Skip to main content


#askfedi

What is the best social network for researchers and scientists to share publications, exchange experiences and discuss? Which platform has great experience and good outreach?

#ResearchGate #AcademiaEdu #GoogleScholar #Mendeley ...

--
#question #askfediverse #followerpower #ORCID #Zotero #research #SocialNetwork #academia

reshared this

Unknown parent

smallcircles (Humane Tech Now)
I don't have the discussion at hand, and as much as I hate to say it, it was between #scholars who joined #fediverse on the recent #ElonExodus saying that fedi is nice for casual friends networks but they can't do without #Birdsite :birdsite: for their professional scholarly activities and reaching colleagues.

But @VictorVenema may be best able to answer your question. Together we maintain #delightful #OpenScience curated list.

https://delightful.club/delightful-open-science/

Ade Malsasa Akbar reshared this.

in reply to smallcircles (Humane Tech Now)

Maybe it is my field of study, but my impression is that there are more scientists on ResearchGate than on Twitter.

Mastodon can do anything Twitter can. The difference is the number of people there, which is really important for science as it is so highly specialized. So you need a large group to at least have some people to talk to.

Climate scientists probably prefer Twitter because that is were the journalists and misinformation is.

@mpjgregoire @gerald_leppert @socrates
in reply to smallcircles (Humane Tech Now)

I think Friendica has a bridge that allows you to connect to your Twitter account and manage it from within Friendica itself. I'm not sure how well it works now, I think @tio uses it so he might be able to give us more info.
@Tio

reshared this

in reply to Rokosun

Yes. It depends if the Friendica instance has it set up. We do, and works well. Here if anyone is interested https://social.trom.tf - you can directly connect to any twitter account via your own.

reshared this

in reply to Tio

In the responses, there seem to be 2 approaches to a social network for researchers:

• Use a big network (you mentioned ResearchGate but not GoogleScholar, AcademiaEdu... ?)
The idea of ResearchGate is compelling. Its focus is on publications (with infos, fulltext, citations, & cited by), the link to the researcher's profile and possibility to follow.

• AND/OR use federated services to get similar features (see 2nd post).

@tio @futureisfoss @humanetech @VictorVenema @mpjgregoire @socrates

reshared this

in reply to Tio

(2nd post) ...AND/OR use federated services to get similar features:
• Networking via research-focused instance Mastodon/Friendica https://fediscience.org/server-list.html

PLUS:
A Bio page
B List of publications
C Coauthors
D Citations (your work cited in...)
E Recommend new articles

Scholia (A,B,C,D, etc.): https://scholia.toolforge.org/author/Q97270
Zotero (B): https://www.zotero.org/groups/2343740/gerald.leppert/library
OpenCitations (D) https://opencitations.net/
ORCID (B) https://orcid.org/

@tio @futureisfoss @humanetech @VictorVenema @mpjgregoire @socrates

reshared this

in reply to Gerald Leppert :verified:

Yes, citations would also be good. My preference would be a federated system. I did not know whether your question was about the future or present.

I do not know Friendica well, but I would prefer @bonfire over Mastodon. Mastodon is nearly impossible to extend, while Bonfire is more like a library.

Is GoogleScholar more than a search engine and Scholia? I had not seen it as a social network. 1/2

@tio @futureisfoss @humanetech @mpjgregoire @socrates

reshared this

in reply to Victor Venema

My impression is that AcademiaEdu is focused on collaborative research. Another set of functions that could be interesting for such a social network. https://delightful.club/delightful-open-science/#collaborative-research

Then it can become a large job; although, also here, there is already a lot there. 2/2

@tio @futureisfoss @humanetech @mpjgregoire @socrates
in reply to Victor Venema

would be wonderful to have a federated social media software like Masto or Bonfire or whatever, extended so it makes the most out of existing science-related open platforms, dragging the data into the profile thanks to the available APIs. ORCiD is the obvious first one, to have some kind of CV / list of publications integrated into the profile, but others might make sense as well (Zenodo, OSF, Zotero, etc.)
in reply to Whitney Loblaw

one of the goals of #SolidProject is to make one protocol by which all linked data can talk to each other, so you could say "so i the mastodon person here am the same person as this author on this citation graph website" and a smart client could male good use of the combined data from all the linked sources
in reply to Gerald Leppert :verified:

I use the big ones: RG, Google Scholar, Twitter and Academia.edu. Although I find them useful, I don't feel at ease using them. Especially Academia.edu can be really annoying.

Academic mastodon instances are really great, I think. I've met great people here. Some time ago, I had the idea to set up an academic focus Lemmy instance. I might consider working on this in the near future.

Nice that you mentioned Scholia. I think it's a project with high potential.
in reply to Jorge S.

If you ever get to it, I would be interested in moving the OpenScienceFeed to such a Lemmy instance.

@gerald_leppert