@joeroe@archaeo.social
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

joeroe

@joeroe@archaeo.social

Researcher in computational archaeology at https://mastodon.online/@unibern. https://archaeo.social admin. Wikipedian.

This profile is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

joeroe, to Archaeology
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

Digital Archaeology Bern – Ancient West Asia (#DABAWA) begins today at 13.00 (UTC+2): https://dabawa.hypotheses.org/

#Archaeology #DigitalHumanities

joeroe, to threads
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

With and now with the new bridge, I'm really worried that s are doing a bad job of communicating what "federated" means.

Your Mastodon posts are PUBLISHED on the internet. As you read this they are being downloaded, legally, by hundreds of other computers. These computers belong to people you want to share with (other fedizens) and people you don't (surveillance capitalists). There is no reliable way to differentiate them.

This is by design. You cannot opt-out.

joeroe, to random
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

Is there a simplified version of the CRediT (https://credit.niso.org/) taxonomy of contributor roles out there? I love the idea but never got why anyone would care about about the four different types of manager or whether someone "curated" or "collected" the data used in a paper.

#ScientificPublishing #OpenScience #OpenAccess

joeroe, to random
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

Really interesting point from Pickering & Kgotleng (https://doi.org/10.17159/sajs.2024/17473) – is the preprint model right for all fields?

> [P]osting unreviewed research on a preprint server is not new or controversial [...] But palaeoanthropology is not a field that needs urgent research and rapid breakthroughs. Given the huge and wide public interest in human evolution and our origins, this research field benefits from much slower, measured, and careful research.

joeroe, to Archaeology
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

The changing stories we tell about the of West Asia, summed up in one Ngram!

Tell Abu Hureyra was a poster child for new scientific methods when it was excavated in the 70s, and still has some of the earliest evidence of plant domestication.

Ian Hodder chose Çatalhöyük to put into practice his model of a postmodern social archaeology in 1993, and according to this graph it overtook Abu Hureyra in popular consciousness in 2007.

(A thread...)

joeroe, (edited ) to Archaeology
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

Does anyone know of a paper or dataset that compiles the earliest known dates of agriculture in a given region? Globally, ideally, but I'd settle for a continent or two...

(I know there are several options for the European Neolithic, but beyond that?)

joeroe,
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

@mrundkvist Well yes, but I was kind of hoping that someone might have already done the work for me 😂

I'm basically thinking of something like Gronenborn & Horejs's (https://www.academia.edu/9424525/Map_Expansion_of_farming_in_western_Eurasia_9600_4000_BCE_update_vers_2023_1_) or Fort's (https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/full/10.1098/rsif.2015.0166) interpolated models (or better yet the underlying data points), but beyond Europe.

Probably I'm just dreaming!

joeroe, to random
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

"Archaeology in the Fediverse and the future of scholarly social media"

@zackbatist and I are proposing this topic for a panel discussion at 2023, Turin: https://www.archeofoss.org/2023/panel-proposals

The proposals are open for comment until 15th September, after which there'll be an open call for papers. Let us know if you're interested!

joeroe, to Archaeology
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

: if there was a non-selective, diamond open access (i.e. free to publish, free to read), post-publication peer review journal for field reports, would you use it?

The idea being to publish basically any description of primary archaeological results from anywhere in the world, subject to basic checks for research ethics, without worrying about things like significance, novelty, or English-language editing, that can otherwise make it difficult to publish that kind of thing.

joeroe, to random
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar
joeroe, to random
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

This morning I read a post on a very active commercial archaeology Facebook group, asking whether a young person with an interest in maths and archaeology could combine the two.

15 replies in and all the answers are basically "no, there's no maths in archaeology"!

How is it our 70-year-old subfield is still so invisible? #comparch

ArchaeoIain, to random
@ArchaeoIain@archaeo.social avatar

I have been warned by the Mastodon moderators that some of my posts will be marked sensitive. This was a direct result of a post which sought to show the direct consequences of book burning as has been reported in Gaza on this platform.

joeroe,
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

@ArchaeoIain Important to note that moderators on Mastodon belong to a specific server and cannot take actions beyond that server. Likely your posts were only marked sensitive on one server, which could have many users or could have just one. We haven't taken an action on your posts or account here on archaeo.social (your home server).

joeroe, to random
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

I love that the collapse of social media platforms is unearthing the internet I grew up with: blogs, forums, newsletters...

