New dietary guidelines released by the Trump administration tell Americans to avoid ultra-processed foods but don't have an ...
Discover how the Dutch Book Theorem reveals profit opportunities in betting and finance when probabilities are misjudged.
Through the AdvanceSTL program, the Business Journal wants to hear your big ideas for bringing together public, private, ...
Academics today, around the world, are confined by the way their research output is measured. Indicators that count the ...
As the fall semester came to a close, Andrew Heiss, an assistant professor in the Department of Public Management and Policy at the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University, ...
While growing evidence shows that carbon emissions are harming the economy, the journal Nature found that an outlier paper had deep flaws. By Lydia DePillis In April 2024, the prestigious journal ...
Renee Good Belonged to ‘ICE Watch’ Group That Trained Activists to Interfere with Agents, Block Vehicles Federal Immigration Officers Shoot Two People in Oregon During ‘Targeted Vehicle Stop’ of ...
Altmetrics have emerged as a complementary tool to traditional citation-based metrics in the assessment of scholarly impact. Unlike traditional metrics that primarily capture academic citations over ...
From fraudulent research coming out of paper mills, to data fabrication showing up in published papers, academic journals have a quality control issue on their hands. According to a study in Nature, ...
Avery is vice chair for addiction psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medicine and NewYork-Presbyterian. For much of the 20th century, the academic medicine ideal was clear: a physician-researcher supported ...
Federal officials are raising long-standing concerns with research journals and the academic incentive structures propping them up. But experts say the government alone can’t overhaul the industry.
Thousands of scientific papers are retracted every year because of fraudulent activity, with both authors and journals gaming a system to gain academic acclaim through deceit, dishonesty and false ...