Current Picks
Science

One Data Package’s Version Mismatch Broke 12 of 20 Reanalysis Pipelines

By Jonas Eriksen / Jun 8, 2026

A minor version bump in a NetCDF4 library silently broke 12 of 20 reanalysis pipelines, introducing biases of up to 0.3°C in climate trends. The failure exposes gaps in reproducibility checks that standard practices miss.
Science

How One 1960s NIH Grant Shifted Mouse Genetics

By Alice Chen / Jun 8, 2026

In 1965, a single NIH grant to Jackson Laboratory funded the creation of standardized inbred mouse strains. That decision reshaped biomedical research, enabling reproducibility and accelerating discoveries in cancer, immunology, and genetics.
Science

One Lab’s Sediment Sieve Mesh Size Swapped 14 of 20 Paleoclimate Signatures

By Renu Shah / Jun 8, 2026

A Swiss team found that switching from 63-μm to 150-μm sieve mesh altered 14 of 20 climate proxies in lake sediment, potentially affecting published reconstructions.
Science

One Lab’s Calcium Imaging Filter Bandwidth Switched 12 of 18 Place Cell Maps

By Karim Osman / Jun 8, 2026

A Stanford lab found that changing the optical filter bandwidth in calcium imaging experiments altered 12 of 18 place cell maps, raising questions about hidden methodological variability in neuroscience.
Science

From Viscosity to Vorticity: How Fluid Dynamics Reshaped Condensed-Matter Topology

By Jonas Eriksen / Jun 8, 2026

How ideas from fluid dynamics—vorticity, circulation, helicity—migrated into condensed-matter physics to classify topological phases, from the quantum Hall effect to Weyl semimetals.
Science

One Reproducibility Audit Traced 19 Failures to Uncalibrated pH Probes

By Renu Shah / Jun 8, 2026

A 2025 meta-analysis traced 19 replication failures to uncalibrated pH probes. The finding underscores how mundane lab errors, not fraud, drive the reproducibility crisis.
Science

One Funder's Publication-Bonus Program Created 124 Phantom Authors

By Alice Chen / Jun 8, 2026

How a Chinese funder's cash-per-paper program led to a ghost-author marketplace, 124 fabricated contributors, and lessons for research incentives worldwide.
Science

One NSF Budget Cap Forced 11 Observatories to Share One Instrument

By Jonas Eriksen / Jun 8, 2026

A $4 million NSF budget cap led eleven university observatories to pool funds for a single spectrograph, changing how astronomy research is done.
Science

One Funder’s Software Citation Policy Now Traces 14 of 20 Pipeline Dependencies

By Alice Chen / Jun 8, 2026

A national funder's policy requiring software citations now traces 14 of 20 key pipeline tools. The result offers a realistic benchmark for reproducibility in computational science.
Science

One Agency's Subjective Scoring Cut 14 of 20 Grant Review Scores

By Renu Shah / Jun 8, 2026

A study found that one agency's subjective scoring cut 14 of 20 grant scores by at least one point. We examine the evidence, real-world consequences, and what agencies are doing.
Science

How NSF’s 1996 Climate Modeling Cap Reshaped Two Fields

By Renu Shah / Jun 8, 2026

In 1996, NSF capped climate modeling grants, slashing budgets by 40%. The policy drove modelers into oceanography and paleoclimatology, reshaping both fields for decades.
Science

One Lab's Unversioned Library Dependency Broke 14 of 20 Reanalysis Scripts

By Alice Chen / Jun 8, 2026

A single unversioned library dependency caused 14 of 20 reanalysis scripts to fail. This article examines the fragility of computational environments in science, the costs of broken code, and tools that can prevent such failures.
Science

One Funding Agency's Metadata Mandate Fixed 14 of 20 Reanalysis Pipelines

By Renu Shah / Jun 8, 2026

One funding agency's metadata requirement made 14 of 20 bioinformatics pipelines run end-to-end. The mandate reshaped incentives, cut costs, and began spreading across disciplines.
Science

How a 1970s Fly Mutant Screen Reshaped Mammalian Circadian Genetics

By Karim Osman / Jun 8, 2026

In 1971, Seymour Benzer's fly screen isolated the first circadian mutants. Decades later, that work led to mammalian clock genes, the transcription-translation feedback loop, and new insights into human health.
Science

Stephanopoulos’s Palladium Trimer Solved 1970s Cross-Coupling Side-Reactions

By Karim Osman / Jun 8, 2026

How a triangular palladium trimer designed by Stephanopoulos in 1979 suppressed unwanted dimerization, enabling cleaner cross-coupling reactions that later became industrial standards.
Science

One Optogenetics Pulse Duration Switched 11 of 16 Fear Conditioning Recall Curves

By Renu Shah / Jun 8, 2026

A single optogenetics pulse duration switched fear recall in 11 of 16 mice, raising questions about parameter choice and replicability in memory research.
Science

One Telescope's Single Optical Fiber Now Guides 14 Star Positions

By Alice Chen / Jun 8, 2026

A single optical fiber fed by robotic positioners now measures 14 star positions simultaneously with microarcsecond precision, challenging traditional multi-instrument setups.
Science

One Reproducibility Audit Traced 14 Failures to Unarchived Analysis Scripts

By Alice Chen / Jun 8, 2026

A 2023 audit of 25 computational studies found 14 failures due to missing analysis scripts. The finding underscores the critical role of code archiving in reproducibility.
Science

One Telescope's Single Coating Layer Now Filters 14 Exoplanet Spectra

By Karim Osman / Jun 8, 2026

A single thin-film coating on a 4-meter telescope claims to extract spectra from 14 exoplanets. But critics say the signal processing overfits, sparking a debate that could reshape exoplanet spectroscopy.
Science

One Lab's Unarchived Analysis Code Broke 14 of 20 Published Conclusions

By Renu Shah / Jun 8, 2026

When a lab revisited its own analysis code, 14 of 20 published findings collapsed. The culprit wasn't data but unarchived scripts—a quiet crisis in computational science.