Archive for the ‘Science Writing’ Category

Peering through peer review

Friday, February 11th, 2011

Some peer review in science rests upon mutual anonymity.

In non-mumbo-jumbo speak: Scientists who bust their asses and write a paper submit it to a journal, and that journal arranges reviewers. The paper authors don’t know who’s marking their hard work up in red ink, and the reviewers don’t know whose work they’re marking up. In theory.

It’s designed to keep everyone to focused on good science, and not gender, race, rivalry, and other forms of bias. But here’s a ticklish question: What if you deduce the identity of your reviewers?

Part of writing science news about a study is to bug the paper’s author(s). I generally trick them into thinking our chat will be about 10 minutes. But what I should really say in a blind query is this: “I don’t think I’ll need more than 10 minutes of your time. But that depends on how interesting the stuff you have to say is, and how well you say it. So, it could be more like an hour, or 2-3 minutes, if you get my gist.”

When I bug the author, I work through the bread-and-butter questions (how did you do it? what does it mean? what’s next?) and take a few interesting tangents along the way. One of the final questions I ask is: “Who would you recommend I talk to that’s familiar with this field, but wasn’t involved with your work?”

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Better baggage screening for science writing

Wednesday, January 19th, 2011

Did anyone pay me to write this?* What’s my relationship with sources mentioned below? Is this post a presentation of opinion? Is it backed by reporting? Some combination of both?

Do you care?

I don’t have any data to suggest you do or don’t, let alone anyone else. But I care, for your sake, my own sake and the sake of democracy.

To make informed judgments about the world, I think readers need access to as much context surrounding a piece of content as possible — including disclosures from the writer (whether it’s a simple blog post or an award-winning feature).

As a critically thinking reader, imagine me as a TSA worker who likes his job way too much. I want to screen your baggage, wave electrified wands in uncomfortable places and possibly direct you into a compromising body scanner. I do this so I can trust that you won’t sneak a figurative bomb into through my brain and into my social networks.

The reality of disclosure is kind of a bummer. Only two out of five science news stories, for example, say anything about the funding of reported research. Science writers disclose researchers’ financial ties to the work even less frequently, about 11 percent of the time. These are often the easiest facts of a story to write, yet omitting them may be erroding public trust in science and journalism**. And we haven’t even touched the writer’s baggage yet.

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The obscure journal dilemma

Wednesday, January 12th, 2011

giant shelf of booksPositivity.

Childhood.

small.

What do these have in common? One, they’re all scientific journals. Two, chances are you’ve never heard of them. (No offense, journals.)

These titles don’t have quite the ring of Science, Nature or PNAS — three of the most-cited journals in modern times — and they rarely carry the studies that send newsfolk into a frenzy, e.g. the recent one about evidence of microbes incorporating arsenic into the backbones of their DNA.

But obscure journals have cool science tucked between their covers. Even the brutal ranks of impact factor, one of the slave drivers of publish-or-perish culture in science, can’t take that away from them.

As a science writer, this fills me with sorrow. I know they hold fascinating and newsworthy gems, the kind of studies people would want to read about. But the noise-to-signal ratio is multiplied by thousands upon thousands of titles. And I’m but one nerdy person to sift through them.

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Not by a Longshot?

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

Longshot magazine (formerly 48 HR magazine*) screamed onto the internet/magazine/media experimentation scene in May, and went for round two this past weekend. Never heard of it? The magazine’s maxim is as follows: Produce a full, glossy and finished issue in 48 hours or less(!).

The editors pull it off by decreeing a theme, then granting hopeful contributors 24 hours** to submit their text, photos, illustrations and other content. In the following 24 hours, the mag’s staff selects, arranges, generates art, edits, fact-checks, copyedits, designs and posts a final product to an on-demand magazine publisher called MagCloud.

I didn’t make the cut in issue “zero” (as I lament in another post), themed hustle, nor did I make it this time around in issue one, themed comeback.

