Scholarly
How can we optimize the peer review process, and what role should AI play? The post Unveiling Perspectives on Peer Review and Research Integrity: Survey Insights appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
In today’s Kitchen Essentials interview, Roger Schonfeld speaks with Sami Benchekroun, CEO of Morressier, which provides publishers with workflows that ensure research integrity. The post Kitchen Essentials: An Interview with Sami Benchekroun of Morressier appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Open Café, a new listserv dedicated to the free and open discussion of open scholarship has been met with enthusiasm by the scholarly communication community. The post Who Would Have Thought That We Needed Another Listserv? appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
XKCD's Randall Munroe has launched a video series around his "What If?" books and today answers the question, what if the earth stopped spinning? The post What if the Earth Suddenly Stopped Spinning? appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Legislation often lags technological advances. The EU's Digital Single Market Copyright Directive leaves many open questions regarding AI text- and data-mining. The post Protecting Commercial AI Rights is Harder than You Think — EU Edition appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
In this post Robert Harington looks to Hannah Arendt, and her 1958 book, The Human Condition for help in understanding the nature of how we work, asking how an AI world may affect the nature of our work. The post How We Work, AI, and Human Engagement appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
To celebrate the fifth anniversary of the Research Organization Registry (ROR), Alice Meadows interviewed Director Maria Gould for today's Kitchen Essentials post. The post Kitchen Essentials: An Interview with Maria Gould of ROR appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
The scholarly publishing sector is undergoing its second digital transformation. Today, Ithaka S+R reviews this strategic landscape as part of a broader analysis of the shared infrastructure that supports scholarly communication. The post The Second Digital Transformation appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
How many books do we read in a year? Wouldn't a better question be how well, how thoughtfully we had engaged with long-form content? The post Reading: It Can’t Be About the Numbers appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
AI might help with the deluge of content, but there are problems when we rely on machines to think for us. The post Let’s Be Cautious As We Cede Reading to Machines appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.