Results for ' scientific publishing market'

967 found
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  1.  37
    Peer Review: Scientific Publishing: Disruption and Semantic Build-Up.Frank Hellwig - 2009 - Logos 20 (1):184-198.
    A new technology paired with a viable business model will have disruptive impact on incumbent companies in a speci c market, if they do not re- evaluate and update their business models accord- ingly. As the Internet matures, Semantic Web technologies enable applications for meaning- based and dynamic ltering and processing of information, which has a disruptive impact on sci- enti c publishing. This article calls for publishers to adopt seman- tic technologies and emphasises the “need to in- (...)
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  2.  29
    Publishers as elements of the scientific communication system.Wulf D. V. Lucius - 2007 - Poiesis and Praxis 5 (2):125-137.
    The author argues that the new digital possibilities in scientific communication do not imply, by any means, that many old requirements are becoming dispensable. The essential elements of the system, such as quality assurance, authenticity, orientation and navigation will still demand considerable expense. The overall system costs will rather be higher in a hybrid system. In the second part of his lecture, the author discusses the two fundamentally different open access models, the Golden Road, which is supposed to be (...)
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  3.  28
    (1 other version)Scénarios prospectifs pour l’édition scientifique.Ghislaine Chartron - 2010 - Hermès: La Revue Cognition, communication, politique 57 (2):123.
    Cet article s’intéresse au marché de l’édition scientifique et à son évolution dans le cadre de l’Internet et du développement du libre accès. Il s’attache à montrer la diversité de ce marché en fonction des champs scientifiques, notamment par le type d’éditeurs impliqués, les lectorats concernés, les économies associées. Il met en exergue le nécessaire discernement de ces marchés face aux critiques générales de dysfonctionnement soulignées. Il pointe certains effets contrastés du numérique conduisant à certaines reconfigurations paradoxales. Enfin, la vision (...)
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  4. Pharma's Marketing Influence on Medical Students and the Need for Culturally Competent and Stricter Policy and Educational Curriculum in Medical Schools: A Comparative Analysis of Social Scientific Research between Poland and the U.S.Marta Makowska, George Sillup & Marvin J. H. Lee - 2017 - Journal of Healthcare Ethics and Administration 3 (2):19-33.
    It is reported that medical students both in the U.S. and Poland have experience of interacting with pharmaceutical company representatives (pharma reps) during their school years. Studies have warned that the interaction typically initiated by the pharma reps’ general gift-giving eventually leads to the quid pro quo relationship between the pharma company and the future doctors, the result of which is that the doctors will prescribe their patients drugs in favor of the pharma company. Built upon the existing finding, this (...)
     
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  5.  36
    Street research market: dealing with scientific misconduct in Iran.Homayoun Sadeghi-Bazargani, Leila Nikniaz & Hamid Reza Yousefi Nodeh - 2020 - BMC Medical Ethics 21 (1):1-8.
    BackgroundScientific misconduct is a prevalent phenomenon with many undesirable consequences. In Iran, no original research have been done about scientific fraud. So, this study aimed at describing a challenging research misconduct in Iran, its related causes, and the ways Iranian authorities deal with it.MethodsIn this cross-sectional study, through a two-year period, all the advertisements installed in the study sites were collected and the content analysis was performed. Semi-structured interviews were held with experts for discovering the causes of misconduct. Also, (...)
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  6.  36
    Ethical Publishing: How Do We Get There?Fernando Racimo, Nicolas Galtier, Véronique De Herde, Noémie Aubert Bonn, Ben Phillips, Thomas Guillemaud & Denis Bourguet - 2022 - Philosophy, Theory, and Practice in Biology 14 (15).
    The academic journal publishing model is deeply unethical: today, a few major, for-profit conglomerates control more than 50 of all articles in the natural sciences and social sciences, driving subscription and open-access publishing fees above levels that can be sustainably maintained by publicly funded universities, libraries, and research institutions worldwide. About a third of the costs paid for publishing papers is profit for these dominant publishers' shareholders, and about half of them covers costs to keep the system (...)
