledge Foundation Blog - 0 views
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The following post is by Andrew Magliozzi founder of FinalsClub.org and one of the developers working on the Annotator javascript library and the AnnotateIt service. Scholars, bring us your ancient, worn, and insightful annotations. We have the tools to help you collect and connect your knowledge of Plato, Dante, Shakespeare, Eliot and others.
Billion Brain Blog - 1 views
Scientific American Launches Project to Identify Whale Calls | Observations, Scientific... - 1 views
Filter-then-publish vs. publish-then-filter | Sauropod Vertebra Picture of the Week - 2 views
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"Unlike many journals which attempt to use the peer review process to determine whether or not an article reaches the level of 'importance' required by a given journal, PLoS ONE uses peer review to determine whether a paper is technically sound and worthy of inclusion in the published scientific record. Once the work is published in PLoS ONE, the broader community is then able to discuss and evaluate the significance of the article (through the number of citations it attracts; the downloads it achieves; the media and blog coverage it receives; and the post-publication Notes, Comments and Ratings that it receives on PLoS ONE etc)."