Matt Hardy

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Matt Hardy

Matt Hardy

@DocInTheDocs

Lecturer at @UniofBradford. Rep for @thephysoc. Interests in science, TEL + Horror/SF. Wears Dr. Martens. Views my own. Not a professional wrestler. he/his/him

เข้าร่วม Mayıs 2019
292 กำลังติดตาม206 ผู้ติดตาม
Matt Hardy รีทวีตแล้ว
Denis Wirtz
Denis Wirtz@deniswirtz·
Here is our updated database of grants for early careers researchers in all fields. It goes way beyond traditional NIH and NSF funding opportunities. We list 428 types of grants. Download it here: research.jhu.edu/rdt/funding-op…
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Matt Hardy
Matt Hardy@DocInTheDocs·
@fake_journals Sadly, I have often been impacted by whether I need to source article processing charges or not.
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Publishing with Integrity
Publishing with Integrity@fake_journals·
Are journal metrics quietly replacing editorial judgement? When researchers decide where to submit a paper, the discussion often begins with numbers. ⚫️ Impact Factor ⚫️ CiteScore ⚫️ Quartile rankings ⚫️ Journal lists These indicators appear precise. They are widely used by universities, promotion committees and research assessment systems. As a result, they have become embedded in the culture of scholarly publishing and are used to inform many decisions, including which journal to submit to. But there is an uncomfortable question behind this behaviour. Are journal metrics quietly replacing editorial judgement? ________________________________________ Taking the road of least resistance Metrics make decisions easier. Instead of examining how a journal actually operates, researchers can look at a single number and feel confident that they have chosen a “good” venue. In practice, many submission decisions are influenced by signals such as: ⚫️ Impact Factor or CiteScore ⚫️ Q1 / Q2 / Q3 / Q4 rankings ⚫️ Presence in major databases ⚫️ Journal rankings used by institutions None of these indicators are meaningless. They provide a rough signal about visibility and citation performance. However, they tell us very little about how a journal actually handles manuscripts or whether it is the best place for your paper. ________________________________________ What metrics do not show A journal metric does not tell you: ⚫️ How rigorous the peer review process is ⚫️ How decisions are made by editors ⚫️ Whether editorial board members are active ⚫️ How carefully reviewers engage with submissions ⚫️ Whether the journal maintains consistent editorial standards Two journals with very similar metrics may operate in completely different ways. One may run a careful, editor-led review process. Another may rely on minimal editorial oversight. Yet to the outside world, the numbers can make the journals look almost identical. ________________________________________ The risk of metric-driven behaviour Metrics were originally intended as descriptive indicators. Over time they have become decision tools. When this happens, a subtle shift occurs. Researchers stop asking questions about how journals function and begin to rely on the number itself. This can create a situation where reputation is inferred from metrics rather than from editorial practice or publishing standards. In extreme cases, the metric becomes the journal. ________________________________________ A simple question Before submitting your next paper, consider this. Do you evaluate the editorial quality of a journal? Or do you mainly look at the metrics attached to its name? Many of us probably recognise both behaviours in ourselves. I would be interested to hear how others approach this decision. When you choose a journal, what matters most to you?
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Matt Hardy รีทวีตแล้ว
Journal of Physiology
Journal of Physiology@JPhysiol·
⏰ 6 DAYS LEFT TO APPLY ⏰ Are you an ECR seeking some Editorial Board experience? 🎓 Our #EditorialBoardFellowship is a great opportunity to be directly involved in the editorial process under the guidance of a Senior Editor! Apply now:⤵️ buff.ly/gYZGdKA
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Matt Hardy
Matt Hardy@DocInTheDocs·
@DrHelenFry Dr. Stewart F. Alexander, who not only saved many lives by recognising the presence of Mustard Gas after the air raid at Bari (when it shouldn't have been there), but whose discoveries at that air raid were also instrumental for the future development of chemotherapy.
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Matt Hardy รีทวีตแล้ว
Physiological Reviews
Physiological Reviews@physiolrev·
🚨We’re calling for applications for the Physiological Reviews Editor-in-Chief position! 📅Application deadline: April 30, 2026 🎙️Candidate interviews: Spring 2026 🖱️Apply now! ow.ly/HlqW50YbNfp
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Kenneth Lowande
Kenneth Lowande@ProfLowande·
@seanjwestwood this "prophet of academAI doom" thing wouldn't work without the beard. No one as well positioned as you; keep it coming.
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Sean Westwood
Sean Westwood@seanjwestwood·
Faculty raging against AI: are you just openly abdicating your responsibility to prepare students for what's coming? AI is the future. Your anger doesn't change that. It just means your students learn it from someone else--or don't learn it at all. Enrollments will respond.
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Wayne Bradshaw
Wayne Bradshaw@NonwayneWayne·
I'll bite. Large language models CANNOT write systematic literature reviews because they are token-prediction models. "Reviews" that they produce are not "reproducible" in the way that systematic literature reviews must be. Maybe time for social "science" to stop playing
Sean Westwood@seanjwestwood

People are mad I said AI can write literature reviews. Fine, but literature reviews are broken. Why does elegant prose or the ability to regurgitate past work override if a finding actually matters? Today storytelling launders bad research and bad writing buries good research.

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Matt Hardy
Matt Hardy@DocInTheDocs·
@nationalrailenq @GC_Rail @northernassist but not Sowerby Bridge, Mytholmroyd, Hebden Bridge, Todmorden etc. The second point would be, that if the bus won't travel to the end of the route, at least get it to where trains are travelling from (e.g. today's finished in Halifax, when there were no services onwards)
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Matt Hardy
Matt Hardy@DocInTheDocs·
@nationalrailenq @GC_Rail @northernassist Hi Oscar - I was fortunate enough to be offered a lift by someone else who was waiting. I appreciate what you are saying, but it isn't any help when there are no trains and no buses.
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National Rail
National Rail@nationalrailenq·
Hi Matt, Oscar here today. The rail replacement services are organised by the train operators and their availability to source some from third party sources. If you are currently at a station I would advise speaking to station staff as they will be able to provide you the most relevant and recent information.
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Matt Hardy
Matt Hardy@DocInTheDocs·
@nationalrailenq @GC_Rail @northernassist You may want to sort something out in Halifax. There currently aren't buses heading to Hebden Bridge (the last two haven't shown) and your rail replacement service has ignored all the smaller stops. There are people stuck here. Some are trying to get to Manchester.
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Matt Hardy
Matt Hardy@DocInTheDocs·
@TheCinesthetic Gary Oldman in Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. George Smiley was short and fat, with plump fingers in the book.
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cinesthetic.
cinesthetic.@TheCinesthetic·
Actors who physically didn't fit a role but still did a good job regardless
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