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  7. Marketing as a Metaphor for Assuming and Outlining the Senses of Library Services – A Romanian Initiative and Experience.Kiraly V. Istvan & Trifu Raluca - 2010 - Philobiblon - Transilvanian Journal of Multidisciplinary Research in Humanities:441 - 454.
    The present research studies more thoroughly and extends from global perspectives the ideas elaborated in a former study dedicated to that which was named there – related to libraries, but not exclusively – symbolic marketing, embodied and objectified as a metaphor. “Living”, active and efficient metaphor. The analyses focus, on the one hand, on the theoretical, conceptual – and even philosophical – aspects of “symbolic marketing”. On the other hand, applying these theoretical considerations, we present and examine as a case (...)
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  8.  32
    Bas de Boer, How scientific instruments speak. Postphenomenology and technological mediations in neuroscientific practice. Lexington books: the Rowman & Littlefield publishing group, Inc., 2020. 211 pages. ISBN 978-1-7936-2784-1 and 978-1-7936-2785-8 (electronic). [REVIEW]Jan Kyrre Berg Olsen Friis - 2023 - AI and Society 38 (6):2381-2383.
  9.  4
    Influence of Social Responsibility and Sustainable Marketing Strategies on the Behavior of the Plant-Based Food Consumer Market in Ecuador and Latin America.Víctor Hugo Briones-Kusactay, Guido Homero Poveda-Burgos, Humberto Pedro Segarra-Jaime, Clara Augusta Cabrera-Jara, Luis Roberto Asencio-Cristóbal, Simón Bolívar Parrales-Escalante, Julio Antonio Baque-Mieles & Galvarino Casanueva-Yánez - forthcoming - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture:562-572.
    A documentary review was carried out on the production and publication of research papers related to the study of the variable Social Responsibility, Sustainable Marketing and Consumer Behavior. The purpose of the bibliometric analysis proposed in this document was to know the main characteristics of the volume of publications registered in the Scopus database during the period 2017-2022, achieving the identification of 57 publications. The information provided by this platform was organized through graphs and figures categorizing the information by Year (...)
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  10.  68
    Socrates Comes to Market.Jos Kessels - 2001 - Philosophy of Management 1 (1):49-71.
    Socrates op de markt, Filosofie in bedrijf was first published in the Netherlands in 1997 and reprinted in 1999.1 It was translated into German and published in Germany in late 2000. The book covers the need today for Socratic dialogue, its methods, its uses and related concepts. These include elenchus (the refutation of what one thought one knew); maieutics (Socratic midwifery making latent knowledge conscious); the relationship of knowledge to feeling, virtue and the formation of personality; and the distinction between (...)
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  11.  23
    (1 other version)Le marché de l'édition scientifique, entre accès propriétaire et accès libre.Joëlle Farchy & Pascal Froissart - 2010 - Hermès: La Revue Cognition, communication, politique 57 (2):137-151.
    A number of practical aspects as well as ethical and political considerations have contributed to the advent of open-source applications in pioneering software, and subsequently to an extension of the openness principle to culture and research fields. This article explores the genealogy of open-source scientific publishing, emphasising the other variable of economic market dysfunction to show that although this has been an important factor in the development of open access, the problem has by no means been entirely (...)
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  12.  22
    Dim and dimmer: an exploration of the production and diffusion of scientific knowledge in Australia between the 1770s and the 2010s.Lynnette Hicks - 2016 - Dissertation, Macquarie University
    Despite growing public concerns around socio-scientific problems and the significance of these problems to everyday life, there is a dearth of sociological literature addressing the production and diffusion of the natural sciences in Australia. In particular, critical analyses of scientific knowledge production and diffusion relative to the actions of the state, the market and civil society are largely absent. This thesis sets out to mitigate this situation by contributing a critical historiography of scientific knowledge production and (...)
