@AmazonHelp@amazonIN Why do you make the life of your customers so hard that they might give up during the process?? The process is becoming punishment as an amazon customer
@amazonIN
I have been delivered this broken paper shredder..Pickup Tracking ID:
5556785205..
However, I am still waiting for someone to come and pick this up.. such an inconvenient experience
@amazonIN I have been delivered this broken paper shredder..Pickup Tracking ID:
5556785205.. however, you are not picking this up and replace the product..such inconvenience!
Excited to share our latest work on #quartz#rheology, available on #EPSL@ElsevierConnect.
Link >> https://t.co/eDWPr4II8Z
All the structural geologists, numerical and geophysical modelers >> cool microstructures, updated flow law values, strength of the continents.
@UMR_ISTO
Really excited to share some new insights on the kinematics of Himalayan folds. We introduced a novel weak coal-shale layer controlled #fold_duplex model, with the help of classical structural mapping.
#Himalayas#Tectonics@ElsevierConnect.
Free Link >> https://t.co/2pS4dgBu92
✋🏿8. Starting my own business.
🟢Finding commercial prospects.
🟢Creating and evaluating your product.
🟢Busting the biggest entrepreneurship myths.
🟢https://t.co/PuWOgD7yHA
Curious about how geologists unveil the mysteries of Earth's crust and mantle rheology? 🌍 Dive into this week's blog post where Subhajit Ghosh (@dynamicRHEOLOGY) from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, delves into the experimental methods:
https://t.co/TorpHu6Hlv
📢NEW OPEN CALL📢We are thrilled to announce that the first call in #EXCITE2 for free-of-charge transnational access to 36 world-class imaging facilities is officially open!
📆Deadline May 22, 2024 @ 23:59 CEST
🔗To learn more & apply, visit: https://t.co/oiOUnPJsdc
@HorizonEU
What are some evidence of stress relaxation in active fault damage zones? Our🚨new paper🚨 published @AGU's #GeophysicalResearchLetters shows field scale evidence of fault damage zone stress relaxation✍️ #earthquake#fault#timedependent
https://t.co/9KuazQeY6l
A list of papers that were rejected before going viral
( = winning a Nobel Prize).
It just shows how #science works sometimes.
▫️
1. Richard Ernst, Chemistry (1991), for NMR spectroscopy
The paper that described our achievements was rejected twice by the Journal of Chemical Physics to be finally accepted and published in the Review of Scientific Instruments.
▫️
2. Andre Geim, Physics (2010), for graphene
“First, we submitted the manuscript to Nature. It was rejected and, when further information requested by referees was added, rejected again. According to one referee, our report did 'not constitute a sufficient scientific advance'."
▫️
3. Paul Boyer, Chemistry (1997), for enzymatic mechanisms underlying the synthesis of ATP
His proposed resolution of a major unsolved problem in biochemistry threatened to "change the paradigm," Boyer remembers, and "the leading journal" in his field - The Journal of Biological Chemistry - declined to publish his work.
▫���
4. Herbert Kroemer, Physics (2000), for semiconductor heterostructures
"I wrote up the idea and submitted the paper to Applied Physics Letters, where it was rejected. I was talked into not fighting the rejection, but to submit it to the Proceedings of the IEEE, where it was published, but ignored. I also wrote a patent, which is probably a better paper than the one in Proc. IEEE."
▫️
5. John Polanyi, Chemistry (1997), for describing the dynamics of chemical elementary processes
PRL rejected the paper as lacking scientific interest. Shortly thereafter they rejected T. Maiman's report of the first operating laser, on the same grounds. Polanyi read about this second rejection, quite by chance. [Later] he submitted the identical manuscript to the Journal of Chemical Physics, where it was promptly published.
▫️
6. Kary Mullis, Chemistry (1997), for the PCR method (!!!!)
"And Dan Koshland would be the editor of Science when my first PCR paper was rejected from that journal and also the editor when PCR was three years later proclaimed Molecule of the Year."
▫️
7. Rosalind Yalow, Medicine (1977), for the radioimmunoassays of peptide hormones
From the rejection letter: “The experts in this field have beer particularly emphatic in rejecting your positive statement that the "conclusion that the globulin responsible for insulin binding is an acquired antibody appears to be inescapable”.
▫️
8. Hans Krebs, Medicine (1953), for the citric acid cycle
The rejection letter from Nature is in the picture. 🤦♂️
▫️
❗ My point is simple:
Rejections by editors are NOT rejections by the research community.
Believe in your results. Bring them to the public. Post your study as a preprint.
Show it to the world and let the world decide.
▫️
(This list compiled by Josh Nicholson + bit from me).
#AcademicTwitter #phdlife
OpenAI released their own Prompt Engineering Guide.
The guide is useful for anyone trying to maximize LLMs. I'd recommend it.
Here's the 6 strategies they outline for getting better results from GPT-4:
Overpublishing puts enormous stress on students and PIs.
And brings tons of money to publishers in STEM.
A new study shows that the number of papers is increasing FASTER than the number of #PhD graduates.
It’s an amazing work with very useful statistics. Huge kudos to the authors!
▫️
Main outcomes:
1️⃣ In 2022 the number of articles is 47% higher than in 2016. The amount of writing, reviewing and editing workload per scientist is increased enormously.
2️⃣ “Special issues” is a strategy for publishing lots of papers with reduced review time. This is possible due to the “publish or perish” pressure and clearly benefits the publishers.
3️⃣ The publishing time varies widely!
MDPI = 37 days. Frontiers = 72 days. Elsevier = 134 days. Springer = 157 days. Nature = 185 days.
4️⃣ The article rejection rates do not seem to correlate with publisher growth. However, rejection rates decline with increased use of special issue publishing.
5️⃣ Certain for-profit gold-open-access publishers create an increasing number of special issues, with uniquely reduced turnaround times, and in specific cases, high impact inflation and reduced rejection rates.
6️⃣ The authors suggest a new metric - Impact Inflation, which is reflected in self-citation within the same journal. For example, MDPI has a high impact inflation due to excessive self-citation compared to other publishers.
Conclusions and my opinion:
- Scientists have to spend a lot more time on reviewing and writing than before (on average).
- The more papers are published, the more the quality is compromised.
- Scientific progress has become partially bound to the business models of publishers and their revenue (a sad reality today).
- There is a huge lack of transparency. Much of these data had to be ‘web-scraped’ from numerous sources in order to get a full picture. We clearly need regulators to mandate open access to publisher’s statistics.
- Reduce the number of special issues! Those typically have low standards.
▫️
Science, publishing and funding make a trio that is very hard to disentangle.
However, research quality is controlled by the community.
This is why preprint + community review can make a big difference.
#AcademicTwitter #AcademicChatter