11 research outputs found
Unusual C35 to C38 alkenones in mid-Holocene sediments from a restricted estuary (Charlotte Harbor, Florida)
Experimental evaluation of effective atomic number of composite materials using back-scattering of gamma photons
The pathology caused by Pomphorhynchus laevis Muller in the alimentary tract of the stone loach, Noemacheilus barbatulus (L.)
A comparative study of gamma-ray interaction and absorption in some building materials using Z
Relationships between the spatial pattern and number of apothecia of Sclerotinia sclerotiorum and stem rot of soybean
Determination of the effective atomic number of thick samples of unknown composition using scattering studies
Changes or Transition? Analysing the Use of ICTs in the Sciences
Current changes in the science system conceptualised as cyberscience, Mode 2 knowledge production or Triple Helix have been debated heavily the last decades. This paper rearticulates these debates by studying the ways in which the emergence and use of ICTs have conditioned changes in the science system. Based on empirical studies and theoretical conceptualisations, we analyse these changes as an interaction at three levels: researching, scientizing and politicking. The analysis suggests that the main result of the use of ICTs in sciences is an additional layer of communications, providing heterogeneity on top of established patterns, and allowing a recombination of new and established elements. Concepts of radical discontinuity in sciences are rejected and policy implications on the basis of the analysis are offered.JRC.J.3-Knowledge for Growt