From: Boris Nikolic
To: "Jeffrey Epstein (jcevacation@gmail.com)" <jeevacation@gmail.com>
Subject: Nature article on ResearchGate!
Date: Sat, 16 Aug 2014 16:09:26 +0000
ResearchGate is getting there!
This week, the Nature (one of the competitors) published this article — essentially demonstrating that ResearchGate is
winning!
The original paper is on the bottom
Some paragraphs:
The results confirm that ResearchGate is certainly well-known (see 'Remarkable reach', and full results
online at ). More than 88% of scientists and engineers said that they were aware of it —
slightly more than had heard of Google+ and Twitter — with little difference between countries. Just under half
said that they visit regularly, putting the site second only to Google Scholar, and ahead of Facebook and Linkedln.
Almost 29% of regular visitors had signed up for a profile on ResearchGate in the past year.
This does not surprise Billie Swalla, an evolutionary biologist and director of the University of Washington's Friday
Harbor Laboratories. Swalla says that she and most of her colleagues are on ResearchGate, where she finds the
latest relevant papers much more easily than by following marine-biology journals. "They do send you a lot of spam,"
she says, "but in the past few months, I've found that every important paper I thought I should read has come
through ResearchGate." Swalla admits to comparing herself to others using the site's 'RG Score' — its metric of
social engagement. "I think it taps into some basic human instinct," she adds.
"It was really a head-scratcher when we saw that," says Leslie Yuan, who heads a team working on networking and
innovation software for scientists at the University of California, San Francisco. "We thought — who are these guys?
How are they getting so much money?"Yuan is not the only one who has been taken aback. A few years ago, the
idea that millions of scholars would rush to join one giant academic social network seemed dead in the water. The list
of failed efforts to launch a 'Facebook for science' included Scientist Solutions, SciLinks, Epernicus, 2collab and
Nature Network (run by the company that publishes Nature).
Last paragraph in the article:
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"I think at some point there will be one winner in this race," says Madisch. Or — as Nature's survey suggests
is already happening — different disciplines might favour different sites.
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