Apr 01 2009

Towards a better linked, better informed world

Published by Dougal at 12:01 pm under Bad Science, Society

This is an announcement:

  • The Science Behind It

    Ever get really annoyed by the BBC not providing adequate citations for their science and medicine stories? At most we get a researcher’s name and maybe the name of an institution. Doesn’t that really bug you?

    This website is the answer to all your problems. It scans whatever BBC or Reuters article you give it and then tries to extract whichever meagre details the journalist included. This information is used to search MedLine and give you a list of articles which may have been the source.

    This is a really fantastic resource. I highly recommend using the “bookmarklet” as well. Whenever you’re reading an interesting or dubious article, just press the “bookmarklet” button and The Science Behind It will magically read your current URL and try to find the real data. Many congratulations to Andy, the author of this great service.

  • Just Fucking Cite It

    This is admittedly more juvenile and less immediately informative, but in my opinion still necessary. My little contribution.

    The internet is full of people who can, and should, make more references. Bloggers don’t have any word limit. Inline URLs don’t even add to the word count, since they are seamlessly integrated with the text. But still people don’t cite their sources. And it makes me mad. It’s lazy and sloppy and reduces transparency. It also engenders distrust, especially for bloggers who are trying to push a social or political agenda. Anyone can lie about anything when they don’t give their readers the chance to check the facts themselves.

    So next time you see someone make a claim about some new science story on a blog or forum, use this link — and challenge them to justify their claim.


The fledgling JFCI was created after reading this post on Language Log. The first reference to TSBI that I saw also appeared in the comments to that post.

One response so far

One Response to “Towards a better linked, better informed world”

  1. Jeremy Hentyon 03 Apr 2009 at 6:59 am

    Cool. But there’s a typo: “discusssing” should be “discussing”. HTH