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Mashup Score: 1
Although intellectual humility is a prerequisite for credible science, it is rarely practised. Hoekstra and Vazire make recommendations on how to increase intellectual humility in research articles and highlight the crucial role of peer reviewers in promoting intellectually humble manuscripts.
Source: Nature Human BehaviourCategories: Latest Headlines, Oncologists1Tweet
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Mashup Score: 8Developmental differences in memory reactivation relate to encoding and inference in the human brain - Nature Human Behaviour - 2 year(s) ago
Schlichting et al. investigate how the developing brain forms memories that support later decisions. Using fMRI decoding, they show that children and teens do not anchor new memories into existing, related ones, but rather store them separately.
Source: Nature Human BehaviourCategories: Latest Headlines, NeurologyTweet
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Mashup Score: 2The distributional effects of nudges - Nature Human Behaviour - 3 year(s) ago
Nudges are tools to achieve behavioural change. To evaluate nudges, it is essential to consider not only their overall welfare effects but also their distributional effects. Some nudges will not help, and might hurt, identifiable groups. More targeted, personalized nudging may be needed to maximize social welfare and promote distributive justice.
Source: Nature Human BehaviourCategories: Healthcare Professionals, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 5
During the COVID-19 pandemic, conspiracy theorists have exploited the provisional nature of scientific consensus and the realities of how science is conducted to paint scientists and public health leaders as malign actors.
Source: Nature Human BehaviourCategories: Cardiologists, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 0
During the COVID-19 pandemic, conspiracy theorists have exploited the provisional nature of scientific consensus and the realities of how science is conducted to paint scientists and public health leaders as malign actors.
Source: Nature Human BehaviourCategories: Cardiologists, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 11
During the COVID-19 pandemic, conspiracy theorists have exploited the provisional nature of scientific consensus and the realities of how science is conducted to paint scientists and public health leaders as malign actors.
Source: Nature Human BehaviourCategories: General Medicine News, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 34
During the COVID-19 pandemic, conspiracy theorists have exploited the provisional nature of scientific consensus and the realities of how science is conducted to paint scientists and public health leaders as malign actors.
Source: Nature Human BehaviourCategories: General Medicine Journals and Societies, Latest HeadlinesTweet-
Conspiracy theorists during the pandemic have exploited the provisional nature of scientific consensus and the realities of how science is conducted to paint scientists and health leaders as malign actors, according to a @NatureHumBehav Comment article. https://t.co/qABBuVLbZi https://t.co/GFd7aEBZeC
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Mashup Score: 8
During the COVID-19 pandemic, conspiracy theorists have exploited the provisional nature of scientific consensus and the realities of how science is conducted to paint scientists and public health leaders as malign actors.
Source: Nature Human BehaviourCategories: Latest Headlines, NeurologyTweet
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Mashup Score: 3
Although intellectual humility is a prerequisite for credible science, it is rarely practised. Hoekstra and Vazire make recommendations on how to increase intellectual humility in research articles and highlight the crucial role of peer reviewers in promoting intellectually humble manuscripts.
Source: Nature Human BehaviourCategories: Cardiologists, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 48
Although intellectual humility is a prerequisite for credible science, it is rarely practised. Hoekstra and Vazire make recommendations on how to increase intellectual humility in research articles and highlight the crucial role of peer reviewers in promoting intellectually humble manuscripts.
Source: Nature Human BehaviourCategories: Expert Picks, Latest HeadlinesTweet
Completely agree that this is a problem. “…we argue that current research practice does not incentivize intellectual humility.” Aspiring to greater intellectual humility in science | Nature Human Behaviour https://t.co/jzLcvUUL1Y