www.reddit.com/r/Programmer...
www.reddit.com/r/Programmer...
Still, one canβt trust academics to not allow their scholarly societies to bloat and become v. expensive (non-profits in academia have become very rent-seeking in some areas), so we do need some discipline enforced by the funders, even in a landscape where publishers are mere service providers.
academia became beholden to the for-profit publishers rather than using them as service providers. If academics had ensured it was easy to switch publishers, and demanded that contracts serve academic values (such as low cost), the costs neednβt have spiraled out of control.
The situation is more akin to corporate capture. In the case of scientific journals, no one stopped for-profit publishers like Maxwell from taking over ownership. Combined with journals being more like monopolies than commodities (there were only one or a few respected journals in each field),
The problem cannot be reduced to the for-profit nature of scholarly publishers. In domains where there is real competition, like groceries, cars, or TVs, the free market delivers products that constantly get better, and cheaper. www.experimental-history.com/p/the-one-sc...
Apparently he published two critiques in 90s that were largely ignored, and didn't publish again until 2019 - maybe it's the 2019 one that you liked? journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
"Compared to what?" is one theme I have; it's my phrase for highlighting that one always needs to think about the control/comparison condition and the possibilty of confounds.
Here is my earlier post requesting suggestions, with responses bsky.app/profile/alex...
Nietfeld, E. (2025.). What the most famous book about trauma gets wrong. Mother Jones. https://www.motherjones.com/media/2024/12/trauma-body-keeps-the-score-van-der-kolk-psychology-therapy-ptsd/ Also see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Body_Keeps_the_Score Learning styles . https://www.apa.org/news/press/releases/2019/05/learning-styles-myth Damian, R. I., & Roberts, B. W. (2015). Settling the debate on birth order and personality. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 112(46), 14119β14120. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1519064112 What does popular media say about birth order? Compared to what? Crede, M. (2019). A Negative Effect of a Contractive Pose is not Evidence for the Positive Effect of an Expansive Pose: Comment on Cuddy, Schultz, and Fosse (2018). Meta-Psychology, 3. https://doi.org/10.15626/MP.2019.1723 Ferguson, C. J. (2025). Do social media experiments prove a link with mental health: A methodological and meta-analytic review. Psychology of Popular Media, 14(2), 201. https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2024-80192-001 Bunce, C., Eggleston, A., Brennan, R., & Over, H. (2025). To what extent is research on infrahumanization confounded by intergroup preference? Royal Society Open Science, 12(4). https://royalsocietypublishing.org/rsos/article/12/4/241348/235666
Looking for more suggestions for take-downs of popular psychology claims, based on critiquing the underlying flawed research. This is for an undergraduate seminar. Here are the suitable ones I have so far.
hahahaha. Oh god.
e.g. "preference for the stimulus with the higher reward probability is βthe signature of true statistical inferenceβ" does seem like shocking ignorance rather than duplicity or hyperbole.
@markhaselgrove.bsky.social I've only read your abstract but this whole thing sounds like a simple case of animal cognition researchers not knowing the very first thing about associative learning. Is that what you think is usually going on in such cases?
"40% of papers about subarachnoid haemorrhage in animals contained manipulated images."
We have to face up to the fact that in some fields, over half of published science might be fake.
The courtyard of the Jameh Friday mosque in Esfahan
Illicit singing and dancing (banned) under the bridge in Esfahan. Esfahan was known as a place where the mullahs had less control over such things.
Under the bridge in Esfahan
The famous square in Esfahan again (not sure about the second photo).
There are so many beautiful mosques that some look neglected, with no tourists. This is the Nasir-ol-molk mosque in Shiraz.
Buying spices in the Shiraz bazaar
The 18th-century Karim Kahn citadel in Shiraz
Here are schoolchildren, I think in Esfahan. Looks like one of the famous bridges?
In 2004, I visited Esfahan and Shiraz, two beautiful cities that the NYT is showing have now been hit by the US (hoping military targets). The plaza in Esfahan is one of the beautiful in the world. Here is the Sheikh Lotfollah mosque seen from Ali Qapu palace.
Well, I suppose my university had a good run. They've only turned on this maddening feature now, in 2026.
(As if I don't email people outside my university all the time)
This and other publish-review-curate initiatives should help scholars avoid getting trapped in corporate publishers' exploitative walled gardens.
In the area of non-corporate, diamond #openaccess, we are doing something akin to funneling in a non-profit way at MetaROR.org, a metaresearch peer review platform. We have 12 partner journals that authors can transfer their reviews to.
I sometimes make this point to the exploited academic editors when I respond to the Nature family of journals' reviewer requests.
As the reviewer crisis (the shortage of peer reviewers) worsens, this unfortunately favors corporate publishers who have created hierarchical journal families (e.g. Nature->Nature Comms->Nature Comms Psych) that they use as a funnel, which includes passing on peer reviews, saving the authors time.
Just email them and ask for a grant to study how microcredit helps grow businesses, increase revenue, and ward off accusations of cavorting with sexual predators.
If you haven't yet changed how you teach and evaluate thanks to AI, you probably need to. This is not something that educators asked to happen, but it is worth noting what is out there - in this case an OpenClaw tool designed to cheat.
How does our brain excel at complex object recognition, yet get fooled by simple illusory contours? What unifying principle governs all Gestalt laws of perceptual organization?
We may have an answer: integration of learned priors through feedback. New paper with @kenmiller.bsky.social! π§΅
Stealth corrections. "This directly contradicts earlier statements from Elsevier. " I'm shocked, shocked I tell you!
deevybee.blogspot.com/2026/02/gues...