#aaas

EFSJ - European Federation for Science Journalismnews@efsj.eu
2025-12-30

A new guide aimed at helping aspiring science journalists in Bulgaria to cover scientific topics has been published.

Download the Bulgarian Science Journalism guide-bnsj-upload

‘First steps in science journalism – a practical experience guide’ (Първи стъпки в научната журналистика – практически насоки от опит) was written by three experienced science reporters from Bulgaria, who provide helpful insights from their own experiences and examples of stories they have reported over the years for online, TV, and radio outlets.

The guide was published by the Balkan Network of Science Journalists and the European Federation for Science Journalism and is available on the BNSJ and EFSJ websites.

Publication of the guide was made possible through the support of EurekAlert!, a science news release platform operated by the non-profit American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).

The lead author of the guide, Maria Cherneva, said the lessons in there are important because “the work of a journalist who deals with science is very delicate, because it carries a great risk of fueling pseudoscience, fake news, conspiracy theories, myths and legends, or simply mistaken ideas about many processes and phenomena” if not done properly.

One of the other authors, Vanya Mileva, said: “Science journalism is especially necessary today, in a world suffocating from conspiracies, lack of public trust and resources, misunderstanding and underestimation of the importance of science itself. This applies with great force to Bulgaria.”

“The profession of a science journalist is not easy and one of the challenges is the lack of specialized training. Therefore, the presented guide is useful with guidelines taken from the experience of leading Bulgarian science journalists, and with a pinch of inspiration for the future young generation in science journalism.”

“For aspiring and working science journalists in Bulgaria, this guide will offer crucial principles and skills to ensure their daily work benefits the public and hold the scientific enterprise and other establishments accountable,” said Brian Lin, director of editorial content strategy at EurekAlert!. “EurekAlert! and AAAS are proud to play a small part in these efforts in this part of the world.”

The initiative has previously brought science journalism guides to life in CroatianSlovenianHungarianRomanianAlbanian, and Turkish.

“It’s brilliant to see experienced science journalists share their tips on how best to approach scientific topics for Bulgarian media,” said Mićo Tatalović, a board member of the Balkan Network of Science Journalists, who has been coordinating the project. “There is a lot of great science reporting happening in Bulgaria, and the authors of this guide have managed to condense lessons from many years of work in the field to help students and other journalists who wish to specialize in science journalism.”

Author bios:

Maria Cherneva has been building most of her journalistic career at Bulgarian National Television. She says that journalism is a collection of principles that work better when warmed by an inner passion. That is why she makes incredible efforts to escape from routine and embarks without hesitation on all kinds of research projects – historical, archaeological, underwater. She also has four Antarctic expeditions behind her. She takes her job very seriously – to ignite the imagination and curiosity with stories from the depths of science. Not by chance. She graduated with a Biochemistry and Microbiology degree from Sofia University, so she has a certificate to show that she can think about life at the molecular level. She has one son, one published book and over 60 documentaries to her name.

Vasilena Mircheva is a journalist, translator and editor. She has worked for various cultural publications, including BTA’s “Lik” magazine, collaborates with various online cultural publications, the “Bulgarian Film Society” and the podcast platform “1002 Productions”. Her translations into Bulgarian have included novels by Rachel Kushner, stories by Arthur Conan Doyle, Alice Munro, Lucia Berlin, etc. She was the host of the radio program for the popularization of science and education “Labyrinths of Knowledge”, and is currently the author and host of “Time for Science” on the “Hristo Botev” program on Bulgarian National Radio.

Vanya Mileva is a happy science journalist, because her long-standing hobby of delving into various sciences and presenting what she has learned on the Internet in a beautiful way for everyone has become a profession. She started as a hydraulic engineer and over time became fascinated with programming, writing C++ programs for calculating and drawing hydraulic facilities. But one day she was captivated by fractals – the endless self-similar vortex that leads her from science to science, and Vanya shares what she has collected on her website. There, the head of a leading news media, Vlado Yonchev, found her and suggested that the then 58-year-old Vanya Mileva start and write for the website Nauka OFFNews. This happened 10 years ago, before about 15,000 articles, one nomination and one award from the Mtel Media Masters competition in the “Internet media – long forms” category. She has also published a “Little Book of Science” – a collection of her articles.

