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-   -   February 8, 2007: Thousands of daddy-long-leggers (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=13280)

bluesdave 02-10-2007 05:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 314492)
As a Wikipedia advocate I take this combination of statements to be highly ironic.

Research institutions often post news releases about their research projects, on their web sites. That was what I was looking for, not the research paper itself. Very few of these sites offer archives, so if they have a busy publicity/communications department, the news releases can drop out of sight pretty quickly.

I have only ever quoted a link to Wikipedia if the subject content looked OK to me, and as I have already said, I know that most web users accept Wikipedia as being an impeccable source. I too wish that more of our work was published on the web, but there is very strong resistance to doing this amongst the scientific community. I tried to do something about it, but I was virtually a lone voice.

missaminus 02-10-2007 05:40 PM

sluurrrrp!
 
anything I can suck up in my Dyson vacuum is tolerable. Anything else that I can't- mice, rats, snakes, kids (eewwww!)- intolerable! :D

bluesdave 02-10-2007 06:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by xoxoxoBruce (Post 314510)
C'mon Dave, I believe ya. I'm just trying to help you out here, by linking pertinent articles.

I know Bruce, and I appreciate your efforts. I meant no disrespect to you. :worried:

skysidhe 02-10-2007 09:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BigV (Post 313969)
GAH!!


Wombat 02-11-2007 04:41 PM

In Australia, the term daddy long legs refers to a different creep-crawly... ours is a true spider, with a small pale body and very long thin legs. It is rumored to be one of the most venomous spiders in the world, however it is harmless to humans because its fangs are too small to pierce human skin.

http://www.usq.edu.au/spider/find/sp...ges/508A10.jpg

LabRat 02-12-2007 09:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bluesdave (Post 314598)
Research institutions often post news releases about their research projects, on their web sites.

So, they are telling what they found out, and you are saying OK, that must be true then. Right?

Just because a "Research Institution" says something , doesn't mean it's necessarily right.

All scientific articles must go thru a peer review process before being accepted for publication, online and eventually print in a scientific journal. The papers are usually sent to 3 researchers in the same field, who are asked to review the paper. (If they do not wish to review it, it is sent out again until at least 3 people review it.) If all 3 say sure, looks good to us, it generally gets published. If there are apparent problems withthe method of experiment, or conclusions drawn, the author(s) are either asked to make corrections and resubmit for further review, or the paper is totally denied for that publication in that journal. The Authors can then send the paper out to another (less picky/lower quality) journal, and try to get it published again, with or without revisions.

I am a researcher, so I know this process. :)

Scientific journal editors are relying on the collective knowledge of experts to put out reliable information.

Essentially this is what Wiki is doing also. The info is out there, but "we" are the reviewers. It's really no more or less reliable than the set of people reviewing the initial submissions.

bluesdave 02-12-2007 04:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by LabRat (Post 314958)
So, they are telling what they found out, and you are saying OK, that must be true then. Right?

No.

Quote:

Just because a "Research Institution" says something , doesn't mean it's necessarily right.
True. I never said otherwise.

Quote:

All scientific articles must go thru a peer review process before being accepted for publication, online and eventually print in a scientific journal. The papers are usually sent to 3 researchers in the same field, who are asked to review the paper. (If they do not wish to review it, it is sent out again until at least 3 people review it.) If all 3 say sure, looks good to us, it generally gets published. If there are apparent problems withthe method of experiment, or conclusions drawn, the author(s) are either asked to make corrections and resubmit for further review, or the paper is totally denied for that publication in that journal. The Authors can then send the paper out to another (less picky/lower quality) journal, and try to get it published again, with or without revisions.
Don't try to teach your grandpa how to suck eggs, girlie. :p

Quote:

I am a researcher, so I know this process. :)
I was undertaking research when you were just a gleam in your parents' eyes. :D
Quote:

Essentially this is what Wiki is doing also. The info is out there, but "we" are the reviewers. It's really no more or less reliable than the set of people reviewing the initial submissions.
Rubbish. First Wiki is not a recognised, nor supported, academic resource, and secondly, any given entry can be modified by anyone, and even the "editors" often cannot agree - a fact admitted on NPR by the head of Wiki last Friday. He said that he knows of entries that have been modified several times in only a few minutes, and that he has no control over it. He seemed to be quite proud of it. Strange.

xoxoxoBruce 02-12-2007 06:43 PM

Here is an excellent article that explains how Wikipedia really works. It appears from the comments below the article, there's some politics, some money, some ego, some disention....but it's working. :D


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