Read About Emoji in Science
There is growing evidence that Emoji can be useful in science communication.
There is growing evidence that Emoji can be useful in science communication.
Short, engaging description of what researchers need to know about predatory journals (and how to avoid them).
Dr Matthias Rillig gives advice for PhD students, postdocs and group leaders on how to navigate the various challenges that academia presents.
“Tortured phrases” — are probably the result of automated translation or software that attempts to disguise plagiarism.
If you want to know why ‘x’ is used to denote the unknown, it’s because you can’t say ‘sh’ in Spanish.
All our ancestors had plenty of fur. According to a new study on relatively hairless mammals, we still have the means to be hirsute. Those genes, it seems, have simply been switched off.
Octolab TV have several videos showing octopus behavior. This one of it getting food out of a bottle is a fav.
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