RELX | Reed Elsevier has been recognized as one of the “Top Inspiring Workplaces in Asia” by the Inspiring Workplaces Group in their 2025 rankings. RELX | Reed Elsevier also secured a Best-in-Class Special Recognition for Inspiring Culture & Purpose. The recognition underscores RELX | Reed Elsevier’s commitment to creating a people-first workplace built on good leadership, psychological safety, and employee empowerment. The annual awards evaluated organizations across six fundamental elements: Culture and Purpose, Leadership, Wellbeing, Inclusion, Employee Voice, and Employee Experience. Among hundreds of entries across Asia, RELX | Reed Elsevier secured the #3 position and also received the Best-in-Class Special Recognition for Inspiring Culture & Purpose. Join us: https://www.elsevier.com/about/careers
💬 Uncertainty isn’t a flaw in science — it’s a feature. Researchers navigate uncertainty every day. Talking openly about it can build trust, not diminish it. Camilla Arvidsson of Sense about Science shares six ways to communicate clearly about what we know — and what we don’t. 👇
Reaxys AI Search: search chemistry like never before. Elsevier has launched Reaxys AI Search, which uses natural language to unlock over 121 million documents — helping researchers move from question to discovery, faster. 🚀The first chemistry database to support natural language document search 🔍 Ask questions in plain language ⚡ Skip complex keyword strings 📈 See better relevancy than traditional search Especially useful for interdisciplinary fields like materials science, drug discovery and chemical engineering. Available now to all Reaxys users. 🔗 Learn more: https://www.elsevier.com/about/press-releases/elsevier-introduces-reaxys-ai-search-enabling-faster-and-more-accessible #ReaxysAI #Research #AI
What does it take to protect research integrity at scale? For Elsevier data scientist Savvas Chamezopoulos, it means blending advanced technology with real-world insight, and building tools that support experts in detecting and preventing misconduct. His work shows that thoughtful collaboration and human judgment remain central to maintaining trust in research. Read the full profile: http://spkl.io/6049AHzqD
Not Alone, recorded at the Elsevier Impact Conference 2025 in Chicago! In July, Not Alone recorded a special episode: Leaders in Conversation podcast on site at the Wacker Studio — with real-time insights from global research and academic leaders. Listen to provoking dialogues that inspire and spark meaningful conversation while illuminating the paths of academic leadership and innovation and fostering a community that thrives on shared knowledge. https://notalonepodcast.buzzsprout.com/2365553
Why do retractions matter in scientific publishing? A new explainer from Elsevier outlines how retractions uphold the integrity of the scientific record, what leads to them, and why they remain a vital part of the publishing process. Read the full piece: http://spkl.io/6044AHziE
Tool use, grooming, and culture in the deep. 🐋 New research in Current Biology shows killer whales using kelp as tools to groom each other. It's a first for marine mammals and offers new insight into whale culture, communication, and care. Watch the footage. 👇
🎓 “Moral courage is doing the right thing — even when no one is watching” Amid political polarization, funding pressures, and technological disruption, Vice-Chancellor Dawn Freshwater (University of Auckland) calls on university leaders to reclaim higher education's founding virtues: moral courage and institutional autonomy. In her compelling essay featured in Not Alone: Leaders in Conversation, she challenges academia to protect the freedoms that fuel enquiry, uphold public trust, and shape future-ready societies. 📖 Read the full article: http://spkl.io/6047AGSfV
How can AI help R&D teams build a more sustainable future? In Sustainability Magazine, Stuart Whayman, President of Corporate Markets at Elsevier and Executive Sponsor of our Climate Action Program, explores how AI is accelerating innovation in greener materials, supporting compliance, and enabling more circular ways of working, all while keeping environmental impact front of mind. 🔗 Read the full piece: http://spkl.io/6045AGhOS
What does it take to build an AI tool that researchers actually find useful? 💬 130 one-on-one interviews. 🔎 30,000+ users testing across 70+ institutions. 👥 And weekly product meetings focused entirely on feedback. From rewriting prompts to comparing methods across papers, nearly every feature in ScienceDirect AI can be traced back to a specific user need. Here’s how the team made it happen: http://spkl.io/6046AGU8y