Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “publish or perish”
FOSS and research
Brain drain
There is always a lot of talk about “brain drain” (fuga di cervelli in Italian) from my country. I keep on reading disgruntled comments of low pays and poor research, and that going abroad is the only solution for an Italian scientist to be successful.
While I believe that research done outside of my country can be handled better (but it’s impossible to know for sure: never tar everyone with the same brush), I think that, also thanks to the way the media and the scientists themselves handle it, in everyone’s view it has almost become like the El Dorado. And that, in my opinion, is incorrect.
Buggy bioinformatics software
As people who read my science-related posts know already, I’m not a big fan of {{post id=“software-and-biological-research” text=“software made just to support a publication”}}. Recently I’ve stumbled again into similar software. Namely, I’m talking about the TIGR Multiexperiment Viewer (TMeV), a Java-based program which is often used for microarray analysis. It’s not exactly “fit for publication”, because it has reached version 4 last year, but shows some of the problems ({{post id=“genbugg” text=“mentioned already”}}) with releasing bioinformatics software.
I use TMeV mostly because I didn’t find any other implementation of the hierarchical clustering algorithm with support trees. However, I’ve stumbled upon a very annoying bug in the most recent version. Normally I use average linkage clustering and as the distance metric I employ the Pearson’s correlation, and with gene and sample bootstrapping: with certain files this makes TMeV report errors at random during the iterations.