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Researchblogging.org: Updated and Running Strong!

September 2, 2008 Science 2 Comments


Today, Researchblogging.org has been thoroughly updated; a good moment to reflect on the initiative of researchblogging.org itself, my participation in it, and on the phenomenon of blogging on peer reviewed research itself.

Researchblogging.org is a non-profit initiative, and provides in a web-based gathering of posts from weblogs on science. Not all posts are gathered (‘aggregated’) though, only the ones that explicitly address research that has been published in a peer-reviewed journal. In that, it distinguishes itself clearly from similar (collections of) scientists’ blogs, for everything else but the research itself is left out. This is achieved by having bloggers to administer their posts on the researchblogging.org website manually, after which some PHP-code is provided. This code is added to the blog-post, resulting in a bibliographic reference to the article that is discussed, as well as the aggregation of the article to the researchblogging database.

For me, this results in a very interesting collection of blog-posts, that are nicely categorised and stored in a searchable database accessible though the web. And this is where the new version of researchblogging.org becomes really interesting, because next to a visual update, new features have been added. Bloggers now can categorise their posts manually, making them easier to find by prospective readers.
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Paradoxical negative spill-over of Catholics’ attitudes on induced abortion

August 28, 2008 Science 2 Comments


ResearchBlogging.org

Even though it is rather widely known in sociology that individual actions can have unexpected or seemingly contradictory outcomes on the societal level, I always get that little tingly feeling of discovery when reading about such a seemingly paradoxical mechanism. Interestingly, Jelen et al. have found one regarding the attitudes of Catholics on induced abortion.

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Welcome to Curving Normality

Curving Normality is an academic blog maintained by Rense Nieuwenhuis. He uses this blog to write about the social sciences in general, fascinating journal papers, useful data, interesting books, statistics using R. In addition, his personal academic activities are shared here, as well.