#early-publication

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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

It's official: scientists aren't funny. But it doesn't have to be this way | Helen Pilcher

The findings confirm research that I conducted more than 20 years ago. Under the guise of the Comedy Research Project, Timandra Harkness and I performed a randomised clinical trial to assess whether or not science can be funny.
Humor
OMG science
fromArs Technica
4 days ago

Research roundup: 7 cool science stories we almost missed

Raccoons exhibit flexible problem-solving skills, thriving in human environments by successfully navigating complex puzzles.
#artificial-intelligence
fromNature
5 days ago
Intellectual property law

Hallucinated citations are polluting the scientific literature. What can be done?

Intellectual property law
fromNature
5 days ago

Hallucinated citations are polluting the scientific literature. What can be done?

Artificial intelligence is generating non-existent academic references, leading to hallucinated citations in scholarly publications.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

AI wrote a scientific paper that passed peer review

AI has begun to independently conduct scientific research, marking a significant shift in the role of technology in scientific discovery.
fromNature
1 week ago

Now is the time for scientific societies to guide global research

Modern scientific societies are increasingly vulnerable due to their dependence on membership fees and journal subscriptions, which are being challenged by the rise of virtual networking and open-access publishing.
Science
Online Community Development
fromNature
6 days ago

A responsible authorship culture is needed - it is a collective responsibility

Responsible authorship culture is essential for scientific integrity, anchored in credit, accountability, and transparency.
fromSearch Engine Roundtable
1 week ago

Block of Citations Tested Beneath AI Overview Summary

The format has ginormous link cards at the bottom of the AI summary, which include a thumbnail of no apparent value, the site name, favicon, description, and title.
Typography
fromNature
1 week ago

A guide to the Nature Index

The Nature Index provides absolute and fractional counts of article publication at the institutional and national level and, as such, is an indicator of global high-quality research output and collaboration.
Data science
OMG science
fromNature
1 week ago

Giants of the deep and the wonder of space: Books in Brief

Right whales have drastically declined from abundant populations in the 17th century to fewer than 400 today.
Higher education
fromNature
2 weeks ago

The mid-career reset: how to be strategic about your research direction

Mid-career researchers face rising expectations and responsibilities, making it a crucial yet precarious phase in their academic careers.
Data science
fromNature
2 weeks ago

How I squeeze fresh science from public data

Utilizing existing data can lead to significant discoveries and collaborations in research.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

What happens when AI starts checking mathematicians' work

Computer programs that check mathematical arguments have existed for decades, but translating a human-written proof into the strict programming language of a computer is extremely time-consuming, often taking months or even years.
OMG science
Science
fromNature
1 week ago

How to build an AI Scientist: first peer-reviewed paper spills the secrets

AI Scientist automates the entire scientific process, from idea generation to paper writing, and has undergone peer review.
fromNature
3 weeks ago

The problem with Canada's plan to buy scientific prestige

CIRC posts come with excellent resources and generous salaries. But the current round is being filled on an extraordinarily tight timeline. We assume that this is to take advantage of some US scholars' urgency to leave, and to keep pace with other countries hoping to achieve similar results (such as France, which is running a high-profile campaign to lure US scholars).
Canada news
fromSearch Engine Roundtable
3 weeks ago

AI Mode Tests Ask About Element in Citations

Google AI mode has added an 'Ask about this' option above the sources where all URLs are displayed. Clicking on 'Ask about' here automatically pulled a new prompt into the search box.
Artificial intelligence
Marketing tech
fromFast Company
3 weeks ago

Publishers are finally getting serious about AI scraping

ChatGPT's 900 million users demonstrate AI's rapid growth as a discovery channel, creating urgency around content compensation and generative engine optimization as publishers seek fair value for scraped content.
Privacy professionals
fromFast Company
3 weeks ago

ChatGPT Edu feature reveals researchers' project metadata across universities (exclusive)

ChatGPT Edu's Codex Cloud Environments expose repository metadata and user activity information to thousands of colleagues at universities, revealing project details and interaction patterns without exposing actual private code.
fromNature
1 week ago

Can China keep up its extraordinary research growth?

