180 Folgen

Methodology, scientific life, and bad language. Co-hosted by Dr. Dan Quintana (University of Oslo) and Dr. James Heathers (Cipher Skin)

Everything Hertz Dan Quintana

    • Wissenschaft
    • 4,9 • 17 Bewertungen

Methodology, scientific life, and bad language. Co-hosted by Dr. Dan Quintana (University of Oslo) and Dr. James Heathers (Cipher Skin)

    180: Consortium peer reviews

    180: Consortium peer reviews

    Dan and James discuss why innovation in scientific publishing is so hard, an emerging consortium peer review model, and a recent replication of the 'refilling soup bowl' study.


    Other things they cover and links:



    Which studies should we spend time replicating?
    The business models of for-profit scientific publishers
    How many tacos can you buy with the money it costs to publish open access in Nature?
    The original soup bowl study: https://doi.org/10.1038/oby.2005.12
    The replication study: https://doi.org/10.1037/xge0001503
    The Peer Community In initiative: https://peercommunityin.org/
    Stuart Buck's newsletter: https://goodscience.substack.com


    Other links
    Everything Hertz on social media



    Dan on twitter
    James on twitter
    Everything Hertz on twitter
    Everything Hertz on Facebook


    Support us on Patreon and get bonus stuff!



    $1 per month: A 20% discount on Everything Hertz merchandise, access to the occasional bonus episode, and the the warm feeling you're supporting the show
    $5 per month or more: All the stuff you get in the one dollar tier PLUS a bonus episode every month


    Citation


    Quintana, D.S., Heathers, J.A.J. (Hosts). (2024, May 2) "180: Consortium peer reviews", Everything Hertz [Audio podcast], DOI: 10.17605/OSF.IO/24FMP
    Support Everything Hertz

    • 50 Min.
    179: Discovery vs. maintenance

    179: Discovery vs. maintenance

    Dan and James discuss how scientific research often neglects the importance of maintenance and long-term access for scientific tools and resources.


    Other things they cover:



    Should there be an annual limit on publications (even if this were somehow possible)?
    The downsides of PhD by publication
    The Gates Foundation's new Open Access policy


    Other links
    Everything Hertz on social media



    Dan on twitter
    James on twitter
    Everything Hertz on twitter
    Everything Hertz on Facebook


    Support us on Patreon and get bonus stuff!



    $1 per month: A 20% discount on Everything Hertz merchandise, access to the occasional bonus episode, and the the warm feeling you're supporting the show
    $5 per month or more: All the stuff you get in the one dollar tier PLUS a bonus episode every month


    Citation


    Quintana, D.S., Heathers, J.A.J. (Hosts). (2024, April 3) "179: Discovery vs. maintenance", Everything Hertz [Audio podcast], DOI: 10.17605/OSF.IO/KS8PV
    Support Everything Hertz

    • 48 Min.
    178: Alerting researchers about retractions

    178: Alerting researchers about retractions

    Dan and James discuss the Retractobot service, which emails authors about papers they've cited that have been retracted. What should authors do if they discover a paper they've cited has been retracted after they published their paper?


    Other things they chat about



    A listener question about including examiner's comments in thesis
    The different types of retractions and thier impact
    Why aren't versioning systems more common in scientific publishing?


    Other links
    Everything Hertz on social media



    Dan on twitter
    James on twitter
    Everything Hertz on twitter
    Everything Hertz on Facebook


    Support us on Patreon and get bonus stuff!



    $1 per month: A 20% discount on Everything Hertz merchandise, access to the occasional bonus episode, and the the warm feeling you're supporting the show
    $5 per month or more: All the stuff you get in the one dollar tier PLUS a bonus episode every month


    Citation


    Quintana, D.S., Heathers, J.A.J. (Hosts). (2024, February 29) "178: Alerting researchers about retractions", Everything Hertz [Audio podcast], DOI: 10.17605/OSF.IO/T8HRD
    Support Everything Hertz

    • 49 Min.
    177: Plagiarism

    177: Plagiarism

    We discuss two recent plagiarism cases, one you've probably heard about and another that you probably haven't heard about if you're outside Norway. We also chat about the parallels between plagiarism and sports doping—would people reconsider academic dishonesty if they were reminded that future technology may catch them out?