But I’m not too bummed about it, seeing as there were hundreds of submissions, many by writers I hold immense respect for. I can also see many reasons why my submission wasn’t published — in a way, I’m glad. To name a couple shortcomings, the piece had at least one three errors (fixed in this version), weird structure (not fixed) and lacked enough context/explanation (not fixed).

In my defense, I hope Longshot manages to launch an issue when I:

a) am not moving at a high rate of speed

b) have a reliable (or any) internet connection

and

c) can commit my full, undivided attention for more than a few minutes at a time

Even if that day never arrives, I’ll still crank out content for them in a frenzied, disorderly way. In the meantime, constructive criticism is welcome:

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Plagiarism as a spectrum

Monday, July 26th, 2010

cheating on a testLast week, fresh in the wake of the digital hurricane that was PepsiGate, science writer Brian Switek saw a funny thing: what appeared to be part of his story on a website he had never written for.

On July 16, Smithsonian.com ran a piece Switek wrote about dinosaurs that snacked on unfortunate burrowing mammals (with cool skeleton-in-the-stomach fossils to boot). As is common in the competitive science news industry, some other outlet — Tom Feilden’s blog at the BBC in this case — eventually posted a similar piece.

But according to Switek and many others, the wording in the BBC’s post looked a bit too similar.

Switek pointed out this curiosity in the article’s comments section, eventually announcing “slimy” behavior on Twitter. Allegations of  plagiarism ensued, and Charlie Petit of Knight Science Journalism Tracker played referee. (more…)

ScienceBlogs + PepsiCo: Are we overreacting?

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

Update 1 (7/8/2010): I’ve had some time to “chew on the gray area,”and Martin Robbins’ most excellent post on “Pepsigate” certainly helped (via David Dobbs). In short, I agree with Robbins’ argument and potential solutions. However, I’m still left wondering the following: Why wasn’t such a colossal stink about corporate-sponsored blogs previously raised by the community? Again, I admittedly lack the inside perspective because I’m not a ScienceBlogs member. Some of these sponsored blogs appear to be editorially independent, but full transparency is publicly elusive.

Update 2 (7/8/2010): ScienceBlogs has shuttered Food Frontiers and officially opened this issue up for debate, which pads the fair ounce of credit I think they deserve. Is this, however, a case of “a day late, a dollar short”? Yes, and rightfully so for those who left — especially the journalist-bloggers (i.e. David Dobbs, Maryn McKenna, Rebecca Skloot, etc.). But I’m an optimist. Perhaps management at Seed can truly learn from this experience, address the major problems that permitted the business operation to tarnish the editorial operation, and salvage their hemorrhaging community.


If you’ve been living under a science blogging rock, head over to Carl Zimmer’s summary of the ScienceBlogs and PepsiCo kerfuffle.

Didn’t get all that? Here’s a capsule review of the past 24+ hours:

  1. The 8,000,000-pound corporate gorilla PepsiCo struck a deal with Seed Media Group to join ScienceBlogs
  2. “Food Frontiers,” as the new blog is called, started with an introductory post by Evan Lerner
  3. The science blogosphere threw a conniption, with the majority* saying: “WTF is going on here?”
  4. In protest, some ScienceBloggers decided to vacate the premises (some temporarily, some permanently)
  5. ScienceBlogs finally added disclaimers about the nature of the PepsiCo relationship, i.e. that it’s “advertorial”
  6. News outlets (e.g. The Guardian) ran pieces about the fiasco
  7. When it’s a little too late, Adam Bly — founder and CEO of Seed — sent this letter to the ScienceBloggers
  8. (welcome to the present)

Pepsi Cola sign by Whiskeygonebad/FlickrIn short, ScienceBlogs — for various reasons — pissed off a lot of people.

But are we all overreacting over a communications oversight here? Or is this a legitimate, fist-slamming-on-the-desk moment to stick up to The Man?

Or perhaps a bit of both? (more…)