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Articles by David Matthews 榴莲视频>
Martin Chalfie argues that young scientists who ‘play the game’ of publishing in selective journals are less likely to win permanent posts
Country faces dilemmas over language of instruction and how to tackle dropout rate
Investigation discovers 400,000 researchers worldwide have used ‘pseudoscientific’ journals
Institutions set to be rated on metrics including the number of classrooms and dormitories that they have
Analysis of Italian PhD graduates finds that the ‘milk’ as well as the ‘cream’ leave
The Dutch astrophysicist on discovering the chemistry of the cosmos, whether she’d like to go into space, and if extraterrestrial life would surprise her
The entanglement of the university and tech worlds faces increased scrutiny following the Cambridge Analytica scandal. Could joint positions in industry and academia offer a workable and ethically defensible way forward? David Matthews reports
Stampede to study AI has led to warnings that the number of lecturers cannot keep up with demand
Peter Doherty warns scientists about being ‘used’ by journalists with a predetermined story to tell
‘Verbose’ language, bad English and unexplained abbreviations all figure highly in reasons for rejection
Nobel laureates call for early career researchers to be freed from ‘publish or perish’ mentality
At a gathering of young scientists and Nobel prizewinners, David Matthews detects a whiff of mutiny in the air stirred by the pressures of a modern research career
Chemistry laureate Michael Levitt also warns younger scientists are now far less likely to be awarded grants
Overseas scholars use survey to warn of hostile political rhetoric against immigrants
National strategies also debate merits of basic versus applied research in rapidly expanding field
After more than a decade of inflation-busting growth, now could be time to ‘pause and consolidate’, says Anja Karliczek
Resistance to increasing English-language courses could set tone for the rest of Europe, some believe
Public suspect researchers are performing ‘impact’ and hitting targets for the benefit of government regulators, not them, European academies argue
University representatives disappointed by lower than expected budget increase for European Research Council
Arizona State to be first university adopter of new technology, launching fully online biology degrees
Unions and universities worry that agreements could leave them vulnerable to for-profit competition and entrench privatisation
Interdisciplinary and risky projects in particular led to projects that made big strides in understanding, evaluators say
Gender gap at professorial level is largely down to fewer women applying, so default application system could be a solution, researcher suggests
Institutions themselves could create their own megajournals in response, report from European universities suggests