Download - Social media for scientists
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Social Media for Scientists
Paige Brown
PhD, Mass Communication,
Science Communication
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My Story• M.S., PhD Biological Engineering• My primary professor leaves
WashU• I start a blog• I start PhD program in
Manship School
Digital media made this possible
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What is social media?
• Mailing lists• Facebook• Twitter• Instagram • Blogs
“Social media platforms aren’t just digital water coolers. They are the way the world is networking and communicating. They are how and where we share information – with friends, colleagues, acquaintances and any and everyone else.” – Christie Wilcox
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The Story of Scott MorelloDuring a 2013 ScienceOnline meeting, Scott told Karyn over beers that he wasn’t sure why one should be using social media as a scientist…
Karyn took to Twitter to convince Scott to start a Twitter profile…
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Faculty members have found students via Twitter.
Dean Lisa Graumlich at Wash U. says online outreach belongs in tenure metrics.
Boosts in research efficiency.
Networking
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Why Use Social Media?
• Boost your professional profile• Act as a public voice for science• Online outreach can help you get (NSF)
funding!• Increase impact of your papers• Open science & Collaboration
"Those that have the privilege to know, have the duty to act." - Albert Einstein.
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MIT Engineering
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Create Impact
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Be Impact(ed)
Highly tweeted articles were 11 times more likely to be highly cited than less-tweeted articles. Top-cited articles can be predicted from top-tweeted articles with 93% specificity and 75% sensitivity.
- J Med Internet Res 2011;13(4):e123
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Blog about your Science
• Collaborative Blog posts have even lead to peer-reviewed papers.
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A Revolution: Open Science• Sharing scientific data, process, results,
and opinions openly– Open access and data– Open peer review– Open data– Preprint sharing,
https://peerj.com/preprints/– Scientific blogs
@openscience#opendata#openaccess#icanhazpdf
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Darling et al. (2013).The role of Twitter in the life cycle of a scientific publication. http://dx.doi.org/10.7287/peerj.preprints.16v1
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Know How to Use it
“Online social media tools can be some of the most rewarding and informative resources for scientists – IF you know how to use them.”
– Bik & Goldstein 2013
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Think about your Goals• What do you want out of your social
media experience?– Increased citations for your papers?– Increased visibility of your research?– Outlet for opinions?– Collaboration?– Open data and sharing?– Translation of science for broad audience?
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A good start:• Establish a professional website
– Ex. wordpress.com • Follow social media accounts of
scientists w/ similar interests (Twitter, Google+, LinkedIn)
• Bring your science to the blogosphere– Scilogs.com, Nature Network Blogs– Scientific American has a Guest Blog
News written by university experts: Become an author @ https://theconversation.com/become-an-author
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Networking with Colleagues
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A new database of scientists online, searchable by research interests and field of study.
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• Among the commonly used social media, the 140-character microblogging service Twitter has been popular.
Followers of scientists on Twitter
Emily Darling. figshare.http://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.704858
A virtual department to spark and share new ideas
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Tweeting Tips• You have 140 characters
– use them wisely but accurately
• Use URL shorteners: – bit.ly– ow.ly– goo.gl
• Add a Hashtag (#)– This marks it as a keyword within the Tweet and turns it into
a link. Once clicked, it will bring up a list of other Tweets that include the same keyword.
#fridaynightscience
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“A majority of established bloggers (72% of 126 blogs surveyed) use Twitter as a complementary outlet for disseminating new blog posts to followers.”
Shema H, Bar-Ilan J, Thelwall M (2012) Research blogs and the discussion of scholarly information. PLoS ONE 7: e35869 doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0035869.
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Other Online Tools
• Blogs – continuous, long-form science narratives
• Facebook – networking• Digg, Reddit – content aggregation• Twitter – in the moment conversation,
customized news streams, building and maintaining communities
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Being Accurate
• You CAN maintain scientific accuracy and rigor in your blog posts and social media posts.– Link to original research studies– Remember proper attribution to pictures,
statistics, quotes, etc.– Learn to be concise but avoid buzzwords that
can be misleading (“cure” “breakthrough”)
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But what if…
• My Big idea will be stolen?– You don’t have to share unpublished
research– But don’t you do this at conferences? What
is the difference?– There is more potential for help than
harm… & they would probably pursue it differently than you anyway.
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But what if…
• I don’t have enough time?– It’s OK to not always keep up to date; take
“vacations” from social media– Only post when you are motivated to do so– Post what you are passionate about– Make it a daily routine– Post as a lab GROUP
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Thank you for listening!
• Questions?
Check out this library of social media outlets for scientists:
http://cshl.libguides.com/social_media
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References• It’s Time for Scientists to Tweet: http://
theconversation.com/its-time-for-scientists-to-tweet-14658• Social Networking for Scientists: The Wiki http://
socialnetworkingforscientists.wikispaces.com/General• How to Build an Enduring Online Research Presence Using
Social Networking and Open Science, SlideShare, Titus Brown http://www.slideshare.net/c.titus.brown/2013-beaconcongresssocialmedia
• Darling et al. (2013).The role of Twitter in the life cycle of a scientific publication. https://peerj.com/preprints/16v1/
• Bik, H. M., & Goldstein, M. C. (2013). An Introduction to Social Media for Scientists. PLoS biology, 11(4), e1001535.
• Images: Flickr by Jason A. Howie; Wikipedia; Screenshots