    Here are some of the takeaways from the episode (generated with the help of AI):



    Plagiarism cases can range from minor academic practice issues to more serious instances of copying verbatim
    The detection and punishment of plagiarism can vary depending on the context, such as academic journals or internal university issues.
    The mindset and motivations behind plagiarism can differ between athletes and students, with athletes often driven by intense competition.
    Long-term detectability and the potential consequences of cheating are factors that may discourage individuals from engaging in plagiarism.
    Addressing plagiarism requires a balance between identifying genuine cases and avoiding ideological biases.


    Other links
    Everything Hertz on social media



    Dan on twitter
    James on twitter
    Everything Hertz on twitter
    Everything Hertz on Facebook


    Support us on Patreon and get bonus stuff!



    $1 per month: A 20% discount on Everything Hertz merchandise, access to the occasional bonus episode, and the the warm feeling you're supporting the show
    $5 per month or more: All the stuff you get in the one dollar tier PLUS a bonus episode every month


    Citation


    Quintana, D.S., Heathers, J.A.J. (Hosts). (2024, January 31) "177: Plagiarism", Everything Hertz [Audio podcast], DOI: 10.17605/OSF.IO/4M3F2
    Support Everything Hertz

    • 42 Min.
    176: Tracking academic workloads

    176: Tracking academic workloads

    We chat about a paper on the invisible workload of open science and why academics are so bad at tracking their workloads.


    This episode was originally recorded in May 2023 in a hotel room just before our live recording of Episode 169, which is why we refer to the paper as a 'new' paper near the start of the episode.


    Links



    The paper on the invisible workload of open research
    Our live and in-person episode with Sandra Matz on using big data to understand behavior


    Other links
    Everything Hertz on social media



    Dan on twitter
    James on twitter
    Everything Hertz on twitter
    Everything Hertz on Facebook


    Support us on Patreon and get bonus stuff!



    $1 per month: A 20% discount on Everything Hertz merchandise, access to the occasional bonus episode, and the the warm feeling you're supporting the show
    $5 per month or more: All the stuff you get in the one dollar tier PLUS a bonus episode every month


    Citation


    Quintana, D.S., Heathers, J.A.J. (Hosts). (2023, December 29) "176: Tracking academic workloads", Everything Hertz [Audio podcast], DOI: 10.17605/OSF.IO/U84JC
    Support Everything Hertz

    • 36 Min.
    175: Defending against the scientific dark arts

    175: Defending against the scientific dark arts

    We chat about a recent blogpost from Dorothy Bishop, in which she proposes a Master course that will provide training in fraud detection—what should such a course specifically teach and where would these people work to apply their training? We also discuss whether open science is a cult that has trouble seeing outward.


    Links



    The blog post on the Master in dark arts defence from Dorothy Bishop
    The blog post on whether open science is a cult from Andrew Gelman


    Other links
    Everything Hertz on social media



    Dan on twitter
    James on twitter
    Everything Hertz on twitter
    Everything Hertz on Facebook


    Support us on Patreon and get bonus stuff!



    $1 per month: A 20% discount on Everything Hertz merchandise, access to the occasional bonus episode, and the the warm feeling you're supporting the show
    $5 per month or more: All the stuff you get in the one dollar tier PLUS a bonus episode every month


    Citation


    Quintana, D.S., Heathers, J.A.J. (Hosts). (2023, December 7) "175: Defending against the scientific dark arts", Everything Hertz [Audio podcast], DOI: 10.17605/OSF.IO/K2J7N
    Support Everything Hertz

    • 38 Min.

Kundenrezensionen

4,9 von 5
17 Bewertungen

17 Bewertungen

Schnemann ,

My fav (open) science podcast

The science equivalent to good cop, bad cop. One is constantly venting and rambling while the other compensates with his tender voice and tries to steer the conversation out of rabbit holes they both keep finding themselves in.
But jokes aside, this is a great podcast with two very likable and knowledgeable hosts, likewise their guests. I must’ve learned as much about science from them as in my whole undergrad.

Konrad Senf ,

Truth and beauty bombs

I quote 'A Softer World': ". . . but I'm not alone, there are more of us than you suspect, and we've got bombs, truth and beauty bombs."
Dan and James illuminate the inner workings of science from the point of view of two post-docs with experiences covering research environments of three continents and multiple levels of the scientific process. They represent the new generation that believes in open science and they hold well-thought-out positions on important matters that they articulate really well.
And what really ties everything together is the clear bond of friendship that shines through in their conversations. Come for the science, stay because it feels like you're among friends.

Tobiasjohannes ,

Awesome.

Really great sci podcast. Great guests, sharp talk, relevant content. Love it!

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