 

https://efsj.eu/2025/12/30/new-science-reporting-guide-published-for-journalists-in-bulgaria/ #AAAS #Balkans #BNSJ #Bulgaria #EastEurope #efsj #EurkeAlert #guidelines #practialGuide #skills
EFSJ - European Federation for Science Journalismnews@efsj.eu
2025-12-30

A new guide aimed at helping aspiring science journalists in Turkey to cover scientific topics has been published.

Download the Turkish Science Journalism guide

‘Science Journalism in Turkey and Communicating Science to the Public’ (Türkiye’de Bilim Gazeteciliği ve Halka Doğru Bilim İletişimi) is the first Turkish science journalism guidebook for science journalists.

It was written by the science journalist and academic Dr. Gülsen Saray, and reviewed by editors and academics Prof. Dr. Akif Özer and Prof. Dr. Sefa Yüce.

The author, Saray, said: “This guide is a comprehensive resource for those navigating the dynamic profession of science journalism, and it highlights the importance and growth of science journalism in Turkey and Turkish-speaking countries. It will help ensure journalists produce higher-quality, more effective and impactful reporting which is a growing need driven by societal needs and technological developments.”

“The scope, context, and purpose of this guide are to offer practical advice to science journalists working in the field, drawing on the expertise and insights of contemporary and internationally successful science journalists and renowned science journalism institutions …  I hope it will be an interesting and useful handbook to valued media members, students who choose the field of science journalism, people working in government or corporate public relations departments, and academics.”

The guide was published by the Balkan Network of Science Journalists and the European Federation for Science Journalism and is available on the BNSJ and EFSJ websites.

The initiative has previously brought science journalism guides to life in CroatianSlovenianHungarianRomanianAlbanian, and Bulgarian.

“This is another in a series of expert guides written by local authors in local languages to make them accessible and relevant to local audiences – journalists wishing to report about science,” said Mićo Tatalović, a board member of the Balkan Network of Science Journalists, who has been coordinating the project. “It is an ambitious, book-length guide that should be a useful reference for both practitioners and those interested in the theory and practice of science journalism.”

Publication of the guide was made possible through the support of EurekAlert!, a science news release platform operated by the non-profit American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).

“EurekAlert! is humbled by the opportunity to help support journalists in the Balkans through this locally accessible project,” said Brian Lin, director of editorial content strategy at EurekAlert!. “Our thanks to everyone involved in producing this guide.”

Author bio:

Dr. Gülsen Saray is a science journalist and columnist. She holds a PhD in science journalism, MA in political science and public administration, and BSc in civil engineering. She speaks Turkish, English, and German at an academic level, and has also learned French and Ottoman Turkish. She is also a qualified scientist who has gained experience based on experiments in the construction materials laboratory.

https://efsj.eu/2025/12/30/new-science-reporting-guide-published-for-journalists-in-turkey/ #AAAS #Balkans #BNSJ #books #EastEurope #education #EurekAlert #guide #MiddleEast #practicalGuide #skills #Turkey
François Ferron 🇪🇺 🔷️🔶️F2erron@fediscience.org
2025-12-16

Seems that it is going with less science based and more political decision... not sure it is going the right way:
NSF pares down grant-review process, reducing influence of outside scientists | #Science | #AAAS
science.org/content/article/ns

2025-12-15

Même question que mon post précedent : Qui va s'approprier la plus-value dégagée ? martinalderson.com/posts/ai-ag #saas #aaas #agent #ia

2025-12-15

L'émergence des agents IA sonne-t-elle la fin du "seat pricing" des SAS ? 👀 aws.amazon.com/fr/isv/resource #sas #aaas #pricing

2025-12-06

IAD>DEN today after a great meeting at #AAAS

#science

Picture of a blue twill American Association for the Advancement of Science ball cap resting on a leg on the Metro
2025-11-24

Analytics as a Service is scaling fast! 📊☁️
Valued at $6.68B in 2022, expected to hit $39.91B by 2030 (CAGR 25.7%).
Growth driven by cloud adoption, rising data volumes & demand for real-time insights.

