Archive for July, 2008

Science blogging, science communication, and the multitude

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

I’ve put my paper for the ‘Public Engagement With Science and Web 2.0′-session on the Biomedicine on Display-blog, see here. Comments (also detailed) are extremely welcome — it’s very much a draft paper and need a lot of re-writing to be journal-publishable. All constructive comments will of course also be formally acknowledged in due time.

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Science in the 21st Century

Monday, July 14th, 2008

Science in the 21st Century is an upcoming conference that discuss scientific practice, research policy, organization and communication:

Times are changing. In the earlier days, we used to go to the library, today we search and archive our papers online. We have collaborations per email, hold telephone seminars, organize virtual networks, write blogs, and make our seminars available on the internet. Without any doubt, these technological developments influence the way science is done, and they also redefine our relation to the society we live in. Information exchange and management, the scientific community, and the society as a whole can be thought of as a triangle of relationships, the mutual interactions in which are becoming increasingly important.

with an interesting set of topics:

  • Web/Web 2.0.
    Communication, Social and Information Networks, Wikis, Blogs, Information Overflow, and the Illusion of Knowledge
  • Globalization
    Collaboration and Competition in the scientific community, The Global Village, the Limits of Growth, Science and Democracy
  • Open Access
    Scientific Publishing, Science Journalism, Framing, and the ‘Marketplace of Ideas’
  • Sociology
    Ethics, Morals, Trends, and their impact on scientific directions, organization of our communities, fragmentation, feedback, selection, and the ivory tower.
  • Miscellaneous and Other
    Teaching, Information storage, Resilience and the next Generation

Programme with links to abstracts here. Time and place: Sep. 8th-12th 2008, Perimeter Institute, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.

[via Academic Productivity].

Scientist-journalist relations in Science

Saturday, July 12th, 2008

The July 11 issue of Science includes a short paper on relations between scientists and journalists. The investigation covers epidemiologists (n = 608) and stem cell researchers (n = 706) in the US, Japan, Germany, the UK and France.

Contacts were fairly common (30% had more than 5 media contacts in the past 3 years) and scientists reported mostly positive interactions, the researchers say. (I’d not really call two contacts per year common, though).

As might be expected, scientists reported “increasing the public’s appreciation of science”, “achieving a more positive public attitude toward research” and “a better-educated general public” as their main motivations for contacts with the media. Also, the problem of trust in journalists was a common issue: “[nine in 10 respondents identified the "risk of incorrect quotation" in stories as an important disincentive, and 8 in 10 felt that the "unpredictability of journalists" was also a problem]“. Now, this is not terribly surprising. More interestingly, only a third of the respondents found media incompatible with the scientific culture, and the proportion of researchers who anticipated positive reactions from peers (39%)was almost as large as that fearing negative peer reactions (42%).

Also interesting is the relation between the quality of available scientific reporting and the degree of satisfaction of the scientists (with their media appearances):

Japanese researchers reported being slightly less “pleased” with their latest appearance in the media than their Western colleagues were, and researchers from the USA and Germany were slightly more “pleased” than British and French scientists  [...] Assessments of media coverage of science in general also varied modestly but significantly by country [...] German and French researchers rated the quality of science coverage most positively, British researchers perceived it most negatively, and U.S. and Japanese researchers took middle positions.

Now, I don’t know about Japanese science journalism, but otherwise the rated quality of science coverage (national, I presume, even if that’s not evident in the text) meshes very well with what I’ve seen so far. There are a lot of serious popular science magazines in Germany and France, compared to for instance Sweden, while more of the English/American reporting seems to end up in the “cool stuff” area. 

I think that if researchers from other countries - ones less well placed on the top-research-countries scale - had been asked, they would have opinions more in line with the British (Germany and France are not really representative for the situation in most countries). Using these results to extrapolate to an arbitrary country would be overly optimistic. But still, positive results in this area is a nice thing.

If the authors had also divided their statistics more clearly in different age/seniority and gender groups, this study would have been even more informative. And if they had included a couple of less prestigious research nations as well… it would have been interesting to see how well the results held up.

Reference: Peters et al, “SCIENCE COMMUNICATION: Interactions with the Mass Media”, Science vol. 321. no. 5886, pp. 204 - 205 (DOI: 10.1126/science.1157780)
 

 

 

 

Discussing elsewhere - communication between scientists and journalists

Thursday, July 3rd, 2008

Ask a journalist, and they’ll most likely say that scientists are contrary, stubborn and awkward interviewees. Ask a scientist, and probably they will complain that journalists have no understanding of scientists’ working condition or the problems you encounter as a researcher if you are misquoted in the media.

This discussion arises from time to time (one of its biggest installments ever took place on Scienceblogs last summer), and its content seems to change but little between countries. Its most recent Swedish incarnation takes place on the blogs of journalist Anders Mildner (1st, 2nd), archaeologist Åsa Larsson - and on my blog (here and here).

I mentioned this problem briefly in my PCST session presentation, and argued that blogging would be a solution for the researcher (who would no longer have to fear being misquoted, or in vain try to persuade a journalist to let them into a newspaper/magazine/TV- or radio show). Mildner also argues that more researchers should use social media to reach out to the public.

I am not sure it solves the underlying conflict of interest, however. And how would it help the journalists?