China's overall Share from September 2024 to August 2025 exceeded 38,000 and is on course to double that of the United States within the next two years.
Science
#academic-publishing
fromNature
3 weeks ago
Higher education

Reckoning with my 'ghost years': why a high publication rate doesn't always reflect success

fromNature
2 months ago
Public health

I'm going to halve my publication output. You should consider slow science, too

Higher education
fromNature
3 weeks ago

Reckoning with my 'ghost years': why a high publication rate doesn't always reflect success

Publication gaps during early career development represent valuable research progress and skill-building, not career failure, despite academic pressure to maintain constant output.
fromNature
2 months ago
Public health

I'm going to halve my publication output. You should consider slow science, too

fromInside Higher Ed | Higher Education News, Events and Jobs
3 weeks ago

How Libraries Shape AI Literacy on Campus

Librarians have been actively collaborating and talking about it almost every day, whether it's creating tutorials and digital learning objectives or thinking about the conversations to have with instructors. It can feel like cognitive dissonance to be actively working with AI on a regular basis and also saying we're constantly thinking about the harms and the biases.
Higher education
Science
fromNature
3 weeks ago

Daily briefing: How labs are coping with 'RAMmageddon'

Global RAM chip shortage driven by AI demand forces researchers to innovate with more efficient algorithms and hardware, with supply recovery expected in 18+ months.
Science
fromNature
3 weeks ago

How bioRxiv changed the way biologists share ideas - in numbers

bioRxiv has grown to over 310,000 preprints since 2013, with neuroscientists as top users and monthly submissions reaching 4,000 by 2025, demonstrating widespread acceptance of preprint publishing in scientific research.
OMG science
fromArs Technica
1 month ago

Research roundup: Six cool science stories we almost missed

Scientists revived Edison's nickel-iron battery design using protein scaffolding and graphene oxide, creating an aerogel structure for improved renewable energy storage with extended range and longevity.
Science
fromNature
3 weeks ago

Keep calm and be transparent: advice from scientists who retracted their papers

Scientists who self-retract papers due to honest mistakes maintain citation rates and receive community support, suggesting shifting attitudes toward retractions as responsible scientific practice rather than career-damaging misconduct.
#peer-review
fromNature
1 month ago
Artificial intelligence

This AI can improve your peer review - and make it more polite

fromNature
1 month ago
Artificial intelligence

This AI can improve your peer review - and make it more polite

UK politics
fromNature
1 month ago

Don't deprioritize curiosity-driven research

Government-directed shifts in research funding risk undermining curiosity-driven, investigator-led science that generates fundamental knowledge and long-term innovation.
#predatory-journals
Women
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

Scientific journals place less trust in women researchers

Biomedical and life-science papers led by women face longer peer-review times than those led by men, causing career and knowledge-production disadvantages.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 months ago

Not Yet: A Graduate Student's First Publication

Graduate students often face cautious mentorship that delays submission; trusting one’s judgment can result in successful publication despite initial skepticism.
fromNature
1 month ago

Pop-up journals for policy research: can temporary titles deliver answers?

I'm less interested in topics than in questions, and I'm less interested in publishing than I am in curation. When I've testified before Congress or dealt with an appropriations bill or a budget negotiation, this question, of what is the return on investments when you're doing R&D, comes up quite often. It's been asked by economists in very formal ways since at least the 1950s, but the data and the methods that were available were really not very strong.
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

I know science can't fix the world - here's why I do it anyway

His message is clear: our world is built on abundant energy, around 80% of which has come from fossil fuels over the past 50 years. Because supplies are limited, energy consumption will peak in decades - sooner if humans attempt to limit climate change. To keep global warming below 1.5 °C by 2100, the use of fossil fuels must fall by 5-8% each year - a pace that is too fast for low-carbon energy to keep up with.
Environment
Agriculture
fromNature
2 months ago

Fresh starts: how to thrive when you leave academia

A liver physician left full-time academia to run a diverse six-hectare farm while maintaining part-time research and policy advisory roles.
fromNature
2 months ago

When two years of academic work vanished with a single click

Within a couple of years of ChatGPT coming out, I had come to rely on the artificial-intelligence tool, for my work as a professor of plant sciences at the University of Cologne in Germany. Having signed up for OpenAI's subscription plan, ChatGPT Plus, I used it as an assistant every day - to write e-mails, draft course descriptions, structure grant applications, revise publications, prepare lectures, create exams and analyse student responses, and even as an interactive tool as part of my teaching.
Privacy technologies
Writing
fromNature
2 months ago

Three tips for scientific writing: a guide for graduate students

Break large writing projects into specific, actionable tasks, use prompts, structure, and accountability to reduce blank-page dread and sustain progress.
World news
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Publishers fear AI search summaries and chatbots mean end of traffic era'

AI chatbots and search AI overviews will significantly reduce search-driven web traffic to news sites, pushing publishers toward short-form creator-style content strategies.
fromNature
1 month ago

What can I do if my idea has been plagiarized?

