Computer and Information SciencesGhost

Front Matter

Front Matter
The Front Matter Blog covers the intersection of science and technology since 2007.
Home PageAtom FeedMastodonISSN 2749-9952
language
FeatureComputer and Information Sciences
Published

Working in science is as much about reading papers as it is about writing papers. There are usually two ways you can come across an interesting scientific paper: * Active Searching. Literature search on a particular topic * Passive Browsing. Scanning the literature in regular intervals for papers of interest The focused active search is typically used when you collect information for a research project or write a paper or grant proposal.

Book ReviewComputer and Information Sciences
Published

Ben Goldacre: Bad Science. Published September 2008 by Fourth Estate Ltd. Paperback, 352 pages, ISBN 0007240198 Ben Goldacre, blogger of the Bad Science[1] column in the Guardian newspaper, in September published a book based on material from his blog. Just like the newspaper column, the book is primarily intended for a general audience rather than the trained scientist or medical doctor.

FeatureComputer and Information Sciences
Published

The 2008 Nobel Prizes will be announced next week, starting with the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine on Monday. There will be a live webcast on Monday at 9:30 AM GMT for those interested1. As every year just before the announcement, speculation about this year's winners is in full swing. M. William Lensch, here on Nature Network correctly predicted last year's winners2, and this year he is trying it again3.

InterviewsComputer and Information Sciences
Published

Good software solves a problem. When one journal after another switched to PDF as electronic document format, and journals started to appear only in electronic form, storing papers as printouts in folders became impractical. But the PDF files will soon start to clutter the hard drive, despite efforts to organize them by topic, year or author. At least for Macintosh users, Papers is one practical and elegant solution to this problem.

Meeting ReportComputer and Information Sciences
Published

Conference 2.0 – A scheduled meeting of people sharing a common interest that takes advantage of Web 2.0 1 concepts. Scientific conferences are essential both for the exchange of ideas and for networking. But they don’t have to be organized the same way as 10-20 years ago. Web 2.0 tools now allow much broader user participation before, during and after the conference.

InterviewsComputer and Information Sciences
Published

In the last few months we have seen an ever increasing number of new social networking (Web 2.0) sites for scientists. Good Web 2.0 tools for scientists primarily try to solve a problem. But by adding a social aspect, they will gain useful features that would otherwise not be possible. Eva Amsen has recently written a great blog post about this1.

Meeting ReportComputer and Information Sciences
Published

The just finished conference Science Blogging 2008: London was a wonderful chance for real-life socialising networking. I started to upload some fotos to Flickr (e.g. Scott Keir explaining sign language, see all fotos tagged sciblog here), some of them are too embarrassing and I will keep them for bribes reference later on. The meeting was also a great opportunity to think about where we are today with scienceblogging.