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by JSheltzer on 2018-06-29 (UTC).

Great new study about science outreach via Twitter: Initially, scientists mostly tweet to each other. But after accumulating about 1000 followers, scientists reach an increasing number of journalists, policy makers, and other members of the public.https://t.co/35sZgGfkgv pic.twitter.com/S8ybUQcdiA

— Jason Sheltzer (@JSheltzer) June 29, 2018
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by Smerity on 2018-06-29 (UTC).

Whenever I say (paraphrased) "Twitter still houses the best community for #MachineLearning even though that theoretically and practically makes no sense", this is exactly what I mean. Ever more direct connections between those working in, reporting on, or learning about a field. https://t.co/2E9wQhnYkX

— Smerity (@Smerity) June 29, 2018
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by RichardSocher on 2018-06-30 (UTC).

Tweeting, therefore, has the potential to disseminate scientific information widely.
[...] encourage scientists to invest in building a social media presence.
👍
Beyond a threshold of ∼1000 followers, the range of follower types became more diverse.
Fromhttps://t.co/33DvzMuRF4 pic.twitter.com/bdWXAq1iOC

— Richard (@RichardSocher) June 30, 2018
misc

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