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Answer Accepted 6 Answers 7 Votes
Do recurring evaluations by research funders genuinely enhance research quality and societal impact, or do they merely create unnecessary administrative burdens?
Many research funders require periodic evaluations of projects to ensure accountability, monitor progress, and assess impact. While such evaluations can drive improvements in research design, transparency, and relevance, they can also consume significant time and resources. This raises the question of whether the benefits—such as higher-quality outputs and stronger societal contributions—outweigh the potential drawbacks, including administrative overload and reduced time for actual research.
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5 Answers 2 Votes
When the policy exists to share postprints freely on personal sites, why do researchers often refrain from doing so, and what incentives or constraints drive that hesitation?
There has been extensive discussion about the funding model for research publications. Large publishing houses do not fund research themselves; instead, they charge substantial subscription fees or open-access publishing fees. Keeping articles behind paywalls can impede open science and broad access to knowledge. Nevertheless, many publishers grant authors the right to share postprints of their papers immediately on their non-commercial personal blogs or websites. Despite this permission,...
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Answer Accepted 1 Answer 0 Votes
When turning at intersections, how difficult do you find it to detect pedestrians on the crosswalk? And how helpful do you think visual or sound warnings (like lights or beeps) would be?
Turning at intersections presents a common challenge for drivers, especially when pedestrians are crossing from the left or right side. Detecting pedestrians in these situations can be difficult due to blind spots, A-pillar obstruction, distractions, and poor visibility (e.g., nighttime, fog, or busy environments). To enhance safety, researchers and manufacturers are exploring pedestrian warning systems that use visual (e.g., LED lights) and auditory (e.g., beep sounds) alerts to help drivers...
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Answer Accepted 7 Answers 7 Votes
How publication retractions should be handled?
With an alarming rise in number of retracted papers, what the scientific community thinks is the best way to handle them? 1. Should be ignored, giving benefit-of-doubt to the authors 2. Authors with multiple retracted papers should be demoted 3. Organizations with high retraction rates should be banned from entering various rankings, and debar them from government funding for 1-2 years 4. Court trials against the faulty researchers for criminal wastage of public money
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Answer Accepted 1 Answer 0 Votes
What do you think about post-publication review? Should it be adopted more widely?
Conventional peer-review takes quite long, and is one of the major reasons for the snail-pace of the publication process. On the other hand, it seems attractive to quickly make your article public as a preprint (e.g. on bioRxiv), so that it can get readership and may be citations even before formal publication. Some journals (F1000Research, eLife, etc.) have started the practice of post-publication review. Here 'publication' means not 'acceptance', but making the article public with a valid...
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1 Answer 0 Votes
How can advancements in bioinformatics tools and multi-omics integration (genomics, transcriptomics, and proteomics) improve the early diagnosis of cancer in 2024?
How can bioinformatics tools optimize the integration of multi-omics data to identify highly specific and sensitive biomarkers for early cancer diagnosis? · What role does artificial intelligence play in analyzing complex biological datasets, and how can its predictions be validated for clinical use? · What challenges exist in the standardization of bioinformatics pipelines for regulatory approval and widespread clinical adoption? · How can researchers address issues such as data...
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9 Answers 2 Votes
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1 Answer 0 Votes
Why are the survismeter and friccohesity the greenest nantech for nanoformulating the quality products ?
The question is about the nanoformulation obtained on monodispersing the ingredients in chosen solvent for attaining the interfacial tension almost equal to zero mN/m.
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Answer Accepted 8 Answers 5 Votes
What half-life defines a POP (Persistent Organic Pollutant)?
Is anyone aware of a cutoff half-life (e.g., 5 years) that defines a compound as being a POP? Does the half-life have to be in humans, any species, or in the environment? Citations or links would be very helpful. Thanks
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2 Answers 0 Votes
How should SciPinion improve their account profile page?
Currently, an account's profile includes a CV, education, employment. It also asks for an H-index but does not specify which source. It also excludes information about research output in general and limits itself seemingly to journal articles, chapters, and patents. It could ask about data sets, scientific software, and other research output forms. It can allow people to list an ORCID, ROR (institutes), Mastodon/Twitter, GitHub/GitLab accounts, etc, allowing people to establish a much richer...
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