A few years ago, I put together what I felt was a truly innovative concept, which I presented in a conference poster at an international meeting in my field. After the presentation, I spoke to another early-career scientist about my work and how it might apply to their findings. Two years later, they scooped me by publishing a preprint paper that presented my idea, with many of the same verbal formulations and an identical flow of ideas, without any acknowledgement or attribution to my work.
Intellectual property law
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
2 months ago

Call for Papers - Special Issue: "Science, Technology, and East Asian Philosophy"

Special issue solicits papers examining how East Asian philosophical traditions illuminate, challenge, or reframe understandings of science and technology in historical and contemporary contexts.
Science
fromNature
1 month ago

Why every scientist needs a librarian

Academic libraries have transformed into dynamic research hubs offering expert librarianship, technologies, coding, maker spaces, and data support that accelerate scientific research.
Artificial intelligence
fromNature
2 months ago

The academic community failed Wikipedia for 25 years - now it might fail us

Academia has neglected Wikipedia, and AI systems that repurpose its content without attribution now threaten its volunteer-driven, transparent knowledge commons.
Artificial intelligence
fromNature
2 months ago

Author knows best? Top AI conference asks for self-ranked papers amid paper deluge

Authors' self-ranking of multiple submissions, calibrated against peer review, predicts long-term citation impact and highlights higher-quality papers.
fromNature
2 months ago

AI could transform research assessment - and some academics are worried

In 2023, Australia abandoned its expensive and bureaucratic scholar-led research-assessment programme. New Zealand followed suit soon after. The hope, according to a transition plan unveiled by the Australian federal government's Department of Education and the research sector, was to find a "more modern, data-driven approach". In the United Kingdom, where financial pressures on universities are especially acute, there are similar calls to reform the Research Excellence Framework (REF), the country's performance-based research-funding system.
Higher education
Artificial intelligence
fromFortune
2 months ago

NeurIPS papers contained 100+ AI-hallucinated citations, new report claims | Fortune

AI-generated hallucinated citations appeared in at least 53 NeurIPS 2025 papers, including fabricated and subtly altered references that reviewers missed.
Science
fromNature
1 month ago

Daily briefing: Automated robot 'scientists' spark debate over the future of lab work

Autonomous AI-controlled lab robots can automate simple tasks but current limitations mean many laboratory procedures still require human dexterity and judgment.
Science
fromNature
1 month ago

How to wow a popular-science writer with your research expertise

Effective science communication requires researchers to explain work accurately yet comprehensibly, balancing writers' narrative goals with scientists' commitment to precise truth.
Higher education
fromCornell Chronicle
2 months ago

Research Matters' video podcast debuts, translating ideas into impact | Cornell Chronicle

Cornell's Research Matters podcast translates campus research into accessible conversations showing real-world impacts across public safety, health, food systems, climate, and technology.
fromInside Higher Ed | Higher Education News, Events and Jobs
1 month ago

On Being Edited by AI

That was a year or so ago, and my first brush with what generative AI could do. Like many, I started using it for fun: planning trips, finding nineteenth century authors I could recommend to fantasy-loving students (a genre I don't read), and making a holiday card starring my dog, Harry. But as work piled up, I didn't have time for new toys, so now I use AI for work.
Higher education
Science
fromNature Partnerships
2 months ago

Promote your products to scientists | Nature Partnerhships

Reach over 43 million monthly users across Nature, Springer, BMC, and Scientific American to target scientists, healthcare professionals, policymakers, and engaged readers.
Science
fromArs Technica
2 months ago

Research roundup: 6 cool stories we almost missed

Mineral fingerprinting and zircon analysis indicate humans transported Stonehenge stones from distant quarries, not glaciers.
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

Critical social media posts linked to retractions of scientific papers

Critical posts on X can serve as early warnings of problematic scientific articles and higher retraction risk when negative sentiment or red-flag words appear.
Science
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

Science Is Drowning in AI Slop

Scientific journals are increasingly filled with fabricated references and AI-generated low-quality content, undermining peer review and trust in published research.
Science
fromNature
1 month ago

Epstein files reveal deeper ties to scientists than previously known

Jeffrey Epstein had extensive, previously underreported ties to the scientific community, investing and socializing with numerous researchers, revealed by millions of newly released investigative files.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
2 months ago

Author Correction: An autonomous laboratory for the accelerated synthesis of inorganic materials

Prediction platform correctly identified 36 of 40 synthesized compounds; four were inconclusive, and novelty claims were clarified as 'new to the prediction platform', not new to science.
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

Synthesizing scientific literature with retrieval-augmented language models - Nature

OpenScholar is an open, retrieval-augmented system integrating a 45 million-paper datastore, trained retrievers, and iterative self-feedback to generate cited, up-to-date scientific literature syntheses.
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

The unfortunate embossing of Subsector XZ-74

A junior mapgrapher discovers a cluster of stars in Subsector XZ-74 is inexplicably dimming and reports it to a dismissive, powerful superior.
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 months ago

Readers respond to the October 2025 issue

Cuts to government funding push researchers toward billionaire and private funding, offering resources and freedom but creating risks from narrow priorities and donor motivations.
Science
fromNature
1 month ago

Science funding needs fixing - but not through chaotic reforms

UK research funding is shifting to a top-down, industrially aligned model, creating uncertainty and risking harm to curiosity-driven science, small groups, and future leaders.
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