Citations: Incitement or Excitement?

In recent months, a lot of new citation approaches have landed in my email box. Alternatives and tangents seem to have arisen amidst angst about the Institute for Scientific Information (ISI) and their traditional impact factor. (Note to ironists: displeasure […]

A New Look!

Thanks to Nicole Colovos of Goris.com, the Scholarly Kitchen has a great new look! The design is meant to carry through the notion that we’re chatting in a kitchen, and Nicole captured it perfectly. Neat. Thanks!

“Noteworthy” Copyright Case in Florida

The Chronicle of Higher Education recently covered a “noteworthy” copyright case in Florida. Why the air-quotes? The intellectual property at stake is literally class notes, more or less. A professor who recorded his lecture notes in both written form and […]

Online Beats Print, Even for Print Gimmicks!

Online beats print in so many ways: it’s searchable, has greater storage capacity, and supports multiple media (i.e., audio, video, animation), just to name three. Here’s more whimsical evidence that print is inferior. In this case, online makes a print […]

GenBank Turns 25

How quickly they grow up! It seems like only yesterday that GenBank was a two-volume listing of alleles cavorting at our feet. Now, it’s a strapping (300 pickup trucks’ worth) bruiser of genetic information. Congratulations to GenBank on reaching the […]

Blog-based Peer Review Experiment: Mixed Results

An experiment in having a book peer-reviewed online has concluded, and the results are detailed in the Chronicle of Higher Education. The book entitled “Expressive Processing: Digital Fictions, Computer Games, and Software Studies,” examines the importance of using software design […]

China’s Internet: A World Unto Itself?

A good article in the Economist outlines some of the important social roles the Internet is playing in China, even though it is tightly controlled (Wikipedia banned, Google filtered, for instance). China will soon boast more Internet users than any […]

Journals: Salvation through Conversation?

The mainstream media may be registering the revolution, but is it too late? A recent New York Times story reveals in all its glory how younger readers parse news through social media. One focus group participant is quoted saying, “If […]