Messages de Rogue Scholar

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Designed to support “innovators developing prototypes or community projects to improve open science and research communication,” the eLife Innovation Program offers a mix of expert advice, presentations by guest speakers, collaborative workshopping, homework assignments, mentorship, and more.

Publié in Samuel Moore
Auteur Samuel Moore

The term ‘predatory publisher’ reveals a limit of language – or rather it asks too much of language. It seeks a binary separation between ‘predatory’ and ‘non-predatory’ where no such separation can exist, ultimately illustrating more about the motivations and hidden biases about the accuser than the supposedly predatory journal at hand. We therefore need another way to conceptualise the practices that predatory publishing seeks to describe.

Publié in Leiden Madtrics
Auteur André Brasil

Walking through the halls of Sorbonne University last month, I find an announcement on a wall that would catch the eye of anyone interested in Open Science (OS): it was the Sorbonne Declaration on Research Data Rights. Signed at this very university a few weeks ago, the Declaration was published on January 28 at the LERU website, and it is an important document to promote Open Data. But what exactly is Open Data?

Publié in Elephant in the Lab
Auteur Elias Koch

Juggling software, materials, and people In my third week of grad school, I found myself metaphorically elbows-deep in my human-robot interaction lab’s codebase. I was porting a robot teleportation interface from tablet to desktop. The goal: To run a psychology study exploring how young kids learned language skills with social robots. Jacqueline M. Kory-Westlund But comments were few and far between.

Publié in OpenCitations blog

The memorable date 20/02/2020 saw the publication by MIT Press of the first issue of Volume One of a new journal, Quantitative Science Studies (QSS), the official open access journal of the International Society for Scientometrics and Informetrics (ISSI). QSS’s Editor in Chief is Ludo Waltman (CWTS, University of Leiden, Netherlands), Vincent Larivière (Université de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada) and Staša Milojević

Publié in FIS & EPub
Auteur Sebastian Herwig

Einführung Seit der Veröffentlichung der Empfehlungen zur Spezifikation des Kerndatensatz Forschung (KDSF) durch den Wissenschaftsrat 2016 wird die Einführung von Forschungsinformationssystemen als zentrale Nachweis- und Berichtsinstrumente zu den eigenen Forschungsaktivitäten und -ergebnissen an vielen Hochschulen intensiv diskutiert.