...and webrings! If you have a blog about archaeology or the ancient past, please consider adding it to archaeo.social's new webring:

https://webring.archaeo.social/

Just add the links to your site and send us an email at webring@archaeo.social.

joeroe, to random
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

I just finished a peer review for https://f1000research.com, which was... surprisingly pleasant. Nice easy to use interface, focus on written feedback instead of checkboxes, everything's open and citeable, and you're explicitly asked not to consider novelty or importance.

I see it's owned by one of the big publishers though, so I'm sure I'm missing a dark secret...

joeroe, to Archaeology
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

How do you review a paper (in its second revision) where the authors have made an honest attempt to make their analysis (computationally) reproducible, but not quite got there? Given that the field is , where reproducibility is still a niche concern and lots of work is published with no regard to it.

joeroe,
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

@johnefrancis Well, there's a lot to say about how the concept does and doesn't translate in the palaeosciences, but in this case I'm talking about computational reproducibility.

joeroe, (edited ) to stackoverflow
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

Initially I was sad about 's collapse, not so much because I've contributed a lot to it (and as a , I've already resigned myself to big tech trying to sell my own words back to me), but because I learned a lot of programming and statistics from it; it gave me focused answers to specific problems. It already bothered me that my students were turning to AI for that purpose, and now what I was telling them to use instead is turning into AI slop... (1/2)

joeroe,
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

... (2/2) But thinking about it, it was actually a pretty crappy way to learn, making me much slower to see the big picture. I only used SO because I couldn't get formal training in those areas. When I got to the point where I could read books on stats and programming instead, I got a lot better a lot faster.

So I guess now I'll double down on encouraging students to focus on fundamental concepts and the ability to formulate the right questions to ask of high quality sources.

joeroe, to random
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

Looks like the latest Twitter migration to https://archaeo.social is in full swing!

For new users, writing a post with the hashtag is a great way to get those first followers. Lots of people follow and boost posts from that hashtag (DYK you can follow hashtags here?)

For old users, now might be a good time to boost your introduction post to re-introduce yourself.

Follow for server updates and conversations.

joeroe, to random
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

@aap_saaorg Could you tell me if AAP is open to submissions that have been through @PCI_Archaeology's open peer review? I don't see it on the list of PCI-friendly journals (https://archaeo.peercommunityin.org/PCIArchaeology/about/pci_friendly_journals).

My co-authors and I would love to submit something to AAP, but we'd also really like to go the open peer review route. It's a conundrum!

joeroe, to random
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

This Sunday morning my 18 month old son managed to subscribe to .

Their Android TV app makes it so easy that apparently a baby fat-fingering a remote can do it, and that remote has a big red "NETFLIX" button on it that will handily install the app for a fat-fingered baby, and Netflix of course retains my account and card details even though I cancelled 8 months ago...

joeroe, (edited ) to DeGoogle
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

My new years resolution is to finally my life.

I've already replaced a lot of Google products. Some are trickier to extricate myself from (e.g. I've had the same Gmail address for nearly 20 years). Others I just use out of inertia.

There are very few that I'm genuinely struggling to replace. Like Scholar Alerts for finding out about new papers - what can I use instead of that? I know about Semantic Scholar.

joeroe, to random
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

Just saw a grant boosted here that demanded the recipient produce at least one peer-reviewed paper, participate in a conference and 16 smaller meetings/workshops, write public engagement material, and work part-time for the organisation... for the equivalent of 2-3 months postdoc salary.

Don't boost this stuff, call it out! This isn't "every little helps". They could have created a decently-paid and decent length fellowship for one person, instead of precarity for a dozen.

#AcademicJobs

joeroe, to random
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

#DABAWA, the third installment of Digital Archaeology Bern – Ancient West Asia edition, will take place at the University of Bern next month, 6–7 October 2023:

https://dabawa.hypotheses.org/

You can participate in person or online, for free.

joeroe, to ai
@joeroe@archaeo.social avatar

Got multiple 500 Internal Server Error responses when trying to download scientific data files from the Harvard Dataverse today... but funnily enough the totally unasked-for (and totally useless) summary of their contents works fine every time :/

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • JUstTest
  • mdbf
  • ngwrru68w68
  • cubers
  • magazineikmin
  • thenastyranch
  • rosin
  • khanakhh
  • InstantRegret
  • Youngstown
  • slotface
  • Durango
  • kavyap
  • DreamBathrooms
  • megavids
  • tacticalgear
  • osvaldo12
  • normalnudes
  • tester
  • cisconetworking
  • everett
  • GTA5RPClips
  • ethstaker
  • anitta
  • Leos
  • provamag3
  • modclub
  • lostlight
  • All magazines