The Great Pacific Garbage Patch, beer supplies and more: the most popular science stories of 2018

Twenty-two of 2018’s papers in the Altmetric Top 100 were published in Nature Research journals: Nature, Nature Communications, Nature Plants, Nature Biotechnology, Nature Climate Change, Nature Human Behaviour, npj Science of Learning and Scientific Reports.

Launched today, the annual Altmetric Top 100 showcases the research published this year that has caught the public eye through international online attention. By tracking what people are saying about scholarly articles in the news, blogs, on social media networks, Wikipedia and many other sources, Altmetric calculates an Attention Score for each paper.

In this blog, the team in the Nature Research Press Office has picked some of their favourite studies, summarised their findings, and linked to coverage they received in the wider media. The full list is available at https://www.altmetric.com/top100/2018.

For articles from our subscription journals, we’ve included Springer Nature SharedIt links, which means anyone can read them. SharedIt, our free content-sharing initiative, was launched in October 2016.

#7 Scientific Reports — Evidence that the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is rapidly accumulating plastic

More than 79,000 tonnes of ocean plastic are floating inside The Great Pacific Garbage Patch, a figure up to 16 times higher than previously estimated, reported a study published in Scientific Reports earlier this year.

The study proved popular with the press generating over 1,400 news stories. Outlets that covered the research included NPRBBC News, National Geographic, The Hindu and Spiegel.

#9 Nature — Global warming transforms coral reef assemblages

Credit: ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef StudiesStudies/ Gergely Torda

A paper in Nature reported that corals on the Great Barrier Reef experienced a catastrophic die-off following the extended marine heatwave of 2016, transforming the ecological functioning of almost one-third of the 3,863 reefs that comprise the world’s largest reef system. The paper generated over 1,000 news stories, including articles in The New York Times, NPR, The Financial Times and Le Monde.

#19 Nature Plants — Beer supply threatened by future weather extremes

 

Beer’s main ingredient, barley, will have substantially diminished yields as severe droughts and heat extremes become more frequent owing to climate change, reported a paper published in Nature Plants in October. Beer will become scarcer and more expensive to varying degrees depending on national economic status and culture. In Ireland, for example, beer prices could increase by between 43% and 338% by 2099 under the most severe climate scenario.

The Guardian, the Associated Press, Reuters, NPR, and BuzzFeed were among those to report on the findings.

#50 Nature — The genome of the offspring of a Neanderthal mother and a Denisovan father

Credit: Bence Viola, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology)

A study in Nature reported the genome sequence of an ancient hominin bone fragment from Denisova Cave, Russia. The results suggested that the adolescent individual had a Neanderthal mother and a Denisovan father and provided direct evidence of interbreeding between Neanderthals and Denisovans. Coverage in nearly 2,000 news outlets, including 35 target outlets and nearly 250 web stories in China. The story was covered by BBC News, El País, Science, People’s Daily and National Geographic.

#69 Nature Communications — Embryos and embryonic stem cells from the white rhinoceros

Assisted reproductive technologies have been used to create hybrid embryos of the endangered northern white rhinoceros and a closely related subspecies, according to a Nature Communications study in July. In vitro fertilization has been used before in large mammals such as horses, but this report was the first to successfully develop rhinoceros embryos to the blastocyst stage in cell culture — potentially ready for implantation. The findings raise the possibility of being able to preserve some of the genes of the northern white rhinoceros.

Media coverage of the findings included The New York Times, Nature, ABC Australia, The Financial Times and Die Zeit.

#83 Nature Human Behaviour — Evaluating the replicability of social science experiments in Nature and Science between 2010 and 2015

Attempts to replicate 21 experimental social science studies published in Nature and Science between 2010 and 2015 found that one of the four Nature papers and seven of the seventeen Science papers evaluated did not replicate under the primary high-powered replication method used. The study was published in Nature Human Behaviour in August. The original studies likely contained false positives and inflated effect sizes, the authors suggested.

Reporting on the study included articles in The Washington Post, Times Higher Education, The Atlantic and BuzzFeed.

Supporting early career researchers through travel grants

As part of our commitment to championing the cause of promising early career researchers, the Communications journals (Biology, Chemistry and Physics) introduce a new series of travel grants.

This guest blog comes from Joe Bennett, Publisher, Communications journals.

Today the Communications journals have introduced travel grants for early career researchers. Our hope is that by introducing these grants we can reach promising but underfunded researchers who need support the most. This is the first round of what we expect will become a recurring process, and is part of a longstanding commitment by the journals to champion the cause of early career researchers.

The grants

Three grants, each of €2500, will be made available. We have chosen this amount as it will allow support for a researcher, without access to other funding, to attend an international scientific meeting and present their work. We understand that early career researchers are best placed to choose where they would benefit the most from presenting their work, and so applicants are invited to tell us which meeting they require funding to attend. As the grants are designed to support researchers who are working within limited means, recipients will receive the grant funds in full immediately after the panel has made their choice.

We have chosen to introduce this first round of travel grants as we believe that our journals should do more than just publish great science, they should also play an active role within the  communities they serve. We also know that travel to scientific conferences can allow researchers to present their work, hear about the latest research and meet other scientists from around the world to discuss ideas and possible collaborations.

The grants are available across the breadth of the subject areas of biology, chemistry and physics. Although the grants match the subject areas covered by the journals Communications Biology, Communications Chemistry and Communications Physics there is no requirement for applicants to have published in, or to have reviewed for the journals previously. Likewise there is no obligation for the grant recipients to publish their work in the journals.

Supporting early career researchers is vital

We have written before about the challenges facing early career researchers, including the fierce competition for funding.They make a positive contribution to our journals as authors, reviewers and Editorial Board Members. Many of our own in-house editorial staff were also early career researchers before joining Nature Research. Early career researchers are a part of the fabric of our journals and we believe that their work should be supported and their achievements highlighted. This is why we are proud to introduce the first round of grants to strengthen our commitment to champion their work.

A fair assessment

We considered carefully how to make the assessment process as fair as possible and to be mindful of how our unconscious bias can influence decision making. We have designed our process to account for this and will consider each application on its own terms whilst guided by a shared set of principles. We have tried to ensure that our selection panels include members with a broad and diverse range of experiences and have considered factors including gender, geography and whether they were the first member of their family to join academia when deciding the composition of our panels. Active scientists drawn from the Editorial Board of each journal will join our in-house editors on the judging panels.

To be considered for a grant, applicants must first demonstrate that they have a need for funding support. We will then consider the promise of the research within the application when we choose the recipients. All applicants will be judged against the same criteria:

  • Has the applicant demonstrated that without the grant they would not have the necessary funding available to enable travel to the event?
  • Does the applicant plan to present research that the assessment panel feel has outstanding potential and should be seen by the wider community?
  • How does the applicant stand to benefit from travelling to and attending the meeting?
  • Has the applicant been working within a scientifically emerging country or in difficult circumstances?

We admire researchers who conduct research with limited resources, who have overcome systemic barriers or any number of other challenges in pursuit of their ambition to pursue great science. When assessing applicants we will not be selecting the grant recipients based on an exceptional track record, but rather looking for applicants with outstanding promise who have been working within difficult circumstances. Not only will the grants benefit the researchers in question, but empowering and including traditionally marginalised researchers benefits the wider community as we get to meet them, hear their ideas, and learn from their experiences.

Apply

The grants are now open for applications until 5th November 2018. To read more and apply please visit our website: www.nature.com/early-career-travel-grants