edit: various typos
edit: various typos
This is what I dont agree on. A doctorate is not a prize for the best scientific work from a student that year.
Is it the cover? Is it the blurb? Is it the theme? Is it the price? https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00QPBYGFI Anyone knows anyone in publishing who could help me debug this?
(On the other hand, my not-novel Computer Graphics from Scratch seems to be doing well!)
Once it's no longer about being in the esteemed and scarce "10%", they won't bother because they don't need to. Imagine a process where the only criteria are technical soundness and novelty, and as long as minimal standards are met, it's a "go". Call it the "ArXiv + quality check" model.
Neither formal acceptance to publish nor citation numbers truly mark scientific excellence; perhaps, winning a "test of time award" does, or appearing in a text book 10 years later.
I've been reviewing occasionally since ~1995, regularly since ~2004, and I've never heard of collusion rings happening in my sub-area of CS (ML, IR, NLP). I have caught people submitting to multiple conferences without disclosing it. Ignoring past work that is relevant is common, more often our of blissful ignorance, and occasionally likely with full intent. I'm not saying I doubt the report, but I suspect the bigger problem that CS has is a large percentage of poor-quality work that couldn't be replicated.
BTW, the most blantant thing I've heard of (from a contact complaining about it on LinkedIn) is someone had their very own core paper from their PhD thesis plagiarised - submitted to another conference (again) but with different author names on it... and they even cited the real author's PhD thesis!
* Chemistry: A Very Short Introduction by Peter Atkins. Now that I'm into physics I had a hunch that I would now also appreciate chemistry. This book delivered.
* Philosophy of Mind: A Very Short Introduction by Barbara Gail Montero. I recall it just being a really well-written overview of an interesting field.
* Systemantics by John Gall. Very entertaining musings on why systems fail.
* Hard-Boiled Wonderland by Haruki Murakami. Read this while in Japan. A very strange and interesting noir detective story.
* All Systems Red by Martha Wells. <3 Murderbot <3
* Desert Oracle Volume 1 by Ken Layne. American southwest folklore. Read it while in Joshua Tree.
* There Is No Antimemetics Division by qntm. Biggest brainfuck I've read in a long time, probably ever.
* Fundamentals: Ten Keys To Reality by Frank Wilczek. Physics musings from a Nobel winner.