Rogue Scholar Posts

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ComunidadCódigo De ConductaGovernanzaSpanish

🔗Mantener la confianza y la seguridad de la comunidad La comunidad rOpenSci se rige por nuestro Código de conducta,que describe claramente los comportamientos inaceptables,incluye instrucciones sobre cómo reportar un incidentee informa sobre cómo se gestionan estos reportes.

ReadingMD9A8PapersTeaching
Published in quantixed

It’s 2026 and so it’s time for another edition of “the papers I selected for a module that I teach”. Previous selections are here (2025, 2024, 2023, 2022). The list serves as a snapshot of interesting papers published in the previous 12 months or so. I hope it’s useful to others who are looking for lists […]

Research-integrityAcademic-publishingResearch-fraud
Published in Stories by Adam Day on Medium
Author Adam Day

Information & truth. What’s the difference? I’ve always liked this analogy from the world of data science: data is information, but models are truth. Let’s start with the data. This image shows total monthly publications for a particular journal up until mid 2024: On its own, the data doesn’t tell us much that’s interesting. But a little bit of analysis can go a long way here.

Appalachian HistoryBell County KYBreathitt County KYBuchanan County VAClay County KY
Published in Appalachianhistorian.org
Author Alex Hall

Appalachian History Series – Blackjewel: How One Coal Company Turned Appalachian Mines Into Bankruptcy Assets On strip mine benches above eastern Kentucky and southwestern Virginia, Blackjewel looked like any other late era coal operator. Conveyor belts crossed hollow mouths. Rusting loaders sat beside black ponds. Permit numbers were nailed to posts at the edge of steep, gray highwalls. On paper, though, Blackjewel was something different.

Appalachian FiguresBedford County PALincoln County KY
Published in Appalachianhistorian.org
Author Alex Hall

Appalachian Figures Series – The Story of James Harrod of Bedford, Pennsylvania Along the courthouse lawn at Harrodsburg, a roadside marker and a reconstructed fort point back toward a man most Kentuckians know only by name. James Harrod does not loom in popular memory the way Daniel Boone does, yet the town that still carries his name began as his outpost on the edge of Virginia’s empire.