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Which countries do worse in retraction rankings? Plus, how citizen science is transforming research, and the chilling effect of new EU rules on gene-edited crops.
Thousands of scientists worldwide contributed to our salary and career satisfaction survey — here’s what we found out. Plus: a strategy for shrinking publication bias, and how can we program a self-driving car with morals?
A huge analysis sheds light on open-access compliance. Plus, the quantum internet is closer than we think, and experts weigh in on anatomy and its connection (or lack thereof) to gender.
“But I don't know that it's man made,” says the US President. Plus, delve into Stephen Hawking’s final paper and consider a call for a mass retraction of cardiac-stem cell studies.
A white-knuckle ride for two astronauts, an example of how we’re teaching computers to be biased and the promise and controversy of polygenic risk scores.
A tiny chip might have compromised Apple and Amazon, diamond-shaped graphs could prevent correlation-causation confusion and Europe’s ambition open-access plan is being sold stateside.
Scientists will get the jump on fishers in warming Arctic, a deep dive into the frustrating search for dark matter and astronomers might have spotted the first exomoon.
Toast the three winners of the Nobel Prize in Physics, welcome a new world in our Solar System and enjoy a guide for scientists who speak to the media.