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  13.  59
    Scientific publishing and the reading of science in nineteenth-century Britain: A historiographical survey and guide to sources.Jonathan R. Topham - 2000 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 31 (4):559-612.
  14.  59
    Text-Based Plagiarism in Scientific Publishing: Issues, Developments and Education. [REVIEW]Yongyan Li - 2013 - Science and Engineering Ethics 19 (3):1241-1254.
    Text-based plagiarism, or copying language from sources, has recently become an issue of growing concern in scientific publishing. Use of CrossCheck (a computational text-matching tool) by journals has sometimes exposed an unexpected amount of textual similarity between submissions and databases of scholarly literature. In this paper I provide an overview of the relevant literature, to examine how journal gatekeepers perceive textual appropriation, and how automated plagiarism-screening tools have been developed to detect text matching, with the technique now available (...)
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  15.  37
    How to Do Things with Emotions: The Morality of Anger and Shame across Cultures.Andrew Beatty - 2023 - Common Knowledge 29 (2):236-239.
    Publishers love titles that begin How or Why. Better still, How and Why, combining edification with utility. The target group is that overlap between the self-help audience and the idly curious—which is to say, most of us. And since emotions are very much about self-help and self-harm, they offer rich pickings in a burgeoning market. Flanagan's How to Do things with Emotions is a philosopher's take on moral emotions, the allusion to J. L. Austin's How to Do Things with (...)
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  16.  40
    In scientific publishing at the article level, effort matters more than journal impact factors.Kevin Winker - 2011 - Bioessays 33 (6):400-402.
  17.  9
    Towards a history of scientific publishing.Bettina Dietz - 2022 - History of Science 60 (2):155-165.
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  18.  36
    Early Industrial Roots of Green Chemistry and the history of the BHC Ibuprofen process invention and its Quality connection.Mark A. Murphy - 2017 - Foundations of Chemistry 20 (2):121-165.
    Conventional wisdom and many published histories of “Green Chemistry” describe its start as being a result of governmental and/or regulatory actions at the US Environmental Protection Agency during the early 1990’s. But there were many Real World industrial examples of environmentally friendly commercial processes in the oil and commodity chemicals industries for decades prior to the 1990s. Some early examples of commercial “Green Chemistry” are briefly described in this article. The Boots/Hoechst Celanese Ibuprofen process was one of the earliest multiple-award-winning (...)
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  19.  24
    Annals of Scientific Publishing: Johannes Petreius's Letter to Rheticus.N. Swerdlow - 1992 - Isis 83 (2):270-274.
  20.  32
    Using the Internet for scientific publishing: FQS as an example.Katja Mruck & Günter Mey - 2008 - Poiesis and Praxis 5 (2):113-123.
    Since the Public Library of Science launched its first open-access journals and the Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences and Humanities has been released in 2003 and found enormous attention, the claim for open access—to make publicly funded journal articles available for the public—started to reach German scientists too. But still no experience has been made with electronic publishing in general and more specifically with open-access publishing. One consequence is that the potential capacity of (...)
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  21.  70
    A Socio‐epistemological Framework for Scientific Publishing.Judith Simon - 2010 - Social Epistemology 24 (3):201-218.
    In this paper I propose a new theoretical framework to analyse socio‐technical epistemic practices and systems on the Web and beyond, and apply it to the topic of web‐based scientific publishing. This framework is informed by social epistemology, science and technology studies (STS) and feminist epistemology. Its core consists of a tripartite classification of socio‐technical epistemic systems based on the mechanisms of closure they employ to terminate socio‐epistemic processes in which multiple agents are involved. In particular I distinguish (...)
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  22.  10
    Misconduct in medical research and practice.Sergei V. Jargin - 2020 - New York: Nova Science Publishers.