fortunebusinessinsights.com/jp

Benjamin Carr, Ph.D. 👨🏻‍💻🧬BenjaminHCCarr@hachyderm.io
2025-07-10

Trump Seeks to Cut Basic Scientific #Research by Roughly One-Third, Report Shows
Trump’s budget plan guts federal #science funding for the next fiscal year, according to an overview published by #AAAS. Particularly at risk is the category of #basicresearch — the blue-sky variety meant to push back the frontiers of human knowledge and sow practical spinoffs and breakthroughs in such everyday fields as health care and artificial intelligence.
nytimes.com/2025/07/10/science
archive.ph/A1bRu

2025-07-02

A global platform for academic exchange, collaboration and technological advancements—explore the #AAAS Science Partner Journal (SPJ) 'Research' on #ScienceOpen.

📄🌐 Browse standout #OpenAccess publications across disciplines and learn more about submitting your own work here: blog.scienceopen.com/2025/07/t

#OpenScience #STEMResearch #GlobalScience #CallForPapers

2025-06-25

Very interesting results of #AAAS survey on researcher positions on #OpenLicenses. Note that I'm over 70.
aaas.org/news/interests-concer

<blockquote>
* 42% of respondents — when asked what they prefer to do with #CCBY licensed content where they use it themselves— mentioned actions that don’t necessarily require this license, like reading work, or sharing it in the classroom.
* 29% of respondents say there should be no limitations on the #reuse of peer-reviewed research at all, with those older than 70 years of age feeling most strongly.
* 28% of respondents were concerned about reuses of work with a CC-BY license, largely related to possible misrepresentations of their work. Some cited concerns about misuse of their data for political gain.
* In general, younger researchers were slightly more concerned than their older counterparts about potential downstream misuses of their work.
* With respect to commercial reuses of published work, about 36% indicated that there are cases that excite them, while roughly 63% indicated that there are cases that worry them. The latter group’s concerns relate to the possibility of misrepresentation by media and other groups or individuals; use by unsanctioned entities seeking to make a profit; and training of #AI models without proper attribution.
</blockquote>

#CreativeCommons #Libre #Licenses #ScholComm

2025-06-16

The #AAAS event today was very helpful in getting me mentally to think more about the challenges that scientists face when advocating to their US elected representatives at a time like this one: where the President's 'request" (which is a policy document and not legally binding) appears to express a desire to completely destroy the foundations of the US economy ... research and development.

2025-06-16

Fun fact: the last time the Congressional budget process operated as envisioned in the US Constitution (the "orderly" process of passing all the individual budget bills before the start of the next US fiscal year) was 1997.

#AAAS #uspol #funding #science #damage

2025-06-16

How I am spending part of my afternoon: engaged in a #AAAS webinar on "Science Funding at the Brink" regarding the US President's "budget request" and what happens next. Thanks to AAAS for organizing this.

2025-06-16

Sorry for the short notice, but I've only just discovered the existence of this interesting event later today: 👇

"Join science policy experts from the #AAAS Office of Government Relations on Monday, June 16, at 2 pm ET, for a timely webinar that breaks down what’s in the Administration’s proposed FY26 budget, the current political landscape, and what’s at stake for science. We’ll walk through the federal budget process and explore tools and resources that will help you share your personal story with your federal policymakers during the August congressional recess."

aaas.zoom.us/webinar/register/

A strange fascination – Studies of exotic materials called “strange metals” point to a whole new way to understand electricity – Science

Two tiny fingers of a strange metal (above, at right) are ready for their close-up, in which a beam of neutrons will probe the behavior of the sample’s electrons. DMYTRO INOSOV /DRESDEN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY

A strange fascination – Studies of exotic materials called “strange metals” point to a whole new way to understand electricity

22 May 20252:00 PM ET ByZack Savitsky

A version of this story appeared in Science, Vol 388, Issue 6749.
Download PDF

science.adz1375Download

Strange metals and our own personal ‘oxidation fields’
BY Sarah Crespi, Zack Savitsky
Podcast
22 May 2025

Something strange is afoot in Silke Bühler Paschen’s lab at the Vienna University of Technology. The walls of the room are plastered in copper foil to keep out electromagnetic waves. A blue refrigerator dangles through a hole in the ceiling, suspended from robotic shock absorbers that precisely counteract the slightest vibrations, including from subway cars passing deep underground. Condensation drips down the fridge into a Minion-themed kiddie pool. Inside, a hair-thin sample of an exotic material is cooled to thousandths of a degree above absolute zero. What happens within this material, and the way it conducts electricity, is one of the biggest mysteries in condensed matter physics.

