Science isn’t just taught, it’s transmitted.

Mentorship, internships, and small professional interactions can shape careers and influence how research is done.

🔗 https://physicsworld.com/a/why-mentorship-is-vital-for-the-future-of-physics/

#Mentorship #PhysicsCommunity #ScienceEducation #ResearchCulture #STEM

Why mentorship is vital for the future of physics – Physics World

Honor Powrie explains why giving back through mentorship is so valuable

Physics World
Delayed analyses, unpublished results: Poorly managed workplace conflicts can harm research, senior physicists say

What should fluid mechanics papers focus on today?

This editorial argues for a “physics-first” approach: beyond data and simulations, real progress comes from understanding mechanisms and scaling laws.

🔗 https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0329552

#FluidDynamics #Physics #ScientificPublishing #ResearchCulture #OpenScience

Scientists are turning to poetry to make sense of complex ideas and share science beyond data.

From storms to molecules, verse helps bridge logic and emotion, offering new ways to think, explain, and even solve problems.

🔗 https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01028-3

#sciencecommunication #creativity #poetry #ResearchCulture #STEM

Engaging the head and the heart: why scientists turn to poetry

Some researchers use verse to visualize complex problems or translate the wonders of science for wider audiences.

An interesting study on humour in scientific talks (531 presentations, 870 jokes):

67% of jokes failed.
Only ~9% got real laughter.

Men joke slightly more, and native English speakers are more likely to succeed.

🙂 https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2025.3000

O yes... Joking in a foreign language is hard, and even in your own, it only works if the audience truly gets it.

#AcademicHumor #ConferenceLife #AcademicLife #ResearchCulture #ScholarlyCommunication

This is a #throw-back post to about a month ago, when 90 #reproducibility enthusiasts from across domains and #academic workprofiles met to discuss what shapes and forms a #researchCulture where working reproducibly becomes the norm.

You can read our blogpost about the event on our website: https://reproducibilitynetwork.nl/2026/02/26/nlrn-symposium-2026-culture-change-as-a-multi-actor-challenge/
Foto: Robert Kroonen

The UK’s Researcher Development Concordat created shared principles for researcher careers and wellbeing, but uneven implementation means many researchers still feel the strain.

🔗 https://elifesciences.org/articles/110126?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=organic_features
#ResearchCulture

Someone mentioned "clusters of excellence" in a meeting today. Over the years that I've been around in science, the funding buzzword pendulum has swung between "centres of excellence" and "networks of excellence" a number of times, about once every 7-10 years. "Clusters of excellence" was a new one to me, and must surely be a sign that the pendulum is somewhere around the halfway point again. #AcademicLife #ResearchCulture #BuzzWords #Excellence