What to Know About ‘Gen Z Protests’ Around the World
youtube.com/shorts/Eyh2V...
@shinasayama.bsky.social
I'm not a geographer but I'd like to think like geographers | Ambivalence & ambiguity is my intellectual gravity | Doing #climate social science at NIES, Japan | Views my own | https://researchmap.jp/shinichiro.asayama/?lang=en
What to Know About ‘Gen Z Protests’ Around the World
youtube.com/shorts/Eyh2V...
How this TikTok deal puts US media control into the hands of the super-rich youtube.com/shorts/lEWwp...
05.10.2025 00:18 — 👍 0 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0"If you wanted to get a paper published in Science from 2015 to 2020, your odds were 70% lower if you were in China than in the United States. But being at an elite institution anywhere in the world may have given you an edge."
www.science.org/content/arti...
How can the #IPCC navigate generative AI?
What does it mean for scientific assessment more broadly?
New working paper looks at scenarios for AI adoption & resistance, w/ @dralaaclimate.bsky.social @shinasayama.bsky.social and Oliver Geden
Reflections welcome!
www.swp-berlin.org/publications...
.
New working paper out: "Four scenarios for an @ipcc.bsky.social navigating Artificial Intelligence"
Led by @hollyjeanbuck.bsky.social, with @shinasayama.bsky.social and Oliver Geden
Thread 🧵
1/13
"Given all this, we are not advocating deploying geoengineering today. But if policymakers decide that it is needed, a more modest approach would be to run a small, carefully scaled program ... to compensate for the loss of cooling as sulfur pollution is eliminated."
www.nytimes.com/2025/09/21/o...
"Younger children are more likely than their older counterparts to judge relationally, physically & phylogenetically distant others as worthy of help or protection. These findings suggest ... that development may not widen our moral circle but may sometimes narrow it."
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
"Hallucinations are a result of the fundamental way in which LLMs work. As statistical machines, the models make predictions by generalizing on the basis of learnt associations, leading them to produce answers that are plausible, but sometimes wrong."
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
"Researchers are scrutinizing AI-generated sentences while implicitly enabling these systems to choose which scholars are cited ... which research directions might be promising. They are accepting the outputs even though the underlying information has been distorted."
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
"many academic journals .. requir[e] authors to disclose whether they had used artificial intelligence (AI) to help write their papers. But .. 4 times as many authors use AI as admit to it—and that peer reviewers are using it, too, even though they are asked not to."
www.science.org/content/arti...
"One major problem is that regulatory ... requirements force researchers to spend nearly half of their research time on paperwork associated with receiving federal grants ... The administrative tasks are unnecessarily complex, duplicative, and ... contradictory."
www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
What Counts as a ‘National Emergency’? youtube.com/shorts/IOn1e...
02.09.2025 04:14 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0"Automation involves a transfer of knowledge from humans to machines. [Then], human skills are lost, perhaps irrevocably ... Every time a scientist abdicates their work to an AI tool, that is a tacit admission that the work is not worth being done by the scientist."
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
"We’ve built machines that sound like they care. Now, we must ensure that they don’t hurt the very people who turn to them for support. That means giving emotionally responsive AI not just more capabilities, but clearer boundaries."
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
"Conferences today tend to be “deeply shaped by Western and European traditions” ... If they moved to a more diverse set of locations, a wider range of scientists could go, which would benefit science itself by integrating diverse knowledge and experience." @nature.com
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
"But progress always involves reaction and revision. Historical nostalgia may be helping a younger generation to harness the benefits of new technology while preserving the virtues of the tangible, physical experiences that remain essential to human flourishing."
www.nytimes.com/2025/08/24/o...
"this is not a call to revive the fatally flawed 20th-century notions of “development.” Rather, it means that we need to learn from what worked and what was poisonous ... to create a concept that actually accomplishes what “development” imagined it was about..."
www.compactmag.com/article/the-...
"If reviewers typically favor submissions from their own countries, but reviewers from only some countries are well represented in the reviewer pool, this can create a “geographical representation bias” favoring authors from those well-represented countries."
www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...
"Now, simulations with ... virtual users generated with [AI] may have revealed why social media tends to become so polarized ... The results suggest that just the basic functions of social media—posting, reposting, and following—inevitably produce polarization."
www.science.org/content/arti...
"Scholarly publishing relies on peer review to identify the best science. Yet finding willing and qualified reviewers to evaluate manuscripts has become an increasingly challenging task, possibly even threatening the long-term viability of peer review as an institution."
arxiv.org/abs/2507.10734
"There’s an obvious fix to the problem of reviewer overwhelm: do less peer review. Some researchers have raised the prospect of more selective use of organized peer review ... there isn’t enough capacity in the system to do high-quality peer review of everything."
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
Mike Hulme & Arthur Petersen: "The upcoming [AR7] of the IPCC has an opportunity to be better attuned to the world’s religious faiths as holders of knowledge about human meaning, ethics and behaviour, and to incorporate such knowledge explicitly in its assessments."
mikehulme.org/the-ipcc-and...
"Publication rates rise sharply during the tenure-track, peaking just before tenure. However, post-tenure trajectories diverge: Researchers in lab-based fields sustain high output, while those in non-lab-based fields typically exhibit a decline." @pnas.org
www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...
"Conservatives consistently disfavored purchasing both Teslas and EVs, irrespective of their perceptions of Musk. Liberals showed declining intentions to purchase Teslas compared with other EVs, and, to a lesser extent, declining intentions to purchase EVs in general."
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Piers Forster: "Yeah, I’m a stammerer, and I’ve done quite well in lots of really supportive environments ... If people see me doing my job and think, ‘Oh, perhaps I can do that sort of thing,’ then that would make me feel chuffed." @science.org
www.science.org/content/arti...
"[T]he blame may lie on “lazy author syndrome,” in which authors extract information only from abstracts or titles without digesting or even reading the full text. Authors may be more likely to skim this way—and introduce errors—when writing background sections..."
www.science.org/content/arti...
"Here, we show a carbon perception gap, particularly among the wealthiest: Collectively, people acknowledge the presence of carbon inequality and desire a more equitable distribution, yet often perceive themselves as already contributing more than others."
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Why the British love their lawns youtube.com/shorts/R_Op0...
12.07.2025 02:13 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0"From the age of approximately 40 y old, the typical worker endures diminishing feelings of autonomy ... Evidence on objective measures of autonomy ... suggests that these feelings are not an emotional illusion ... “Demotions” ... are apparently commonplace." @pnas.org
www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...
"These results show how the pandemic-driven shift to remote work has persisted and reached a new equilibrium with implications for urban economies, workforce flexibility, and future research on labor markets." @pnas.org
www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...