The electrons begin their journey through Paschen’s lab from an ordinary wall outlet. According to the standard theory of electricity, they migrate individually or in small clusters through the wires leading to the refrigerator. But once the electrons reach the sample—a compound of ytterbium, rhodium, and silicon—this simple picture breaks down. The sample belongs to a class of materials that physicists call “strange metals.” For 4 decades, they’ve puzzled over the fact that in these compounds, the standard theory of electricity just doesn’t work.

Recent experiments in Paschen’s lab and others suggest that in strange metals, electrons lose their individuality. “They magically disappear,” she says. Instead, electric charge appears somehow to pass through the metal as a diffuse amorphous blob—like water without individual H2O molecules. Researchers are still debating the microscopic details of this bizarre picture. But it’s already clear that the stakes are higher than just understanding a dozen or so oddball materials. “It’s really a mysterious state with big consequences,” Paschen says.

Read more: A strange fascination – Studies of exotic materials called “strange metals” point to a whole new way to understand electricity – ScienceSource Links: ‘Strange metals’ point to a whole new way to understand electricity | Science | AAAS

#2025 #AAAS #America #Books #Electricity #Energy #Libraries #Library #Materials #Metals #Research #Science #UnitedStates

A close-up image of a golden device with intricate components, featuring a plate and rod extending outwards, attached to two small pieces of metal.
2025-03-27

Being named a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science during such a turbulent time carries a profound significance.

I’m deeply grateful to my colleagues for the nomination and recognition.

#AAAS #Physics #cosmology

Photos of UC Irvine 2024 AAAS Fellows
2025-03-06

On exhibit this spring at the American Association for the Advancement of Science building in downtown DC:

"On display are standout pieces from Science magazine, including visuals that explore the realms of artificial intelligence, the James Webb Space Telescope, and COVID-19 research—many of which were created under the challenging circumstances of the pandemic. This exhibition highlights the team's unwavering dedication, boundless creativity, and profound commitment to the art of scientific storytelling."

aaas.org/programs/art-science-

(This exhibit might interest people in town for the #StandUpForScience2025 rally tomorrow.)

#scicomm #science #AAAS #dc #WashingtonDC #photography #graphics #exhibit

2025-02-20

Update. Although the #Trump admin is firing scientists, "some science leaders argued [that it's] not specifically targeting research. 'Science seems to be collateral damage to these [downsizing] efforts that are almost random, by date of hire or date of promotion,' says Sudip Parikh, CEO of #AAAS…'It’s not strategic. It’s not based on the needs of the future, the needs of science.'"

PS: My take: Some of the destruction targets research he opposes for political reasons, like #climate research. But much of the rest is semi-random pillaging to show numbers (positions cut, dollars saved). This is evident from the growing number of firings, in a growing number of departments, that Trump and #Musk later try to rescind.

#DefendResearch #USPol #USPolitics

2025-02-16

🇺🇲 « Incertain, anxieux, craintif. » C'est l'ambiance de la première grande réunion scientifique américaine de 2025
sciencenews.org/article/defund
#AAAS #USA #science #scientifiques #politique #recherche #éducation #santé #Canada #monde

2025-02-11

From 2006-2024, 700+ judges participated in AAAS Judicial Seminars on Emerging Brain Science, exploring neuroscience topics relevant to legal decisions. A new AAAS study assesses the program’s impact and identifies areas for growth. Read the report for insights into #neuroscience and #law! 🧠⚖️ #neurolaw #neurosociety #AAAS

dana.org/article/broadening-le

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