    The main varieties of scientific misconduct are fabrication, falsification, misquoting and plagiarism. Considering the "improvement" of fraudulent skills, scientists, editors, and authorities must jointly combat the misconduct. Also, it is important that whistleblowers must be protected from revenge. The response to scientific misconduct requires national and international bodies to provide leadership and guidelines. Whistleblowers need a safe, confidential place to report misconduct. The quality of research and hidden conflicts of interest should be taken into account deciding which studies (...)
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  23.  95
    Publication ethics and the ghost management of medical publication.Sergio Sismondo & Mathieu Doucet - 2010 - Bioethics 24 (6):273-283.
    It is by now no secret that some scientific articles are ghost authored – that is, written by someone other than the person whose name appears at the top of the article. Ghost authorship, however, is only one sort of ghosting. In this article, we present evidence that pharmaceutical companies engage in the ghost management of the scientific literature, by controlling or shaping several crucial steps in the research, writing, and publication of scientific articles. Ghost management allows (...)
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  24.  23
    The Mystery of the Majorana affair: Erasmo Recami: The Majorana case: letters, documents, testimonies. Singapore: World Scientific Publishing, 2020, 400pp, £40 PB.Raffaele Pisano - 2021 - Metascience 30 (3):421-424.
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  25.  55
    Trust in scientific publishing.Harry Hummels & Hans E. Roosendaal - 2001 - Journal of Business Ethics 34 (2):87 - 100.
    Trust is an important phenomenon to reduce organisational complexity and uncertainty. In the literature many types of trust are distinguished. An important framework to understand the variety and development of trust in organisations is provided by Zucker. She distinguishes three types of trust: process-based trust.
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  26. The Effects of Publishing Processes on Scientific Thought. Typography and Typology in Prehistoric Archaeology (1950s–1990s).Sébastien Plutniak - 2020 - Science in Context 33 (3):273-297.
    In the last decades, many changes have occurred in scientific publishing, including online publication, data repositories, file formats and standards. The role played by computers in this process rekindled the argument on forms of technical determinism. This paper addresses this old debate by exploring the case of publishing processes in prehistoric archaeology during the second part of the twentieth century, prior to the wide-scale adoption of computers. It investigates the case of a collective and international attempt to (...)
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  27. Cultural evolution true and false: A debunking of Hayek's critics.Robert Nadeau - unknown
    1.- Introduction: articulating Hayek’s evolutionary argument with his socialist calculation dispute I completely agree with Bruce Caldwell (Caldwell 1988b: 74-75; Caldwell 1988a) that it is precisely within the conceptual and theoretical framework of the debate on the possibility of socialist calculation that Hayek definitively breaks with the standard static equilibrium approach to the market economy and finds out that the central problem of economics is related to the complex question of social coordination. From the Hayekian standpoint, this problem cannot (...)
     
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  28.  46
    Roman Ingarden's Works Published by the Polish Scientific Publishers.Danuta Petsch - 1975 - Dialectics and Humanism 2 (3):123-124.
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  29.  26
    Hegemony of Knowledge and Pharmaceutical Industry Strategy.Sergio Sismondo - 2017 - In Dien Ho (ed.), Philosophical Issues in Pharmaceutics: Development, Dispensing, and Use. Dordrecht: Springer.
    This chapter discusses some strategies pharmaceutical companies employ to establish influence and even hegemony over domains of medical knowledge: marketing products via medical research and education. The chapter thus contributes to understanding the political economy of knowledge in this industry. As a counterpart to traditional epistemology, studying the political economy of knowledge shifts attention from individual claims and their justifications to some of the forces available to shape terrains on which claims are produced, distributed, and consumed.Of pharmaceutical companies’ clinical research, (...)
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  30.  96
    Social Media and the Production of Knowledge: A Return to Little Science?Leah A. Lievrouw - 2010 - Social Epistemology 24 (3):219-237.
