Science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM)
Scholars applaud call to increase cash for basic research, but question timing of release
British researchers no longer win the most grants for established scientists, having already fallen behind in early career category
Prizes of ?80,000 in unrestricted funding up for grabs for best junior principal investigators
Recognising the dominant role of intelligence in academic performance is key to ending the underperformance of poor and minority students, says Richard J. Haier
Critics fear global event risks &trivialising and politicising* research
Analysis of more than 700,000 biomedical texts reveals growing use of jargon
Conducting clinical trials during an epidemic for the first time, researchers fast-tracked the creation of a vaccine for Ebola, but not before 11,000 people had died
Country*s publications in high-quality journals decline in relative and absolute terms
Health and environmental agencies face savage reductions as defence spending soars
The &indigenisation* of Canada*s academy has had many positives, but some scholars are uneasy about universities* reluctance to challenge native beliefs about the world, say Rodney Clifton and Gabor Csepregi
The principles of scepticism and open-mindedness are vital in a post-truth world, an expert on experts tells Matthew Reisz
Matthew Reisz considers gravitational waves, scientific authority and sexual differences
THE analysis reveals the 53 institutions that could surpass Oxbridge and the Ivy League
Who is the man who will take the top job in UK science?
Universities cannot wash their hands of responsibility for who is booked to speak on their premises, says Michael Marshall
JET experimental reactor faces uncertainty following decision to leave Euratom
Neuroscientists argue proposal would improve reproducibility and get drugs to market more quickly
Existing model of outreach that seeks to inform an &ignorant* public is broken, say experts
What were Heisenberg*s intentions for his work on a nuclear bomb for Hitler, asks Graham Farmelo
Data reveal research ties between US and Muslim nations targeted by attempted ban
In a post-truth era, five academics consider strategies, from inviting laypeople into the laboratory to open vivas, to improve trust in experts
Investing in UK science may be cheaper after Brexit but the true cost to innovation system remains to be seen, says Holly Else
Sarah Wise on how the insanity plea developed in English law and why &homicidal mania* became acceptable to experts
Ministry hopes to increase quality of doctorates
University of East Anglia chief says scholars cannot assume that their research findings are &self-evident*
Novo Nordisk to invest ?115 million in University of Oxford centre despite Brexit
Universities need to open up communication channels to help retain women in science, says study
Number of first-year students from India, Saudi Arabia and Nigeria all down
Terence Kealey, former head of the University of Buckingham, tells THE it*s sometimes helpful to think of scientists as &lying bastards*
Nobel prizewinning astrophysicist reflects on the perceptions and realities of how big breakthroughs are made
Attributes of top scientists mapped in new paper
New international consortium tackles major energy challenge
Spanning 200,000 years of human trading, this study considers the influence of technology and the fallout of global interconnectedness, says Juliet Webster
A study probes a silent global epidemic: addiction to prescription medication, says David Healy
Book of the Week: lack of effective antitrust oversight leaves us at the mercy of digital platforms, says Julia Powles
Scholars reflect on ethics and mechanics of a possible &sex tech* future
Toronto and Pennsylvania researchers arrange events to preserve environmental data
Biochemist named in analysis of US highly cited papers claims it is not his main contribution to science
An expert*s personal guide helps Helen Bynum to get better acquainted with the fascinating ubiquitous microorganisms that live on and in us
Book of the week: The scrutiny to which two intellectuals submit their relationship fascinates Shahidha Bari
Alternative metrics find that research from Barack Obama received the most online attention this year
President of Johns Hopkins University says &deeply poisonous politics* is also harming the system
President Meric Gertler reflects on Canadian universities* potential to &capitalise* on political climate in competitor nations
Many early career researchers have &not gone to the library for years*, according to report
As we cannot cut the cords tethering us to tech, we must fully grasp the connection, says John Gilbey
A study focused on Singapore*s Biopolis centre concentrates on various global &currents* in bioscience, says Flora Samuel
From atoll to reef, a coleopterist fears we may not know what we*ve got until it*s gone, says Jules Pretty
A biologist who spent 10 years in the African sun seeking to explain the wild horse*s pelage is in a class of his own, says Tim Birkhead
Study looks at how gender preconceptions are formed at primary school level
UK universities can now &feel confident* in recruiting postgraduate students for 2017-18, says RCUK chair
US study finds biomedical PhDs from certain ethnic minorities are less likely to understand the &hidden* rules of succeeding in science
Book of the week: A study of our leviathan appetite for seafood dares to go deep and recovers pearls, says Philip Hoare
Tristan Bekinschtein lauds a Nobel laureate*s fusion of art interpretation and analysis with the internal mechanisms by which we see works of art
Are our mental faculties really too unevolved to keep us afloat in an ocean of digital distraction? asks Shane O*Mara
For British science to thrive rather than just survive, EU partnerships and global recruitment remain key to fruitful collisions of concepts, says Ian Walmsley
Five top European academics offer advice on how to mentor, manage and expand a research team
Greatly expanded satellite programme should provide vital new data
Minority groups still not represented at professorial level by 2080, study suggests
Researcher sent thousands of emails trying to get paper published
Researchers are &cautiously optimistic* about review set up by Justin Trudeau*s government to improve relations with the scientific community