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Understanding the science-policy interface in urban climate governance from a co-production perspective: Insights from the cases of Hamburg and São Paulo

Understanding the science-policy interface in urban climate governance from a co-production perspective: Insights from the cases of Hamburg and São Paulo

Urban governance, the interplay of governmental bodies with other actors shaping decision-making and its implementation, plays a key role for mitigation and adaptation measures in cities. While knowledge co-production is advanced as an instrumental approach to support climate action, a gap between knowledge and implementation persists.

American postdoctoral salaries do not account for growing disparities in cost of living

American postdoctoral salaries do not account for growing disparities in cost of living

The NIH sets postdoctoral trainee stipend levels that many institutions use as a basis for postdoc salaries - but while salary standards are held constant across universities, the cost of living in those universities’ cities and towns vary widely. 

Public support of science: A contingent valuation study of citizens' attitudes about CERN with and without information about implicit taxes

Public support of science: A contingent valuation study of citizens' attitudes about CERN with and without information about implicit taxes

Large-scale projects in fundamental science, such as major particle colliders, radio telescopes, synchrotron light sources are promoted by scientific communities in the first place, mainly funded by governments, and ultimately by taxpayers. Little is known, however, about preferences of the latter except in the form of qualitative social attitudes survey. 

The digitalisation paradox of everyday scientific labour: How mundane knowledge work is amplified and diversified in the biosciences

The digitalisation paradox of everyday scientific labour: How mundane knowledge work is amplified and diversified in the biosciences

This paper examines how automation and digitalisation influence the way everyday scientific work practices are organised and conducted. Drawing on a practice-based study of the field of synthetic biology, the paper uses ethnographic, interview and survey data to offer a sociomaterial and relational perspective of technological change.

A Helping Hand From the Government? How Public Research Funding Affects Academic Output in Less-Prestigious Universities in China

A Helping Hand From the Government? How Public Research Funding Affects Academic Output in Less-Prestigious Universities in China

This study, proposes that the positive impact of public funds is much weaker in less-prestigious universities than in prestigious ones, and that overdependence on public research funding in fact even hurts academic output quality in less-prestigious universities. 

Gender Inequalities in Research Funding: Unequal Network Configurations, or Unequal Network Returns?

Gender Inequalities in Research Funding: Unequal Network Configurations, or Unequal Network Returns?

Despite longstanding discussions and consequent improvements of gender representation in academia, the number of women working in academic research, their performance and their recognition still indicate the persistence of gender inequalities.

Designing Grant-Review Panels for Better Funding Decisions: Lessons from an Empirically Calibrated Simulation Model

Designing Grant-Review Panels for Better Funding Decisions: Lessons from an Empirically Calibrated Simulation Model

This article explores how factors relating to grades and grading affect the correctness of choices that grant-review panels make among submitted proposals. It seeks to identify interventions in panel design that may be expected to increase the correctness of choices.

How Status of Research Papers Affects the Way They Are Read and Cited

How Status of Research Papers Affects the Way They Are Read and Cited

Although citations are widely used to measure the influence of scientific works, research shows that many citations serve rhetorical functions and reflect little-to-no influence on the citing authors.

Long distance ski racing is associated with lower long-term incidence of depression in a population based, large-scale study

Long distance ski racing is associated with lower long-term incidence of depression in a population based, large-scale study

Physical activity has been proposed to be beneficial for prevention of depression, although the importance of exercise intensity, sex-specific mechanisms, and duration of the effects need to be clarified. Using an observational study design, following 395,369 individuals up to 21 years it was studied whether participation in an ultralong-distance cross-country ski race was associated with lower risk of developing depression.

No time to die: An in-depth analysis of James Bond's exposure to infectious agents

No time to die: An in-depth analysis of James Bond's exposure to infectious agents

Global travelers, whether tourists or secret agents, are exposed to infectious agents. We hypothesized that agents pre-occupied with espionage and counterterrorism may, at their peril, fail to correctly prioritize travel medicine.

Practice What You Preach: Credibility-enhancing Displays and the Growth of Open Science

Practice What You Preach: Credibility-enhancing Displays and the Growth of Open Science

How can individual scientists most effectively spread the adoption of open science practices? The authors propose visible open science badges, especially by prestigious scientists.

Institutional Report Cards for Gender Equality: Lessons Learned from Benchmarking Efforts for Women in STEM

Institutional Report Cards for Gender Equality: Lessons Learned from Benchmarking Efforts for Women in STEM

The outcomes of a 4-year pilot phase which gathered information from over 500 institutions are discussed, outlining future directions for efforts to promote gender equity in STEM.

Does Incentive Provision Increase the Quality of Peer Review? An Experimental Study

Does Incentive Provision Increase the Quality of Peer Review? An Experimental Study

Although peer review is crucial for innovation and experimental discoveries in science, it is poorly understood in scientific terms. Discovering its true dynamics and exploring adjustments which improve the commitment of everyone involved could benefit scientific development for all disciplines and consequently increase innovation in the economy and the society.

The "invisible Hand" of Peer Review: The Implications of Author-referee Networks on Peer Review in a Scholarly Journal

The "invisible Hand" of Peer Review: The Implications of Author-referee Networks on Peer Review in a Scholarly Journal

Peer review is not only a quality screening mechanism for scholarly journals. It also connects authors and referees either directly or indirectly. Thi…

What's in a Number? How (and Why) Measuring Research Productivity in Different Ways Changes the Gender Gap

What's in a Number? How (and Why) Measuring Research Productivity in Different Ways Changes the Gender Gap

The gender gap in research productivity varies widely from study to study. This paper looks at how (and why) measuring productivity in different ways provides different pictures of the gender gap.