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by alcinos
4057 days ago
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To me, the main problem with papers in their current shape is that they are required to be more or less self-contained. When one wants to state a result that improves a little bit the knowledge in a well established field, he has to waste time and space stating the definitions and preliminary results necessary to understand his result. This is counterproductive both for the author and the reader interested only in the small new bit of information. If papers were collaborative, one could simply propose his improvements directly where they fit in the reference paper, without having to write one from scratch, and readers would be immediately aware of these follow-up results, without having to search in dozens of papers. |
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A wiki style database of information could be an exciting resource for kicking off new ideas. When scientists conduct research within this database though, findings and methodology must be to a high enough standard. Marks of high quality research include well defined terms and contextualized prior results.
If you want to get straight to the new information, read the abstract up top, skim the middle and read the results and discussion.