Communication: talk to peers and the general public

Effective communication will improve the value of scientific discoveries, says Eleni Wood

As scientists, our work is often driven by data collection and results. But a key step in the scientific process, and one that increases the value of our findings, is the effective communication of our investigative processes and results. Science communication is not only important within our fields for the advancement of our disciplines – communication to other audiences also influences the public perception and credibility of scientists and the work we do.

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Has big data changed what it means to be a scientist?

Researchers still need to adhere to the scientific method, regardless of how large the datasets are or how complicated the experiments become.

Publishing better science through better data journalism competition winner Erica Brockmeier

The life of today’s scientific researcher doesn’t look like it did in the 1940s. One of the papers I cited in my dissertation, published in 1941 by Dr. C.L. Turner, describes the efforts of a solo scientist manually counting bone segments in female fish fins after treatment with anabolic steroids. Turner was one of the first scientists to show that female mosquitofish exposed to androgens exhibited the type of fin growth which was normally only found in male mosquitofish.

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{credit}QUINTIN ANDERSON{/credit}

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