    In the classic study Little science, big science (New York: Columbia University Press, 1963), Derek Price traces the historical shift from what he calls little science?exemplified by early?modern ?invisible colleges? of scientific amateurs and enthusiasts engaged in small?scale, informal interactions and personal correspondence?to 20th?century big science, dominated by professional scientists and wealthy institutions, where scientific information (primarily in print form and its analogues) was mass?produced, marketed and circulated on a global scale. This article considers whether the growing use (...)
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  31. Conflicted Medical Journals and the Failure of Trust.Leemon McHenry & Jon Jureidini - 2011 - Accountability in Research 18:45-54.
    Journals are failing in their obligation to ensure that research is fairly represented to their readers, and must act decisively to retract fraudulent publications. Recent case reports have exposed how marketing objectives usurped scientific testing and compromised the credibility of academic medicine. But scant attention has been given to the role that journals play in this process, especially when evidence of research fraud fails to elicit corrective measures. Our experience with The Journal of the American Academy of Child and (...)
     
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  32.  31
    Raymond Smullyan, A Beginner’s Further Guide to Mathematical Logic: World Scientific Publishing 2017, pp. 288; ISBN-10: 9814725722 £45.00, ISBN-13: 978-9814725729 £24.00, £13.49.Morten Heine Sørensen - 2019 - Studia Logica 107 (5):1079-1081.
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  33.  30
    Why pesticides with mutagenic, carcinogenic and reproductive risks are registered in Brazil.Glenda Morais Rocha & Cesar Koppe Grisolia - 2018 - Developing World Bioethics 19 (3):148-154.
    Brazil is the biggest market for pesticides in the world. In the registration process, a pesticide must be authorized by the Institute of the Environment, Health Surveillance Agency and Ministry of Agriculture. Evaluations follow a package of toxicological studies submitted by the companies and also based on the Brazilian law regarding pesticides. We confronted data produced by private laboratories, submitted to the Institute of the Environment for registration, with data obtained from scientific databases, corresponding to mutagenicity, carcinogenicity and (...)
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  34.  40
    Gesammelte werke.Henry Walter Brann - 1970 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 8 (4):488-494.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:488 HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY most extensive study of this aspect of Schelling's thought, at least until 1806. However, even if Schelling was not, as it is frequently stated, indifferent to the problems and the vicissitudes of politics, his theoretical thinking on this subject never went beyond temporary systematizations, to be given up, or modified, after a while. The author shows how Schelling, especially in this fieM, was influenced either (...)
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  35.  35
    Ulf Lagerkvist: Erling Norrby : The periodic table and a missed Nobel Prize: World Scientific Publishing Co., Singapore/hackensack, NJ/london, 2012, xii + 122 pp, ISBN: 978-981-4295-95-6 , $22, £15.George B. Kauffman - 2014 - Foundations of Chemistry 16 (3):249-251.
    The “story behind the story” of the genesis of this book is an involved and fascinating one. In May the Sven and Dagmar Salén Foundation decided to give a grant to Ulf Lagerqvist to permit publication of his manuscript titled The Bewildered Nobel Committee by the World Scientific Publishing Company . This decision was based on a thorough review by Torbjörn Norin, Professor of Organic Chemistry at the Royal School of Technology in Stockholm and a member of the (...)
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  36.  14
    Behavioural Economics: From Homo Economicus to Homo Sapiens.Simon Gaechter - 2009 - Routledge.
    Since 1995, the annual Graz Schumpeter lectures have been delivered by eminent economists such as Stanley J. Metcalfe, Nathan Rosenberg and Duncan Foley. Routledge are proud to publish the lectures as new books each year. The latest book in this series come from Simon Gächter, an expert in the psychology of economic decision making. Gächter analyses the latest scientific research on human and social cognitive and emotial biases which help to better understand economic decisions and how they affect the (...)
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  37.  28
    Artificial intelligence national strategy in a developing country.Mona Nabil Demaidi - forthcoming - AI and Society:1-13.
