2 comments

  • jruohonen59 minutes ago
    &quot;These are important questions because scientists are increasingly overwhelmed with the volume of new work posted on preprint servers and published in journals. As a result, traditional quality signals used for triaging papers, such as journal, conference venue, and institution, are becoming less reliable.&quot;<p>The diagnosis is right but the treat is dead wrong. Instead of silly scoring systems, please improve recommender systems for papers. In this space, also opt-in and query-based personalization would be okay.
    • btrettel47 minutes ago
      Recommender systems for papers tend to be pretty bad, so there&#x27;s a lot of room for improvement. I&#x27;ll use Semantic Scholar as an example. I have a bunch of folders in what they call a &quot;Library&quot; with recommendations turned on. Semantic Scholar tends to recommend things that are in the same general area but not specific enough. So I guess that Semantic Scholar seems to interpret adding a paper to a folder as expanding the scope of the folder, but it could be narrowing. There&#x27;s no way to distinguish between the two. Their recommender system is supposed to magically figure it out. Some way to add additional context like relevant keywords or a way to select which parts of the papers are relevant would be helpful. As it stands, I have to repeatedly thumbs down recommendations, and Semantic Scholar doesn&#x27;t figure out what I mean from that vague signal and instead stops recommending much anything. It&#x27;s not that there are no additional papers to go into these folders either as I&#x27;ve added more over time that I&#x27;ve found through other means.
  • emil-lp42 minutes ago
    To save people the bother:<p>An LLM read a paper and concluded it was a top 1% paper.<p>Everyone involved were happy.
    • knowaveragejoe27 minutes ago
      It actually sounds like not everyone involved is happy. Maybe read the article, because it&#x27;s a criticism, not an endorsement.