ahmadove
ahmadove t1_jc3txsm wrote
If you're in STEM academia, it's quite common.
ahmadove t1_jabk6dl wrote
Reply to Walking the hall of my university and there is a fairly large can of nitrogen in the hallway. by XxX_Dick_Slayer_XxX
We have two of those on every floor, it's quite common near labs in the natural sciences, we use them every other day.
ahmadove t1_ja2t0fi wrote
Reply to Ears with different canal sizes by SlavJerry
I have the same problem. Eventually I chose tips that seal perfectly yet only sit at the entrance of the canal. Worked for me. Alternatively you can get customs, custom IEMs or just custom ear tip molds (those exist and aren't expensive).
ahmadove t1_j5nk26j wrote
Reply to TIFU by getting Cirrhosis at the age of 27 by [deleted]
Wow, I hope it's treatable and can be kept under control. If you don't mind me asking, how much were you drinking before and how long? It's a bit unusual to onset at an age so young, makes me worried about myself.
ahmadove t1_j5c8d57 wrote
Reply to comment by oxfordcommaordeath in Moody morning in the Swiss Alps [OC] [1334x2000] IG: arpandas_photography_adventure by dasarpan007
I study in switzerland, and believe me, I had that thought many times even though it's in front of my eyes.
ahmadove t1_j5bpdb8 wrote
Reply to comment by rehabonthego in Moody morning in the Swiss Alps [OC] [1334x2000] IG: arpandas_photography_adventure by dasarpan007
Don't know about flat earth, but I browse /r/birdsarentreal every now and then, they take the joke very very far sometimes, but I sincerely doubt anyone there doesn't know it's satire.
ahmadove t1_j5bp7ln wrote
Reply to comment by jayjonas1996 in Moody morning in the Swiss Alps [OC] [1334x2000] IG: arpandas_photography_adventure by dasarpan007
Lol yes it's satire
ahmadove t1_j5a8dqq wrote
Reply to Moody morning in the Swiss Alps [OC] [1334x2000] IG: arpandas_photography_adventure by dasarpan007
/r/switzerlandisfake would absolutely love this
ahmadove t1_j2it3go wrote
Reply to comment by novawind in Semantic Scholar is a free, AI-powered research tool for scientific literature, based at the Allen Institute for AI. by akiptif
Well yes. But let's say you're interested in a very particular method being used in a paper. That method is often not mentioned in abstracts or to enough detail to discern by a keyword search. Searching by anything that probes abstracts will never get you a comprehensive result. You need an engine that searches also article body. That's my whole point I'm raising.
ahmadove t1_j2ikox2 wrote
Reply to comment by PhilShackleford in Semantic Scholar is a free, AI-powered research tool for scientific literature, based at the Allen Institute for AI. by akiptif
Sci-hub for a literature search? It's gold for someone without a good institutional access or for some rare to find articles, but you can only search DOIs, no?
ahmadove t1_j2ho35e wrote
Reply to Semantic Scholar is a free, AI-powered research tool for scientific literature, based at the Allen Institute for AI. by akiptif
Gave it a whirl. It appears indeed powerful. Google sucks for literature search because most literature is behind paywalls, so you essentially search abstracts. Pubmed sucks because well... It's a got a bit of a primitive search algorithm. This actually works holy shit. I'll introduce it to my lab mates, thank you!
ahmadove t1_iws70l4 wrote
Reply to comment by badpuffthaikitty in My Uncle died peacefully in his sleep. by badpuffthaikitty
Yeah. You also missed the other 63758274850293759929384757 times it was posted.
ahmadove t1_iujln1y wrote
Reply to comment by pentatomid_fan in Nose Picking Could Increase Risk for Alzheimer’s and Dementia by jstohler
You're absolutely right. IF is only appropriate as a metric when used to compare journals within the same field. Clinical stuff that make it to NEJM or The Lancet make the most cutting edge stuff in Nature, Cell and Science look like they're less important, then you have other smaller journals that my field publishes in like JASN and Kidney international and NDT which are even lower IF.
However sci rep has really lowered its IF even compared to other journals within the field, which in an ideal world should still be completely fine as its a negative-result journal making it inherently low impact. But unfortunately the stigma remains. Whenever you say you published there, people automatically give you a look in the life sciences. I would never bash negative results, they're vital. I do however dislike genuinely insignificant studies and especially associational studies. Correlations have importance but they're so... So overused it hurts.
ahmadove t1_iuj2lxd wrote
Reply to comment by pentatomid_fan in Nose Picking Could Increase Risk for Alzheimer’s and Dementia by jstohler
It's common knowledge in academia. It's absolutely not a scam or predatory journal, it's even a part of the nature group lol. It's just that they decided some years ago to convert the journal to an "accept anything that is not fraud or terrible science." In academic terms, this means as long as your paper shows logical research and ethics they HAVE to publish it regardless of how meaningless or low impact it is. Because of this, the IF of the journal dropped dramatically over the last years and continues to drop as we speak.
To clarify further, I'll give an exaggerated example. If you conducted a study showing that age is a strong predictor of mortality (the older you are, the more likely you are to die), and you did all the proper statistics to show this correlation, then your paper will be published. Because, even though the conclusion is useless, it was derived scientifically and logically and so they have to publish it.
Don't get me wrong. It's a brilliant thing for science. For eons we've had the issue of academic journals only publishing high impact and flashy positive results. This is bad because all the negative results get buried in the basement of labs, and no one knows about them. Meaning others are bound to repeat the same research wasting money only to find negative results. But, on the other hand, you have people abusing this by publishing useless and not just negative results. And that is not so nice.
Edit: also I just noticed you said "pay to publish." Lol, all journals ask you to pay to publish. In fact, if one doesn't, it's probably a scam. And nature, amongst the top journals out there, takes thousands of dollars to publish.
ahmadove t1_iuetdjm wrote
Ah yes. Scientific reports. The "no one else accepted my publication so this is my last resort" journal.
ahmadove t1_jdkk2qz wrote
Reply to TIFU by sending nudes to a dead guy by Th3t4w4v3
Yeah I don't buy this.