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SV-POW! ... All sauropod vertebrae, except when we're talking about Open Access. ISSN 3033-3695
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Open AccessSci-HubScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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So, Sci-Hub is the talk of the town. Everyone’s talking about it. I spent Friday afternoon at Manchester University library, giving a couple of taks about open access, and hearing several others about copyright. It was fascinating being a room full of librarians, all of them aware that Sci-Hub is out there, all of them torn between disapproval and excitement. As Martin Eve said on Twitter: Me, I’m not so sure whether I can condone it or not.

PeerJ PreprintsScience CommunicationShiny Digital FutureScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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As a long-standing proponent of preprints, it bothers me that of all PeerJ’s preprints, by far the one that has had the most attention is Terrell et al. (2016)’s Gender bias in open source: Pull request acceptance of women versus men.

EvolutionJuvenileNavel BloggingOntogenySpeculationScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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Autore Matt Wedel

New paper out in Biology Letters: Hone, D.W.E., Farke, A.A., and Wedel, M.J. 2016. Ontogeny and the fossil record: what, if anything, is an adult dinosaur? Biology Letters 2016 12 20150947; DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2015.0947. The idea that dinosaurs had unusual life histories is not new.

Open AccessShiny Digital FutureShowdownStinkin' PublishersScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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Thirteen years ago, Kenneth Adelman photographed part of the California coastline from the air. His images were published as part of a set of 12,000 in the California Coastal Records Project. One of those photos showed the Malibu home of the singer Barbra Streisand. In one of the most ill-considered moves in history, Streisand sued Adelman for violation of privacy.

AltMetricsOpen AccessPapers By SV-POW!sketeersScience PolicyShiny Digital FutureScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
Pubblicato
Autore Matt Wedel

[Note: Mike asked me to scrape a couple of comments on his last post – this one and this one – and turn them into a post of their own. I’ve edited them lightly to hopefully improve the flow, but I’ve tried not to tinker with the guts.] This is the fourth in a series of posts on how researchers might better be evaluated and compared. In the first post, Mike introduced his new paper and described the scope and importance of the problem.

AltMetricsOpen AccessPapers By SV-POW!sketeersScience PolicyShiny Digital FutureScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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You’ll remember that in the last installment (before Matt got distracted and wrote about archosaur urine), I proposed a general schema for aggregating scores in several metrics, terming the result an LWM or Less Wrong Metric.

OstrichRantsSome Kind Of BirdStinkin' CrocsStinkin' TheropodsScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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Autore Matt Wedel

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AltMetricsOpen AccessPapers By SV-POW!sketeersScience PolicyShiny Digital FutureScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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I said last time that my new paper on Better ways to evaluate research and researchers proposes a family of Less Wrong Metrics, or LWMs for short, which I think would at least be an improvement on the present ubiquitous use of impact factors and H-indexes. What is an LWM?

AltMetricsOpen AccessPapers By SV-POW!sketeersRantsScience PolicyScienze della Terra e dell'AmbienteInglese
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Like Stephen Curry, we at SV-POW! are sick of impact factors. That’s not news. Everyone now knows what a total disaster they are: how they are signficantly correlated with retraction rate but not with citation count; how they are higher for journals whose studies are less statistically powerful; how they incentivise bad behaviour including p-hacking and over-hyping.