    Artificial intelligence (AI) national strategies provide countries with a framework for the development and implementation of AI technologies. Sixty countries worldwide published their AI national strategies. The majority of these countries with more than 70% are developed countries. The approach of AI national strategies differentiates between developed and developing countries in several aspects including scientific research, education, talent development, and ethics. This paper examined AI readiness assessment in a developing country (Palestine) to help develop and identify the main pillars (...)
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  38. Scientific integrity and the market for lemons.Richard C. Cottrell - 2014 - Research Ethics 10 (1):17-28.
    Scientific integrity cannot be adequately ensured by appeals to the ethical principles of individual researchers. Research fraud has become a public scandal, exacerbated by our inability accurately to judge its extent. Current reliance on peer review of articles ready for publication as the sole means to control the quality and integrity of the majority of research has been shown to be inadequate, partly because faults in the research process may be concealed and partly because anonymous peer review is itself (...)
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  39. Publication Planning 101: A Report.Sergio Sismondo - unknown
    Publication planning is the sub-industry to the pharmaceutical industry that does the organizational and practical work of shaping pharmaceutical companies' data and turning it into medical journal articles. Its main purpose is to create and communicate scientific information to support the marketing of products. This report is based mostly on information presented at the 2007 annual meeting of the International Society of Medical Planning Professionals, including a workshop entitled "Publication Planning 101/201", attended by one of us. We provide some (...)
     
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  40.  14
    Health Measurement, Industry, and Science.Leah McClimans - 2017 - In Dien Ho (ed.), Philosophical Issues in Pharmaceutics: Development, Dispensing, and Use. Dordrecht: Springer.
    Patient-reported outcome measures are now common endpoints in clinical trials. In 2009 in an effort to standardize and streamline their use in medical product labeling, the FDA published FDA Guidance for Industry Patient-Reported Outcomes Measures: Use in Medical Product Development to Support Labeling Claims. This publication drew attention to the need to ensure that PROMs are methodologically sound. Nonetheless, in this paper I discuss how many of these measures continue to fall short in terms of validity, interpretability, and responsiveness. As (...)
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  41.  37
    Comment.Alvin Goldman & Moshe Shaked - 1993 - Social Epistemology 7 (3):249–253.
    The paper by Susan Feigenbaum and David Levy, 'The market for (ir)reproducible econometrics', has several meritorious features. It offers an interesting model of how econometric researchers might decide whether to replicate a previously published article and how journal editors might decide whether to publish such a replication study. It offers data about error rates involved in original studies and about the willingness of original researchers to submit their data to potential replicators. Finally, it endorses some plausible proposals for institutional (...)
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  42.  77
    Scientific integrity and the market for lemons.Richard C. Cottrell - 2014 - Research Ethics 10 (1):1747016113494651.
    Scientific integrity cannot be adequately ensured by appeals to the ethical principles of individual researchers. Research fraud has become a public scandal, exacerbated by our inability accurately to judge its extent. Current reliance on peer review of articles ready for publication as the sole means to control the quality and integrity of the majority of research has been shown to be inadequate, partly because faults in the research process may be concealed and partly because anonymous peer review is itself (...)
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  43.  30
    Education's Effects on Individual Life Chances and On Development: An Overview.Walter W. McMahon & Moses Oketch - 2013 - British Journal of Educational Studies 61 (1):79-107.
    This paper estimates the effects of human capital skills largely created through education on life's chances over the life cycle. Qualifications as a measure of these skills affect earnings, and schooling affects private and social non-market benefits beyond earnings. Private non-market benefits include better own-health, child health, spousal health, infant mortality, longevity, fertility, household efficiency, asset management and happiness. Social benefits include increased democratisation, civil rights, political stability, reduced crime, lower prison, health and welfare costs, and new ideas. (...)
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  44.  32
    A Tale of Two Textbooks: Experiments in Genre.David Kaiser - 2012 - Isis 103 (1):126-138.
    ABSTRACT Though the notion of a scientific textbook has been around for almost three centuries, the category has hardly been stable. The plasticity of the textbook genre may be illustrated by recent variations as well as long-term trends. In this brief essay I examine two idiosyncratic but highly successful physics books, each published in the mid 1970s, whose production, marketing, and adoption reveal some of the slippage between such categories as textbook, scholarly monograph, and popular best seller.
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  45.  26
    Found in Translation: "New People" in Twentieth-Century Chinese Science Fiction by Jing Jiang (review).Yingying Huang - 2024 - Utopian Studies 34 (3):591-594.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Found in Translation: “New People” in Twentieth-Century Chinese Science Fiction by Jing JiangYingying HuangJing Jiang. Found in Translation: “New People” in Twentieth-Century Chinese Science Fiction. New York: Columbia University Press, 2021. 144 pp. Paperback, ISBN 9780924304941.One of the Association of Asian Studies’ Asia Shorts series, Jing Jiang’s monograph is a delightful 130-page read including notes and a bibliography. It contributes new and cross-cultural perspectives to the Chinese SF (...)
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  46.  36
    Ahmed H. Zewail: 4D visualization of matter: recent collected works: Imperial College Press, London, England, 2014; distributed by World Scientific Publishing Co., Singapore, xvi + 409 pp, ISBN: 978-1-78326-505-3 , $48.00; £31.59.George B. Kauffman & Laurie M. Kauffman - 2015 - Foundations of Chemistry 18 (2):175-176.
  47.  57
    Female Sexual Dysfunction, Feminist Sexology, and the Psychiatry of the Normal.Chloë Taylor - 2015 - Feminist Studies 41 (2):259-292.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Feminist Studies 41, no. 2. © 2015 by Feminist Studies, Inc. 259 Chloë Taylor Female Sexual Dysfunction, Feminist Sexology, and the Psychiatry of the Normal It is really weird that doctors should be the reigning experts on sex. —Leonore Tiefer1 The first volume of Michel Foucault’s The History of Sexuality provides a compelling and influential critique of the “sciences of sex.” In this work, Foucault suggests that there is (...)
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  48.  24
    Culturological reconstruction of ChatGPT's socio-cultural threats and information security of Russian citizens.Pavel Gennadievich Bylevskiy - forthcoming - Philosophy and Culture (Russian Journal).
    The subject of the study is the socio-cultural threats to the information security of Russian citizens associated with ChatGPT technologies (Chat Generative Pre-trained Transformer, a machine-generated text response generator simulating a dialogue). The object of research − evaluation of the ratio of advantages and threats of generative language models based on "machine learning" in modern (2021-2023) scientific literature (journals HAC K1, K2 and Scopus Q1, Q2). The scientific novelty of the research lies in the culturological approach to the (...)
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  49.  60
    Approaches to the Study of Attic Vases: Beazley and Pottier (review).John Howard Oakley - 2003 - American Journal of Philology 124 (2):306-309.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:American Journal of Philology 124.2 (2003) 306-309 [Access article in PDF] Philippe Rouet. Approaches to the Study of Attic Vases: Beazley and Pottier. Trans. Liz Nash. Oxford Monographs on Classical Archaeology. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001. xiii + 167 pp. 21 black and white plates. Cloth, $74. This monograph examines the development of two major approaches in the study of Greek vase painting by focusing on a comparison of (...)
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    Publish Late, Publish Rarely! : Network Density and Group Performance in Scientific Communication.Staffan Angere & Erik J. Olsson - 2017 - In Thomas Boyer-Kassem, Conor Mayo-Wilson & Michael Weisberg (eds.), Scientific Collaboration and Collective Knowledge. New York, USA: Oxford University Press.
    Research programs regularly compete to achieve the same goal, such as the discovery of the structure of DNA or the construction of a TEA laser. The more the competing programs share information, the faster the goal is likely to be reached, to society’s benefit. But the “priority rule”-the scientific norm according to which the first program to reach the goal in question must receive all the credit for the achievement-provides a powerful disincentive for programs to share information. How, then, (...)
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